Court Opinion

ID: 9828227
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 18:13:22.463724+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:44.638541
License: Public Domain

BOYCE, J.
This suit was brought by R. S. Palmer and E. Brooks against H. W. Armstrong and the First National Bank of Tulia *628to recover tlie sum of $1,000, agreed liquidated damages for the breach of a contract between Palmer and Armstrong for the sale of a section of land by Palmer and purchase thereof by the said Armstrong. Trial before a jury resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs.
E. Brooks, a real estate agent at Tulia, was employed by the plaintiff Palmer to sell the section of land for a stated sum of money, which was to be paid partly in cash, partly in the assumption of certain notes outstanding, and constituting a lien on the land, and partly by the execution by the purchaser of two notes for equal amounts for the balance of the consideration to be made payable January 1, 1919, and January 1, 1920. On May 24, 1918, Armstrong and Brooks executed a contract which was signed by Palmer, by E. Brooks agent, by the terms of which said Palmer agreed to sell and the said Armstrong agreed to buy said section of land. The contract provided for payment of the consideration in accordance with the terms of the enlistment, except that it was provided that three notes should be executed by Armstrong instead of two, and that these notes were to become due June 1, 1919, 1920, and 1921, respectively. This contract contains the following provisions that are material to the consideration of the assignments presented: (1) That the interest on the notes, payment of which was to be assumed by Armstrong, should be paid by Palmer “to date of deed”; (2) that the said Palmer should “furnish abstract and deed within 30 days from date, * * * it being understood that, should there be any defects in said title, party of the first part (Palmer) shall have 60 days further time to perfect same so as to show good and merchantable title; (3) that the sum of $1,000 was placed in the First National Bank of Tulia by Armstrong to apply on first payment and to be paid as liquidated damages in case of breach of the contract by Armstrong; (4) that the existing lease on the land should be canceled on the signing of the contract and immediate possession be given to the purchaser. At the time this contract was drawn and signed by Armstrong and Brooks it was agreed that the contract was made subject to the approval of Palmer by June 1, 1918, and the said I-I. W. Armstrong so notified. The contract was written by T. W. Tomlinson, of the First National Bank of Tulia, who on the same day, wrote a letter at the instigation of Brooks, whose name was signed to it, R. S. Palmer, who lived out of Swisher county. This letter inclosed the contract and stated that the contract was in accordance with Palmer’s enlistment, except as to the payments and explained why this change was necessary. This letter contains the following language in reference to execution of the deed, etc.:
“This deed is to be dated June 1, 1918. * * * ‘This deal depends entirely on the possession after June 1st, as party does not want the land unless immediate possession is given. * * * I suggest that you send me the abstract at once and have the deed prepared so as to execute it on the 1st day of June, and mail to the bank immediately after execution, and I think that we will be able to close up without delay.”
On May 31st Palmer wired Brooks as follows :
“Will accept three payments and expect him to pay interest on Mr. Austin’s note from June 1st on. If it is a trade let us know.”
Austin was the payee of the notes, payment of which was to be assumed by Armstrong. On June 1st Palmer wired Brooks again as follows:
“Have mailed contract and abstract to bank. Answer quick.”
Palmer signed the contract on the back under advice of some one that this was the proper way to express his approval thereof, and mailed it and the abstract to the bank at Tulia. The envelope in which they were mailed seems to have been before the jury, and it appears from the testimony that the postmark thereon is June, but the day of the month was not legible. It does not appear just when this letter was received by the bank. There is considerable confusion and conflict in the testimony as to whether Armstrong was notified by Brooks of Palmer’s acceptance of the contract on or before June 1st. We need not set this testimony out at length. Taking it all together, we think there is sufficient evidence to warrant the finding of the jury that Armstrong was notified by Brooks by June 1, 1918, that the contract had been approved by Palmer. The’ particular testimony on which this finding of the jury was based was doubtless the testimony of Brooks that a few days after the signing of the contract — four or five or six he thought — he met Armstrong on the streets of Tulia and told him that “it was a trade,” at which time Armstrong informed him that he was not going to take the land as it was too dry. About June 1st, or a few days thereafter, Armstrong was quarantined at home on account of smallpox. On June 15th Brooks wrote him this letter:
“I am writing you a letter as I heard you were quarantined on account of your family having the smallpox. The contract and papers are here in the First National Bank, which are signed by Palmer. He accepted all of your offers of the three payments and the $3,200 down. He will give possession as soon as the deal is closed. They have been here ever since you were here. They will stay here until you come in, so come in as quick as you can and fix the matter up.”
