Obering v. Swain-Roach Lumber Co.

On January 10, 1923, the devisees of J. Henry Buhner, deceased, were the owners of three tracts of real estate. One of the tracts consisted of 170 acres, the others of twenty-two and nineteen acres, respectively. The executor of the last will of the deceased gave notice by publication that, pursuant to the terms of the will, he would, on January 20, 1923, sell the three tracts of land. In his notices of sale, the executor gave the correct legal description of each tract, and in addition designated the three as tracts Nos. 1, 2 and 3, respectively, the 170-acre tract being designated as "Tract No. 1, known as the J. Henry Buhner farm." The 170-acre tract contained 110 acres of valuable timber. Appellee was a corporation engaged in the manufacture of lumber, and desired to buy the timber for use in its business; and appellants, desiring to buy the *Page 635 farm without the timber, signed and delivered to appellee the following contract:

"This agreement entered into this 10th day of January, 1923, by and between Herman F. Obering, his two children, heirs of the Buhner estate, and Swain-Roach Lumber Co., that in event Swain-Roach Lumber Co., buys tract No. 1 containing 170 acres known as the J. Henry Buhner farm, to be offered for sale January 20, 1923, by John F. Sunderman, Exr., that Swain-Roach Lumber Co. hereby agrees to sell to said Herman F. Obering and children said land reserving all the timber thereon, and that said Herman F. Obering and children agrees to pay for said land to said Swain-Roach Lumber Co. eight thousand dollars cash. It is further agreed that Swain-Roach Lumber Co. is to have four years time in which to remove said timber."

Appellee bought the farm, and the sale was confirmed by the court February 27, 1923. On the following day, appellee executed and tendered to appellants and Albert J. Obering a deed for the farm, reserving the timber, with right to remove it within four years, in accordance with the terms of the contract. Appellants refused to accept the deed, and this suit was begun by appellee against the appellants and Albert J. Obering for specific performance, setting forth in its complaint the above facts.

A demurrer to the complaint having been overruled, Albert J. Obering filed an answer pleading his minority at the time of the execution of the contract; and, in addition to an answer in denial, appellants Herman F. and Amanda M. Obering filed a second paragraph, in which they admitted the execution of the contract, but averred that, at the time the contract was signed by them and their codefendant Albert J. Obering, their codefendant was an infant, under the age of twenty-one years; that Albert J. Obering had pleaded his infancy *Page 636 and disaffirmed the contract. A demurrer to this paragraph having been sustained, Herman F. and Amanda M. Obering filed what was denominated the sixth paragraph of answer, in which they alleged that, at the time of the execution of the contract, and at the time appellee tendered the deed, appellee did not have a merchantable title to the real estate. A demurrer to this answer was also sustained.

A trial resulted in a judgment for appellee against appellants.

The rulings on demurrer to complaint, demurrers to special answers, and on motion for new trial, present the questions for review.

The sufficiency of the complaint is first challenged for the reason, as claimed, that the contract sued on is too indefinite to be enforceable, it being pointed out that the section, township and range locating the real estate are not given.

Less formality of description is required in a contract for the sale of real estate than is necessary in a conveyance. It is a recognized rule in this state that, where the description 1-3. used by the parties in their contract is consistent, but incomplete, and its completion does not require the contradiction or alteration of that used, nor that a new description should be introduced, parol evidence may be received to complete the description and identify the property.Tewksbury v. Howard (1894), 138 Ind. 103, 37 N.E. 355; see, also, Baldwin v. Kerlin (1874), 46 Ind. 426. It is also a well-established rule that the situation of the parties and the surrounding circumstances at the time the contract was executed can be shown by parol, so that the court may be placed in the position of the parties, and the better understand the force and application of the language used by them. Howard v. Atkins (1906), 167 Ind. 184, 78 N.E. 665; Pomeroy, Contracts § 227. *Page 637

In the case at bar, the real estate is referred to in the contract as "Tract No. 1, containing 170 acres known as the J. Henry Buhner farm," to be offered for sale by the executor 4. of the last will of J. Henry Buhner, deceased. Under the above rules and principles, it is clear that the real estate is sufficiently described to bind the parties, the contract having been drawn, as alleged in the complaint, with reference to the executor's notice of sale, which notice gave the correct legal description of the 170 acres and designated it as "Tract No. 1."

A further objection urged against the sufficiency of the complaint is that the agreement is invalid for want of mutuality. There is no merit in this contention. It is true that, at 5. the time the contract was signed, it could not have been enforced against either party, because it was contingent upon a future event; but the moment appellee acquired title to the real estate, it became equally binding upon, and enforceable against, both parties. The principle is correctly stated in 36 Cyc 624, as follows: "The fact that defendant's offer does not ripen into a binding contract until the performance of some act by plaintiff, which act constitutes both an acceptance of the offer and supplies a consideration, as in the case of an agreement to convey land on condition of plaintiff's performing certain work, does not, at the performance of such act, render the contract objectionable in equity, on the score of mutuality in obligation."

The disaffirmance of the contract by Albert J. Obering on the ground that he was a minor at the time of the execution of the contract did not have the effect of releasing appellants 6. from their obligation. It is a well-settled principle that the defense of infancy is a personal defense, which can be taken advantage of only by the infant, and where an *Page 638 infant and an adult enter into a joint contract, or assume a joint liability, the adult is not absolved from liability on the obligation because the infant takes advantage of his right to avoid the contract. Kirby v. Cannon (1857), 9 Ind. 371;Hartness v. Thompson (1809), 5 Johns (N.Y.) 160; Dacosta v.Davis (1854), 24 N.J. Law 319; Cole v. Manners (1906),76 Neb. 454, 107 N.W. 777. The court did not err in sustaining appellee's demurrer to second paragraph of answer.

Action of the court in sustaining demurrer to appellants' sixth paragraph of answer could not have been harmful, since 7, 8. the facts therein averred were provable under the general denial.

On the trial appellee's attorney asked a witness the following question: "You may state whether or not Tract No. 1 in that notice is the same tract of land mentioned as Tract No. 1 9. in the contract?" The question is in the alternative, and appellants' objection to the question on the ground that it was leading, was properly overruled.

The deed tendered by appellee named appellants and Albert J. Obering as grantees; but Albert J. Obering having, on the trial, disaffirmed the contract, the court, on its own motion, as 10. a part of the decree, modified the deed by striking therefrom the name of Albert J. Obering as grantee. Appellants could not have been harmed by this action of the court, which was for their benefit.

The court did not err in decreeing a vendor's lien. The right to such a lien is not, as claimed by appellants, dependent upon an express stipulation to that effect in the contract of 11. sale. Tewksbury v. Howard, supra.

Affirmed.

Dausman, J., absent. *Page 639