Court Opinion

ID: 6542858
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:17:11.025764+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:52.895471
License: Public Domain

Cockrill, C. J.  1. Parol agreement to purchase land is within statute of frauds. If Kimball obtained the title to the land. _ . . m controversy with his own means under a parol agreement J ° with Robbins to let him have an interest in it on condition that he would pay one-half the expenses incurred in acquiring the title, the contract would be void by reason of the statute of frauds, and Robbins could take nothing through it. It could not be enforced for the further reason that Robbins has not complied or offered to comply with the condition by paying his share of the expense which it is admitted Kimball rightfully incurred. If the agreement was that Kimball was to purchase for the joint benefit of himself and Robbins, but the title was taken to himself alone,, the contract would still be within the statute of frauds. If he used none of Robbins’ means in making the purchase,, there would be only the breach of a parol agreement which, cannot raise a trust or form the basis of a title. There is no evidence to warrant the conclusion that the¡ parties were partners in buying and selling real estate. The-only route by which Robbins can arrive at an equity in the-land is to adduce from the evidence clear and satisfactory-proof that Kimball made use of his means in making the purchase, and thereby establish an equitable interest in the land through the medium of a resulting trust. It is material, therefore, to review the conflicting and recriminating testimony, in which the record abounds, only for the purpose of ascertaining whether any money of Robbins-went into the purchase of the land. Beyond that it need not be noticed. It is certain that Kimball purchased the right to acquirer the title to the lands—an option, as the parties term it—for the sum of $5000, and that Robbins paid no part of it;. also, that the then owner of the land executed a deed to Kimball in pursuance of that contract, when Kimball paid him the sum of $11,666.66 and gave him his two notes for like sums for the residue of the purchase price. Since that time Kimball has partly discharged these notes by payments. Robbins has paid nothing. The only pretence that can be made of any use of his funds was in the payment of the $11,666.66. That had been raised upon a mortgage by Robbins and Kimball to one Shirk of lands belonging severally to them, and the argument is, that it was the joint fund of the two parties and that Robbins acquired an equitable interest in the land to the extent of his interest in the fund. Kimball’s version of the transaction is that, about the time he purchased the option of the right to acquire the title, he made an oral agreement with Robbins to the effect that the latter should have the privilege of sharing in his trade when, or upon the condition that, he paid one-half of the price asked for the option and one-half the purchase price of the land; that it was in pursuance of that agreement the Shirk mortgage was executed; that the money thus borrowed was for his own use and not for the use of Robbins or of himself and Robbins, and that Robbins in effect joined in the mortgage note and put his lands in the mortgage as in the nature of a security for him to carry out his purchase in accordance with their contract, with the expectation on Robbins’ part of fulfilling his agreement to pay one-half of the expense previously incurred and thereby being let into the equal enjoyment of the transaction. Robbins denies all this and claims that the mortgage transaction was an ordinary joint borrowing for their mutual benefit and that the fund raised was their joint fund.  2. Conduct of denceSofsterms of contract. The circumstances tend to sustain Kimball’s version. He negotiated the loan as for himself alone, the money was re- . rrntted to him, it was deposited to his individual credit in the bank, and was paid out upon his individual draft, Robbins offering no protest nor suggesting any other course. Robbins was unable or unwilling to pay Kimball the amount he concedes was due him under the térms of their agreement, and at this juncture, several months after the deed to the property in question was delivered, Kimball executed a mortgage to Shirk upon his homestead which was not included in the first mortgage, and thereby procured from Shirk a formal written release of Robbins’ land from the operation of the mortgage, and caused it to be delivered to Robbins after it was duly recorded. Thereafter Robbins mortgaged and sold the real estate described in the release as though the Shirk mortgage had no existence—directing the attention of those with whom he dealt to the record evidence of the release, and thereby procuring them to disregard the existence of the mortgage by relying upon the release. By that conduct he derived the full benefit of the release, and that result is inconsistent with his position that lie repudiated it.- We must take it then that he accepted the release. But the fact that he accepted the release and thereby resumed the position he occupied before the negotiation is strong corroborative evidence of Kimball’s version of the contract as a conditional sale, and of Robbins’ attitude toward the Shirk mortgage. This subsequent conduct sheds a light back upon the contract, and enables us to see what were probably its original terms. The parties themselves, not expecting a controversy about the contract, in all probability had not a very definite understanding of its terms, or of their legal status under it. What they did, therefore, in the execution of it, is the best guide attainable for its interpretation. Watkins v. Greer, 52 Ark., 65; Gauss Sons v. Orr, 46 id., 129. Robbins has failed to disclose a clear and satisfactory state of case as to the payment of his money in the purchase of the land, and the security which he furnished has ibeen restored to and accepted by him. He has thus voluntarily assumed the position which Kimball says he was to take upon failure to comply with the terms of his conditional purchase. We must infer, therefore, that Kimball’s recol- . lection of the contract represents it in its true light. For the reasons already assigned it cannot be enforced. Affirm.