R. S. Palmer owned only one-quarter of the section of the land. 1-Iis son and two *629sons-in-law each owned a quarter section thereof. The correspondence with Brooks in regard to the sale of the land had been had with R. S. Palmer alone, and no mention made of ownership of parts of the section by others. It does not appear what, if any, authority Palmer had to act for the others prior to May 24th but the evidence is sufficient to warrant the conclusion that on receipt of the letter from Brooks of May 24th inclosing the contract Palmer took up the matter with his son and two sons-in-law, and that before he finally wired Brooks approving the contract he had been authorized by his said son and sons-in-law to go ahead with the sale in accordance with the contract.
The first assignment, that the court-erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction for defendant, is based on two propositions: (1) That the contract was not binding on the son and sons-in-law, owners of three-fourths of the land, because it was not made with their authority, and, as it did not purport to be executed in their behalf, they could not ratify it; (2) that, as the contract was not binding on such parties, it is not mutual, and will not support an action either for specific performance or damages. There is authority to the effect that there can be no ratification of a contract made without authority and which does not purport .to bind the person ratifying it. O’Connor v. Camp, 158 S. W. 203; Moore v. Powell, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 43, 25 S. W. 472. And the authorities also support the statement, possibly with some limitations, that “when a person takes upon himself to contract for the sale of an estate where he is not the absolute owner of it nor has it in his power by the ordinary course of law or equity to make himself so, though the owner offer to make the seller a title,” yet specific performance of the contract cannot be enforced or damages recovered for a breach against the seller. Pipkin v. James, 1 Humph. (Tenn.) 325,24 Am. Dec. 655; Hollifield v. Landrum, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 187, 71 S. W. 979; Clifton v. Charles, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 448, 116 S. W. 120; Hahl v. West, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 431, 129 g. W. 876; Townshend v. Goodfellow, 40 Minn. 312, 41 N. W. 1056, 3 L. R. A. 741, 12 Am. St. Rep. 736; Gray v. Smith, 83 Fed. 824, 28 C. C. A. 168; Brown v. Lee, 192 Fed. 822, 113 C. C. A. 141. We need not analyze these authorities, however, because they do not, in our opinion, apply to the facts of this case. The jury found, and the finding is supported by the facts, that the contract written and signed by Armstrong, and by Brooks for Palmer, was not intended to become a contract until R. S. Palmer approved it. The signature of Palmer’s name by Brooks, as agent thereto, on May 24th, had no legal importance. The contract was actually made a contract by Palmer’s communication of his acceptance thereof. Since before the final act on the part of Palmer which made the instrument a contract he had authority from his son and sons-in-law to go abead with it, the contract may be truly said to have been made under authority from the said parties, and their acts, instead of being merely a ratification of an already existing- contract, was authority for the making of the contract itself. Now, it is established by the decisions of pur Supreme Court that the donee of a power to convey real estate may execute the power in his own name without referring in any way to the power or to the donor, and the donor will be bound, if it appear “from the attending circumstances that the donee did in fact act under and by virtue of the power conferred upon him to dispose of the property in question and that it was his intention to dispose of the property in accordance with the power so conferred.” Hill v. Conrad, 91 Tex. 345, 43 S. W. 791, and authorities there cited. The same rule will doubtless apply to the making of executory contracts for the sale of real estate. 2 C. J. 683. The cases of Moore v. Powell and O’Connor v. Camp, supra, recognize such rule by implication.
It is well established that authority to make an executory contract for the sale of real estate need not be in writing. We conclude, therefore, that the attending circumstances are sufficient to show that Palmer in the final act which gave the contract any legal standing as such was acting under authority from his son and sons-in-law, and that he was intending in such matter to act for them. The contract under these circumstances was made under their authority and would be binding on them. It results from this conclusion that the first assignment must be overruled.
