Court Opinion

ID: 7905249
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:59:45.175781+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:23.852376
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Johnston, C. J.:
This was an equitable proceeding to compel the delivery of a deed and the completion of a transfer of a tract of land, and from a judgment in favor of Jeannette Neal, the defendants, M. D. Owings and Lillie R. Owings, appeal.
*75M. D. Owings, who owned five hundred and twenty acres of land, listed the tract for sale with Nate Neal for the fixed price of thirty dollars per acre. About nine months later the agent notified Owings, who was then in California, that he had found a purchaser for the tract at the price fixed, one-half of the purchase price to be paid in cash, and the balance to be paid on or before five years, secured by a mortgage upon the land. He sent a contract signed by him in behalf of the owner, and also a general-warranty deed to be executed by the owner to Jeannette Neal, who was the wife of the agent. With this he sent an advance payment of $200 as earnest money, and requested that the papers be signed and, with the abstracts, sent to the First State Bank of Minneola with instructions to the bank to deliver the deed on the payment of the first half of the purchase price and the execution of the mortgage. He also stated that the agent’s commission was to come out of the cash payment made upon the land. The defendant Owings declined to accept the contract as made and suggested several changes that would satisfy him, namely, that the earnest money should be increased from $200 to $1,000; that it contain a stipulation that the purchaser would only get one-third of the growing crop, and to provide that he should get no part of the crop unless the first half of the purchase price was paid before the crop was harvested; a recital that Owings did not’ own or sell a certain windmill and fence on the premises which belonged to another; also that he did not own or sell a crop growing on a small strip of his land that was named. He further required that a statement be placed in the contract as to the exact amount to be paid as the agent’s commission. The purchaser agreed to all the changes proposed and a contract was prepared and signed in accordance with the directions of Owings. This, together with a deposit slip showing that the $1,000 of earnest money had been deposited to his credit in the bank, was sent to Owings. It was also stated that the purchaser was ready to comply with the conditions of the contract as soon as the abstracts were produced showing a merchantable title, and further that the commission of the agent was $415, which was to be taken out of the cash payment when the abstracts were approved. Within a few days Owings wrote the agent that his wife had declined to sign the deed, that he had endeavored to procure her signa*76ture but had been unable to do so and stated some of her objections. In reply to this letter the agent wrote that the purchaser insisted on the completion of the contract that had been made in accordance with his directions and referred him to Judge Price, who had been employed to represent the purchaser. A letter was written by Judge Price stating that he had been instructed by the purchaser to take the matter up with Owings and that if the transfer was not made to bring a suit to compel specific performance. He advised them as to the nature of the contract that had been made and the obligations of the parties under it, asking that they write him at once and that unless the contract was carried out suit would be immediately commenced. Shortly after receiving the Price letter, Owings and his wife joined in the execution of the deed, which they forwarded to the bank with instructions to the bank to bring the abstracts up to date and to close the transaction according to the contract. Directions were also given as to the release of certain mortgages and advising that when the first payment was made and the note for the unpaid balance and the mortgage securing its payment were executed, to deliver the deed to the plaintiff, and then to forward the note and mortgage to him together with a certificate of deposit for the cash payment. When the bank received the contract, the deed, abstracts and other papers, it brought the abstracts up to date and presented them to the plaintiff. Upon examination of the abstracts by the purchaser, the title was found to be satisfactory and the terms of the contract were accepted. The plaintiff placed the cash payment in the bank less the amount of the agent’s commission, and also the note and mortgage duly executed. On the same day, but before the deed was delivered or payment made, the bank received a telegram from Owings telling them not to deliver the deed, and in a letter to the bank he stated that, unless he was compelled to, he was not going to deliver the deed. In the letter he authorized the bank to pay the agent the commission provided for in the contract and directed it to return to the purchaser the earnest money that had been advanced. The present action was. then brought and the bank was made a defendant. It admitted the allegations of the plaintiff to be true, tendered to the court all the money received and also the papers and documents relating to the trans*77action that had been placed in its possession and asked that it be dismissed from the action with its costs. The other defendants denied the authority of the agent, alleged that he had been dilatory in finding a purchaser, and had concealed from the owner the fact that there had been an increase in the value of land, and further that the land was really purchased by the agent for himself in the name of his wife. He further alleged that the contract was made and the deed executed and sent to the bank involuntarily, in that it was done because of the statements of Judge Price, which induced him to believe that the contract was binding upon him, and he alleged that but for these statements the deed would not have been executed. ' Mrs. Owings alleged that the deed executed by her was not her voluntary act, but that her signature was obtained because of the statements in the Price letter, and she set forth other defenses alleged by her husband. Upon application of the plaintiff a receiver was appointed to take care of the rentals accruing on the land during the pendency of the action, and to do such other acts as were necessary to protect the rights of the parties therein.
