Faulconer & Fenwick v. Samples
Faulconer & Fenwick v. Samples
Opinion of the Court
— This action is to recover the balance ($212.01 principal and interest), claimed by plaintiff to be due on the following contract:
“This contract made and entered into this seventh day of October, 1892, by and between J. D. Faulconer and John H. Samples for the following purposes — the said J. D. Faulconer sells to said John H. Samples his crop of corn, consisting of sixty acres, more or less, for the sum of $500.00 (five hundred dollars), with the exception of forty barrels of corn reserved by the said J. D. Faulconer for his own use, the said Faulconer is to gather said corn for the said Samples; said corn to be paid for Novémber 1, 1892, and December 1, 1892. The said Faulconer acknowledges the receipt of fifty dollars on this contract.
“John H. Samples.
“J. D. Faulconeb.”
The determination of the dispute between these litigants depends upon the construction of the foregoing contract. Plaintiff contends that the sale was of the crop of corn, as such, at the lump price of $500. Defendant contends that it was a sale by the acre; and that the words “more or less,” will not cover so great a discrepancy as was ascertained to exist'in this case, a survey made at defendant’s instigation having shown there was but forty-three and ninety-nine hundredths, instead of sixty acres. Defendant arrives at his conclusion of what is due plaintiff by assuming that the purchase was of sixty acres for $500, and reducing that sum in the proportion that the true number of acres bears to sixty acres.
Our opinion is that the court erred in adopting defendant’s view of the. contract. The sale was of the crop for a gross sum. The words of the contract, “consisting of sixty acres, more or less,” do not make a sale by the acre, or by any other quantity, save as would be included by the entire crop except forty barrels reserved. We must accept the contract as made; defendant’s view as carried out makes a new contract. There is no provision in the contract for a purchase .by the acre, if there was, defendant’s authorities as to the elasticity in the words, “more or less,” would find application. There is no mode provided for of ascertaining the true number of acres, nor any provision for reduction, if a less number was found.
In Ayers v. Hayes, 13 Mo. 252, the contract provided that “said Hayes has sold to said Ayers his farm now in his possession, in Marion county, state of Missouri, known as a part of the lower Marion College tract, and bounded as follows, viz.: ' Beginning at a
“Now if this land thus supposed to contain a certain quantity of acres more or less had been sold for a sum of money, say, for example, for $4,000, without naming any price per acre, and upon actual survey, it should be found to contain less than the estimated quantity, that could afford no cause of complaint to the purchaser; for he bought the entire tract for the entire sum — and if he guessed wrong, as to the number of acres, it is his misfortune or his fault.”
It seems to me that the reasoning in that ease finds application here and that it is opposed to the judgment given below.
We do not regard the words “more or less,” as used in this contract, as in any way affecting the agreed price. They have reference to the quantity of
The judgment will be reversed and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff for the amount claimed, with interest.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.