Court Opinion

ID: 6739870
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:21:06.021373+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:55.537480
License: Public Domain

Robinson, J.
This is a suit for the specific performance of a contract and for $250,000 damages. Paul, the plaintiff, appeals from a judgment canceling the contract on the ground that it is uncertain, unconscionable, and void for want of mutuality and nonperformance by the plaintiff. There is little ground for disputing either the law or the essential facts. To state the case is to decide it.
*1124(1) ' The parties agreed to create a corporation, with capital stock representing 20,000 acres at $30 an acre, the stock to be alloted thus: To Leutz, $300,000; to Paul, $70,000; to Evans, $70,000; to treasury bonus,‘ $160,000. The land is described thus: 20,000 acres in township 1 and 2 south, and 1 north, of range 6 wlest, being the south 20,000 acres of a 5Ó,ooo-acre tract near Telogia, Liberty county, Fla.
(2) Paul, the plaintiff, agrees to obtain a contract for deeds to such land and to pay thereon $200,000 leaving a balance due and unpaid, $160,-000; also, to deliver such contracts, with abstracts of title.
(3) The contracts offered by Paul are Exhibits 8, 9, 10, and xi. Each is dated either October 25, 28, or 30, 1920, signed by the grantors and by Dakota Homes Company, by P. Z. MoWry, President, George N. Paul, Secretary. Each contract reserves merchantable timber, pine, hardwood, cypress, and juniper, and turpentine privileges for a term of years. Each contract recites a payment of nearly 3 per cent, on the price —in all, $10,000. The 3 per cent, may have been a commission. There is no evidence of any cash payment. The grantees assume and agree to pay 97 per cent, of the purchase price.
(4) For his interest as a purchaser of the land — a half interest, as measured by his stock in the nonexisting corporation — Leutz does transfer to Paul 954 sections of land in Mercer county at $25 an acre, subject to a mortgage for $20,000, 375 head of cattle, 50 head of horses, with ranch equipment, hay, feed, and grain, at regular market prices; and, if necessary to care for his share of the balance of the indebtedness, Leutz agrees to put up as collateral $12,500 first mortgage bonds of the Plebron brick plant, $35,000 in shares on the plant, with his homestead in Hebron, valued at $40,000.
(5) From the abstracts it is wholly impossible for a judge, sitting in his chambers, to determine that the titles are good or bad. That would require investigation and inquiry of perhaps six months, and evidence dehors the abstracts.
(6) There is no convincing evidence that the Florida land is worth half the sum due and unpaid on its price, as shown by the contracts, Exhibits 8, 9, xo, and 11. There is strong evidence that the land is not worth over $2 an acre.
The Civil Code gives the law of the case thus:
Section 7193: Neither party to an obligation can be compelled to perform it unless the other party has performed or may be compelled, to perform it.
*1125Section 7197: The law does not enforce an obligation to render personal service (such as to create a corporation). It does not enforce an agreement the terms of which are not sufficiently certain to make the precise act which is to be done clearly ascertainable, nor an agreement which is not as to the purchaser just and reasonable, nor if the seller cannot give to the buyer a title free from reasonable doubt.
To summarize: The contract in question does not describe the land with certainty. It expressly bargains for the payment of $200,000, and not'merely 3 per cent, of the purchase price. The contract is not for titles, with reservations for a term of years, as shown by Exhibits, 8, 9, 10 and 11. The contract is for land fairly worth $18 an acre, and not merely a small part of that sum. Every point of law and fact is against the plaintiff. The case merits no discussion.
The judgment is clearly right, and it is affirmed.
Birdzell, C. J., and Bronson, J., concur in result.