The first contention of the defendant is that the court erred in appointing a receiver. The case was peculiarly one for the appointment of a receiver. (O’Laughlin v. Prockish, 106 Kan. 616, 189 Pac. 383.) There were growing crops on the land in which plaintiff was interested in case she prevailed in the litigation. It was also important that the cultivable land should be put in crops during the period of litigation and to prevent deterioration and waste. This was the extent of the power given to the receiver. According to plaintiff’s allegation, the contract had been made, the deed executed and both placed in the bank for delivery upon compliance with conditions which it is averred were performed by plaintiff. These things, if shown, made the plaintiff the equitable owner of the land and entitled her to the delivery of the deed. Under these circumstances the covenants of the deed would relate back to the time of the contract and the plaintiff would be entitled to the rents accruing after that date. (Scott v. Stone, 72 Kan. 545, 84 Pac. 117.) Under the pleadings and the showing made on the application as to the crops and the condition of the land, it was for the interest of both parties that a receiver be appointed to care for *78the crops and to prevent waste. This appears to have been the view of the defendants as well as of the plaintiff. Two mortgages were upon the land which were due and.required attention, and both parties recognized the necessity of a receiver .and practically ratified the appointment when they agreed in open court that the receiver should use the money derived from rent of the land to pay the mortgage debt.
Elaborate findings of fact were made by the court from which those already recited have been taken. As to the vital facts there is practically no dispute, and indeed there is little ground for controversy as to the rights of the parties. A contract of sale was finally made which embodied all the' conditions named by the defendants. The deed was executed and placed in the hands of the mutually chosen depositary. The defendant directed the bank to deliver the deed upon compliance with the terms of the contract. Substantial compliance with the agreed conditions was made by the plaintiff, and when this was done, the plaintiff became the equitable owner of the land. The manual delivery of the deed was not essential to a transfer of the equitable title as the delivery to the bank was in legal effect a delivery of it to the grantee. (Davis v. Clark, 58 Kan. 100, 48 Pac. 563; Gault v. Hurd, 103 Kan. 51, 172 Pac. 1011. See, also, Baker v. Snavely, 84 Kan. 179, 114 Pac. 370; Akins v. Holmes, 89 Kan. 812, 133 Pac. 849.) It is suggested by defendants that under the issues as formed only the delivery of the deed was involved in the case and that the court was not warranted in adjudicating other issues. If the only question raised by defendants had been the failure of the depositary bank to deliver the deed the action might have been brought against the bank alone, but the grantors were asserting misrepresentation and fraud and attacking the validity of the escrow agreement. It was therefore proper to bring the grantors and depositary into court and thus procure a determination of the existence and validity of the contract, and whether there had been compliance with its conditions as well as the right of the plaintiff to the delivery of the deed. It is a rule of equity that all matters involved in a controversy between parties to a suit shall so far as practicable be adjudicated in that suit, and thus put an end to the litigation.
