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Luton v. Badham

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Oct 1, 1900
37 S.E. 143 (N.C. 1900)

Summary

In Luton v. Badham, 127 N.C. 96 (100), we find: "If the plaintiff's intestate entered upon the defendant's land under a parol contract and placed valuable and permanent improvements thereon, and the defendant, after such improvements were made, repudiates the contract and refuses to convey, the plaintiff has an equitable cause of action.

Summary of this case from Knowles v. Wallace

Opinion

(30 October, 1900.)

1. VENDOR AND PURCHASER — Parol Contract to Convey Land — Statute of Frauds — Improvements.

A vendor in possession, who repudiates a parol contract to convey land, is liable to vendee for the value of improvements.

2. EVIDENCE — Parol — Parol Contract — Statute of Frauds — Vendor and Purchaser — Improvements.

That a party entered and placed improvements on land under a parol contract to convey, may be proved by parol evidence when the owner of the land denies the contract.

ACTION by Margaret Luton, administratrix, against Hannibal Badham, heard by Judge A.L. Coble, at Spring Term, 1900, of CHOWAN. From a judgment of nonsuit, the plaintiff appealed.

Busbee Busbee, for plaintiff.

Pruden Pruden, and Shepherd Shepherd, for defendant.


DOUGLAS, J., dissenting.


The plaintiff is the administratrix of Alexander Badham, her former husband, and the defendant is the father of her intestate. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant was the owner of a vacant lot in the town of Edenton, and upon the marriage of her intestate the defendant proposed to him that, if he would build upon and improve said vacant lot, it should be his; that he would make him a fee simple title to it; that upon this agreement her intestate entered upon said lot, and greatly improved the same, by erecting a dwelling and other outhouses thereon, which improvements greatly enhanced the value of said lot, to the amount of $400; that her husband and intestate lived on said lot in the dwelling (97) house he had built with the plaintiff, his wife, from 1892 until 1897, when he died, leaving the plaintiff and two children, the result of their marriage; that plaintiff continued to occupy said house and premises for some time after the death of her intestate, when she surrendered the possession to the defendant upon his request, and upon his promise to give her a part of the rent for the benefit of her said children, but that since the defendant has gotten possession of said property he refuses to pay her any part of the rent, and refuses to convey said land to her children; that said contract and agreement between her intestate and the defendant was never reduced to writing, her intestate having full confidence in the defendant, and believing that he would keep his said promise, and convey him the lot; that said contract and agreement being in parol only, and the defendant refusing to carry out the agreement and to convey said property, the plaintiff asks that he may be decreed to account and pay for the valuable and permanent improvements her intestate put upon said lot.

The defendant answers, and admits that the plaintiff's intestate was his son; that he went upon said lot and occupied the same with his family until his death; and that he built some small houses for his use while there, but not the dwelling house which defendant alleges he built. But he denies that there was any agreement between him and plaintiff's intestate that, if he would go upon said lot and improve it, he would convey said lot to the plaintiff's intestate, and denies that he said anything to said intestate to induce him to improve said lot with the expectation that he would convey the same to him; that, as the intestate was his son, he simply permitted him to occupy said lot without rent, and defendant admits a demand for title, and for an account and settlement for (98) improvements, and that he has refused the same, but he did not formally plead the statute of frauds.

Upon the trial, the Court formulated issues as to whether there was a parol contract or agreement between the defendant and intestate that, if intestate would improve said lot, defendant would make him a title to it, and, if there was, did plaintiff's intestate, in pursuance of said agreement, enter upon said lot and place valuable permanent improvements thereon. Upon these issues the plaintiff introduced Isaac Owens and other witnesses, and asked them if they ever heard the defendant say how it was and under what circumstances the plaintiff's intestate entered upon, improved, and occupied said lot; stating that the purpose of asking these questions was to prove that there was such a parol contract between the defendant and intestate as that alleged in the complaint. The defendant objected, objection sustained, and the witness was not allowed to answer. Plaintiff thereupon submitted to a judgment of nonsuit, and appealed. This is the case, and the only question presented for our consideration is as to the competency of this evidence.

It would seem that Sain v. Dulin, 59 N.C. 195, and Dunn v. Moore, 38 N.C. 364, cited by the defendant, sustain the ruling of the Court. But the question has been before the Court a great number of times, and we must admit that the opinions do not appear to be always in harmony. A parol contract for the sale of land is not a void contract, but voidable, upon denial or a plea of the statute of frauds. Thomas v. Kyles, 54 N.C. 302; Gulley v. Macy, 84 N.C. 434. But when the alleged contract is denied, or the statute of frauds pleaded, this avoids the contract because the party alleging it is not allowed to show by parol evidence what the contract was. The English rule seems to have been that the statute of frauds must be pleaded, or the party would be allowed to proceed with parol evidence to establish the contract. But our (99) Courts have extended the rule so as to include a denial of the contract as well as by pleading the statute of frauds. Gulley v. Macy, supra, and many other cases. Whether it would not have been better that we had followed the English rule, is not now an open question, as the rule seems to be firmly established the other way in this State.