Appellant, under the second assignment, contends that the finding of the jury to the effect that the contract was ratified by R. S. Palmer by June 1, 1918, is not supported by the evidence. This contention is based on the terms of Palmer’s telegram of May 31st and the statements made in the Brooks letter to Armstrong of June 15th. If the telegram referred to stood' alone as the evidence of Palmer’s acceptance of the contract, or the acceptance had been conveyed to Armstrong in the terms of the telegram, it may be that appellant’s position under this assignment should be sustained. But we do not think the telegram of May 31st should be considered alone in ascertaining whether Palmer accepted the contract unconditionally. The signing of the contract on the back thereof and sending of the telegram of June 1st, and mailing of the contract to the bank, perhaps on said date, does evidence an unqualified acceptance of the contract. Acceptance on June 1st would be an acceptance by June 1st, as the word “by,” used in this *630connection, is construed as meaning on or before. Goldman v. Broyles, 141 S. W. 283; also authorities in Words and Phrases, both original and supplemental edition, cited under word “by.” The telegram of May 31st is to be construed in connection with all the other circumstances and acts of Palmer, and we think the jury might reasonably have concluded that the expression “will expect him to pay interest on Mr. Austin’s note from June 1st on “was not intended by Palmer as requiring a modification of the contract in this respect if that was not the purport of the contract itself, but as stating his understanding of the meaning of the contract as written, and we think the jury were warranted under all the circumstances in concluding that Palmer did accept the contract unconditionally on or before June 1st; and, since the terms of the telegram of May 31st itself were not communicated to'Armstrong as the acceptance, the plaintiff would not be confined to this telegram alone as evincing his intention. It will be remembered. that Brooks testified that he conveyed to Armstrong the information of an unconditional acceptance of the contract. Nor do we think that the letter of June 15th, written after Brooks had told Armstrong Palmer had approved the contract, and after Armstrong had unqualifiedly rejected it, should be necessarily taken as proposing a new term as to possession so as to annul Palmer’s previous unqualified acceptance of the contract. Brooks explains that his purpose in writing this letter to Armstrong was to induce Armstrong to go on with the contract, notwithstanding his previous repudiation thereof. Brooks was an illiterate man unable to read and write, and probably did not mean to propose to defer possession until delivery of the deed and final consummation of the contract, as such a proposition would have been in the 'face of the contract and everything else he had previously said about the matter. The papers that were in the bank were not the deed, notes, etc., but merely the contract and abstract. It seems reasonable to conclude that Brooks meant that possession would be delivered upon Armstrong’s withdrawal of his objection to the contract and an indication on his part oi willingness to proceed.
The third assignment atta-cks the finding of the jury to the effect that'Armstrong was notified of Palmer’s ratification of the contract by June 1st. As we have already said, the testimony on this issue is conflicting. Some of Brooks’ testimony is contradictory, but, taken as a whole, it is sufficient to warrant the jury’s finding on this issue.
The fourth assignment is to the effect that there was error in entering judgment in favor of E. Brooks for a part of the recovery E. Brooks and Palmer joined in the suit, and it was pleaded that said Palmer had assign-
ed a part of the cause of action to the said Brooks. No evidence of any such assignment was offered. Brooks had no interest in the contract itself such as would support a suit, and of course his right to sue and recover depended on some assignment from the legal owner of the cause of action. But Palmer, since the contract was made in his name, could sue in his own name thereon. C. J. vol. 2, pp. 895-897; Tinsley v. Dowell, 87 Tex. 23, 26 S. W. 946; Texas Overall Co. v. Mummert, 157 S. W. 219; San Jacinto Rice Co. v. Lockett, 145 S. W. 1046. The pleading of the assignment of a part of the cause of action in the petition by Palmer is sufficient to bind him in a judgment entered on such pleading, and the defendant could not be harmed by the entry of such a judgment.
We have found no reversible error assigned, and the judgment will be affirmed.