The defendants suggest that the contract was not valid be*79cause not sufficiently committed to writing to avoid the statute of frauds. There is no room for controversy on this question. The contract was drawn as directed by defendants; the deed was executed in accordance with the terms of the contract. It was deposited in the bank with written instructions to deliver it according to the stipulations, and the letter addressed to the agent stated that the deed had been signed and placed in the bank with instructions to close the deal. All these writings taken together constitute a sufficient memorandum of the contract to satisfy the statute. (Schneider v. Anderson, 75 Kan. 11, 88 Pac. 525.) While Mrs. Owings did not sign the contract she joined her husband in making and acknowledging the deed, which was executed in pursuance of the terms of the contract, and intrusted it to her husband for delivery to the depositary. This was sufficient to bind her. (Readicker v. Denning, 86 Kan. 617, 122 Pac. 103; Smith v. Kibbe, 104 Kan. 159, 178 Pac. 427. See, also, Hughes v. Thistlewood, 40 Kan. 232, 19 Pac. 629; Arnett v. Wescott, 107 Kan. 693, 193 Pac. 377.) She did not act hastily or without information. The correspondence was read by her or to her and the matter of carrying out the contract and of executing and delivering the deed was under advisement for weeks. She in company with her husband visited and consulted a friend as to their duties and obligations in the transaction, and were informed by him that they would be compelled to carry out the contract.
The contention, that the transfer was void because the deed was signed and placed in the bank for delivery in reliance upon the statements made in the letter of Judge Price, is without merit. There was nothing in that letter to mislead them. He wrote to and dealt with them at arm’s length, telling them that he had been employed as an attorney for the plaintiff and that if they refused to carry out the contract he would bring an action against them to compel performance. The legal effect of their agreement and conduct was stated by him, and further, that the plaintiff would insist that the transaction be closed according to the contract. They had no reason to rely on statements as to the law made by an attorney of their adversary. His representations related to the law of the controversy that had arisen between the parties and, besides, it appears that the rules of law were correctly stated by the at*80torney. The letter furnished no ground for the claim of coercion nor for refusing to complete the transfer.
It is further urged that the failure of the agent to inform defendants of the advance of the price of land avoided the contract. This is not a litigation between the agent and the owner and, besides, the land was not listed to be sold at its actual value but at a specified price fixed by the owner himself. There had been a slight advance in values because of the promise of good crops in the vicinity, but it appears that this promise was not realized at the harvest time, and further, it appears that the defendants had knowledge of the crop conditions. before the sale was made.
Another contention is that the contract should not be enforced because the sale was made to the wife of the agent. An agent should, of course, deal with his principal openly and fairly, and it devolves on him to disclose any interest he may have in the property which is the subject of the agency. An agent, however, may be the purchaser of the property intrusted to him to sell, if it is done with the knowledge and consent of the principal. On account of the relationship between the agent and his wife, good faith and fair dealing probably required a disclosure as to who was purchasing the land, but it appears that the owner was fully informed in this respect. Long before the execution of the deed the agent informed the owner that the sale had been made to his wife. She was designated as the purchaser in the contract and was named as grantee in the deed, and further, the bank was instructed by the defendant to deliver the deed to her upon compliance with the terms of the contract. Since the-defendants had full information as to the purchaser when the deed and final contract were made, the rule.invoked by the defendants does not apply.
Nor is there any ground for the contention that the money tendered to the bank as a cash payment was insufficient. The amount tendered was made through the agent who withheld the amount of his commission. It had been agreed between the parties that the commission should be taken from the cash payment and the amount was stipulated in the contract deposited with the bank. Instructions had been given to the bank to close the transaction according to the terms of the contract. *81Instead of presenting the full amount of that payment to the bank, and the bank in turn handing back the $415, the bank accepted the payment, less the amount of the commission. This process carried out the agreement of the parties and the method by which it was accomplished is of little concern. It was a substantial performance of the agreement as to payment and the method employed afforded the defendants no ground for complaint.
It is further urged that the findings are not justified by the evidence. The findings were made in great detail, much greater than was necessary. Those that are material to the determination of the real issues in the case are well supported by the testimony, but it is not deemed necessary to recount and review the evidence supporting each of the findings questioned. It is clear that the case was fairly and thoroughly considered by the trial court and that a correct result was reached.
The judgment is affirmed.