But the plaintiff contends that she is not claiming the right to establish — to set up — a parol contract; that she is not asking a specific performance, nor is she asking damages for the breach of a parol contract; that her contention is that, by reason of the contract or agreement between her intestate and the defendant, the intestate was induced to enter upon the defendant's land, place permanent and valuable improvements on the same; and that this is a new cause of action, collateral to the contract, based upon a new consideration given by equity to prevent fraud. If the plaintiff is entitled to maintain this action against the defendant, it is purely upon equitable principles. Before the junction of the jurisdiction of law and equity in the same Court, a bargainee, in a parol contract for the sale of land where the contract was repudiated by the bargainor, could not have relief against the bargainor in a Court of Equity, if legal demands alone were involved. If the bargainee had paid the purchase price, or a part of it, in money or specific personal property, he had a right of action at law to recover the same back. And a Court of Equity would not aid him, unless there was something else connected with the transaction that gave him an equity. Then the Court of Equity, having acquired jurisdiction of the matter, would proceed to investigate and settle legal as well as equitable demands. Chambers v. Massey, 42 N.C. 286. But no such question as this can arise now, as the same Courts have both jurisdiction, and administer both law and equity. (100)

If the plaintiff's intestate entered upon the defendant's land under a parol contract and placed valuable and permanent improvements thereon and the defendant, after such improvements were made, repudiates the contract, and refuses to convey, the plaintiff has an equitable cause of action. Ellis v. Ellis, 16 N.C. 345; Albea v. Griffin, 22 N.C. 9; Lyon v. Crissman, Id., 268; Pitt v. Moore, 99 N.C. 85; Tucker v. Markland, 101 N.C. 422; Chambers v. Massey, 42 N.C. 286; Thomas v. Kyles, 54 N.C. 302; Love v. Nelson, 54 N.C. 339, and many other cases. The Court says in many of these cases that it would be against equity and good conscience to allow the bargainor to repudiate his contract, and thereby to reap the benefit of the bargainee's money and labor.

But it is contended by the defendant that, if this is so, the defendant is protected from any liability to account for the reason that he has denied the contract, and the law will not allow the plaintiff to prove it. And this is admitted to be true, so far as establishing the contract for the purpose of enforcing a specific performance, or the recovery of damages for a breach thereof. But can not the plaintiff prove there was a contract under which her intestate was induced to enter and put valuable improvements on the land? If she can not, the fraud upon which the plaintiff's action is based is protected by the simple answer of the defendant. This, it seems to us, can not be and is not the law in this State. In Albea v. Griffin, supra, which seems to be regarded as the leading case, it does not distinctly appear that the defendant denied the contract, and, if he did not, certainly no stress is put upon that fact by the learned Judge who wrote the opinion. The opinion in Albea v. Griffin was written by Judge GASTON at June Term, 1838, and at June Term, 1839, he wrote the opinion in Lyon v. Crissman, (101) 22 N.C. 268, in which he uses this language: "If the objection be that the agreement is void, because not reduced to writing, and this objection could avail anything, it should have been set up in the pleadings. But this has not been done. The plaintiff avers one agreement, and the defendant sets up another, and the parties have left to proof which representation is the true one." Ellis v. Ellis, 16 N.C. 245, was an action for specific performance of a parol contract for the sale of land, and alternate relief was demanded for betterments. The answer denied the contract, and the Court held that it could not be specifically enforced, but allowed evidence, and ordered an account as to rents and profits and for betterments. In Pitt v. Moore, 99 N.C. 85, which was an action on a parol contract for betterments, where the defendant did not admit the contract as alleged, and set up a different contract or state of facts to those alleged by the plaintiff (and this was an action by the personal representative), and the plaintiff was allowed to prove the agreement, and the Court granted the relief prayed for and ordered an account to be taken, in the opinion of the Court the following language is used: "Whatever may have been the ancient rule, it is now well settled by many decisions, from Baker v. Carson, 16 N.C. 381, in which there was a divided Court, but RUFFIN, C. J., and GASTON, J., concurring, and Albea v. Griffin, 22 N.C. 9, by a unanimous Court, to Hedgepeth v. Rose, 95 N.C. 41, that where the labor or money of a person has been expended in the permanent improvement and enrichment of the property of another by parol contract or agreement, which can not be enforced because, and only because, it is not in writing, the party repudiating the contract, as he may do, will not be allowed to take and held the property thus improved and enriched, without compensation for the additional value which these improvements have conferred (102) upon the property and rests upon the broad principle that it is against conscience that one man shall be enriched to the injury and cost of another, induced by his own acts." This was an action by the personal representative. Tucker v. Markland, 101 N.C. 422, is to the same effect as Pitt v. Moore, 99 N.C. 85, where plaintiffs brought an action for possession of land and defendants answered, setting up a parol contract of purchase by their ancestor, alleging permanent improvements, and asking payment for the same. The plaintiffs replied, denying the contract and defendants' right to have pay for improvements. But the Court allowed evidence to be introduced to establish the parol contract which the jury found to have been made by defendants' ancestor, and the Court ordered a reference as to rents and profits and improvements, and this Court affirmed the judgment. Thomas v. Kyles, 54 N.C. 302, is a case where the plaintiff alleged that his intestate made a parol contract with the defendant for the purchase of land, entered upon and took possession thereof, and put valuable improvements on the same. The defendant answered, denying the contract. But the plaintiff was allowed to prove the contract by parol evidence, and, while the Court refused to compel a specific performance, the plaintiff's claim for betterments was allowed. Other cases might be cited as authority for the admission of parol evidence, to show that the party entered and placed valuable improvements on land under a parol contract or promise to convey, but we do not deem it necessary to do so. It seems to be settled by this Court that it may be done; and the cases cited show that where a party is induced to go upon land, and put valuable improvements thereon, by the owner thereof, upon a parol promise to convey the same to the party putting the improvements on the land, and the owner afterwards refuses to convey, it is held by this Court to be a (103) fraud upon the party so induced, and the Court will compel him to pay for such improvements.

