Grant v. Settle
Grant v. Settle
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The testimony is conflicting as to what the contract really was between the parties, -but all concur in the statement that the appellant was to build a house which the appellee was to live in and control at a cost not exceeding' $2,000. That he failed to build the house is conceded, and the damages are not excessive or unwarranted from the proof. If the failure to comply with appellee’s part of the contract prevented the appellant from building the house the jury was told that the verdict should be for the defendant, or that if she had committed waste on the premises by improper cultivation or a destruction of the timber unnecessarily the appellant was entitled to recover on his set-off. It was purely a question of fact as to the nature of the contract between the parties and its breach, and also a question of fact as to the alleged waste by the appellee.
It was not necessary that the contract should have been in writing. The appellant had accepted a conveyance from the appellee of all interest he had in that particular land, and as a part consideration was to build her a house. The law implies that it was to be erected within a reasonable time, and its construction to begin at once, as the contract had been performed on th.e part of the appellee. There was
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.