Cade v. Brown

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.

Plaintiff claims he entered into a parol agreement with defendant for the purchase of a tract of land, being part of a larger tract owned by defendant. He also claims the defendant took him upon the premises, traced the boundaries of the land in question, and placed him in the possession thereof. That in pursuance of the agreement plaintiff kept possession of the premises and made valuable improvements thereon, with the knowledge and consent of defendant, and also purchased and placed upon the land certain lumber to be used by him in erecting a building thereon, which lumber subsequently became valueless to him through the breach of the defendant; and further, that he tendered full compliance with the contract upon his part. That the defendant refused to comply *403therewith, and sold the land to another person. Whereupon plaintiff brought this action at law to recover his damages. Upon the trial, plaintiff asked the court to in-structthe jury that the measure of damages he was entitled to was the value of the land at the date of defendant’s breach of the contract, together with the amount expended by plaintiff in making said improvements, less the purchase price plaintiff was to pay for the land. The court refused to give the instructions, but directed the jury, if they found for the plaintiff, to assess as his damages an amount equal to the reasonable value of the improvements made by him, to which plaintiff excepted.

It fairly appears from the whole case that the proof tended to show the land had greatly increased in value, and while the instructions asked by plaintiff were not correct in asking pay for his improvements in addition to the value of the land at the time of the defendant’s breach, as the value of the land at that time would include the improvements made thereon, and would have resulted in giving plaintiff pay twice for his improvements, which was properly refused, yet the instruction given by the court was also erroneous. The measure of the damages was the value of the land at the time of the breach, less the price plaintiff was to pay therefor, together with any special damages plaintiff might prove in purchasing lumber to erect a building upon the premises, which could not be considered an improvement before its erection.

It is urged by appellee that an action at law will not lie in such a case. That the plaintiff’s remedy, if he had any, was an action for specific performance of the contract, it not having been putin writing, and the purchaseprice not having been actually paid, but only tendered by plaintiff and refused by defendant; and that where a specific performance cannot be had because of the inability of the defendant to convey, he having previously parted with the title, and where the action cannot be maintained *404against the vendee by reason of his not having had actual notice of plaintiff’s rights, or where the possession of plaintiff was not sufficiently open and notorious to be held a constructive notice, that the plaintiff would be without a remedy, although a specific enforcement in consequence of a part performance by plaintiff might have been decreed against the defendant had he retained the title. We think otherwise, and hold that in such a case an action at law for damages can be maintained.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Stiles, Hoyt and Dunbar, JJ-., concur. Anders, C. J., not sitting.