It was also contended for the defendant that the right to have pay for improvements only exists while the bargainee is in possession, and Albea v. Griffin, 22 N.C. 9, and Pass v. Brooks, 125 N.C. 129, were cited as authority for this position. But neither of these cases, nor any other case that has been called to our attention, supports this contention. In these cases and other like cases, the bargainee being in possession, the Court said that such bargainee should not be turned out until the bargainor paid for the improvements. This was only a means resorted to by the Court to enforce the bargainee's recovery, and not as the grounds of the plaintiff's equity, which was made distinctly to rest upon the fraud of the bargainor; and it would be just as fraudulent and unconscionable for the bargainor to take profit by means of such fraud, if the bargainee was out of possession, as if he was still in possession. It is the fraud that gives the right of action, and not the possession. But the cases of Tucker v. Markland, Pitt v. Moore, Thomas v. Kyles, supra, and other cases, seem to settle this contention against the defendant. It is true that it is said in Pass v. Brooks, supra, that the contract is admitted, and, defendants being in possession, the case of Albea v. Griffin was followed as to the judgment; and the statement that the contract was admitted is only a statement of the facts of the case. There is nothing in the case of Pass v. Brooks that conflicts with what is said in this opinion. The doctrines announced in this case, or many of them, are held in the recent case of North v. Bunn, 122 N.C. 766, in which case it is held that the bargainee was entitled to an account, and that, if anything should be found in her favor, it should be a lien on the land. It may be that this judgment was given owing to the peculiar circumstances (104) of that case. But from the authorities cited, and the strong equitable reasons appealing to our consciences for redress against a fraud, we are of the opinion that the evidence should have been admitted; and if it shall be found on the trial that the plaintiff's intestate was induced to go upon the lot and put valuable permanent improvements upon the same, by reason of the promise of the defendant that he would convey the lot to him, the plaintiff will be entitled to have an account to ascertain the value of the improvements, subject to the rents and profits, while the plaintiff and intestate were in possession, and, if a balance be found in her favor, the judgment shall constitute a charge on the rents and profits of said lot until it is paid, and a receiver may be appointed if it shall be deemed necessary.

Error. New trial.


Summaries of

Luton v. Badham

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Oct 1, 1900
37 S.E. 143 (N.C. 1900)

In Luton v. Badham, 127 N.C. 96 (100), we find: "If the plaintiff's intestate entered upon the defendant's land under a parol contract and placed valuable and permanent improvements thereon, and the defendant, after such improvements were made, repudiates the contract and refuses to convey, the plaintiff has an equitable cause of action.

Summary of this case from Knowles v. Wallace

In Luton v. Badham, 127 N.C. 96; 53 L.R.A., 337; 80 Am. St., 783, it was held that one who had entered upon land and placed thereon improvements, under a parol contract to convey, can recover from the vendor who refuses to execute the contract the value of the improvements, though the contract be denied by the vendor; and to that extent the case of Dunn v. Moore, 38 N.C. 361, was overruled.

Summary of this case from Love v. Atkinson
Case details for

Luton v. Badham

Case Details

Full title:LUTON v. BADHAM

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Oct 1, 1900

Citations

37 S.E. 143 (N.C. 1900)
127 N.C. 96

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