Ali v. Sitts

404 P.2d 100, 1 Ariz. App. 439
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJune 30, 1965
DocketNo. 1 CA-CIV 11
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 404 P.2d 100 (Ali v. Sitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ali v. Sitts, 404 P.2d 100, 1 Ariz. App. 439 (Ark. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

STEVENS, Chief Judge.

This consolidated appeal relates to the-claimed right to off-set an overpayment of rent under an oral lease arrangement, against the fixed rental specified in a subsequent written lease. Mrs. Sitts and her son Mr. Stofella, owned approximately 80 acres of farm land in Yuma County. Adjoining-this land is another approximately 80 acres of farm land which was owned by Mrs. O’Brien and Mrs. Folley. The ladies are-sisters. The land was acquired by these-parties by inheritance in the mid 1920’s.

Sultan Ali is a farmer with a limited command of English. Mr. Ali farmed the-combined approximately 160 acres beginning in the year 1932 and continuously through the year 1958. He remained in-possession, farming this land in the early part of 1959 at which time the above named owners sold the property to a party not involved in this litigation. The evidence discloses that the initial 1932 landlord-tenant relationship was evidenced by a written lease and that there were then three successive three year leases. Thereafter Mr. Ali continued to farm the land on an oral arrangement similar to the written lease arrangements pursuant to which he was required to pay to the owners l/3rd of the net proceeds of the crops grown upon the land. It is not necessary to recite the details of these arrangements. On the 28th day of December 1956, at the request of the owners of the two parcels, he signed two separate leases, the lease for the Sitts-Stofella land calling for annual payments of $3850 payable on December 1st, the first of said payments being due December 1, 1957. There was a like lease in relation to the O’Brien-Folley property except that the annual rent was $3800 a year. The rental was computed on the basis of $50 per acre. The leases were not complex documents and were silent as to any indebtedness due from the owners to Mr. Ali in relation to payments which Mr. Ali had made for the year 1956 and prior years.

On or about the 1st day of December 1957 when the first annual payment became [441]*441‘due under the leases, Mr. Ali paid $3000 to the owners of the Sitts-Stofella land and .a like sum to the owners of the O’Brien-Folley land. There was some conversation at the time and from the record it is ■not clear that either party fully understood the other. On the 22nd day of December 1958, the owners of each of the parcels .•gave Mr. Ali notice of cancellation the ■notice specifying that the reason for such •cancellation was the fact of arrearage in •the payment of rent. Mr. Ali promptly •consulted his attorney who prepared a letter for Mr. Ali’s signature the letter claiming that there had been an overpayment ■under the oral lease arrangement. Mr. Ali delivered the letter to Mrs. O’Brien ■with whom Mr. Ali had most of his business ■relationships concerning both parcels and ;at the same time delivered two checks. 'The checks were in that sum which Mr. Ali had calculated to be the difference between the overpayment made on the oral .•arrangement and the sums specified in the written leases up to and including the sums • due on December 1, 1958. There was little conversation at the time of the delivery of the letter and these checks. Mrs. O’Brien testified that this was the first that she had known that there had been an ■ overpayment. The checks were cashed. 'Mr. Ali continued in possession of the land ••and occupied the same at the time of the •sale of the land which took place shortly ■thereafter.

After the land had been sold and on the 11th day of May 1959, two separate actions were filed which are the subject of ■this appeal. The owners of each of the '80 acre parcels filed a separate suit for 'back rent being the difference between the two years of rent specified in the written lease and the money received from Mr. Ali in December 1957 and December 1958. In both actions Mr. Ali filed a counter- ■ claim for overpayment and urged the right of off-set.- The cases were consolidated for trial and were tried to the court without a jury. A timely request was made ior findings of fact and conclusions of law.

It was agreed that if Mr. Ali was not entitled to a counter-claim or an off-set that then there should be a recovery in the sum prayed for in each of the two cases. As a result of the trial, the court did not allow an off-set, judgment was entered in each case as prayed for and Mr. Ali prosecuted this consolidated appeal.

In the findings of fact, the trial court found that during the year 1956 Mr. Ali had paid a total of $5,000, this figure having been corrected at the oral argument to the sum of $10,000 being $5,000 for each of the 80 acre parcels. The findings further established that the one-third entitlement for each parcel for the year 1956 was the sum of $2,423.43. The court further found that if an off-set was to be allowed the overpayment in 1956 on the O’Brien-Folley land would have been in the sum prayed for which would have left these parties exactly equal whereas there would have been an overpayment on the Sitts-Folley land in the sum of $8.99. The court found that these overpayments were voluntary payments. The trial court then announced the following conclusions of law:

“CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
“That all payments made by the Defendants to the Plaintiffs under the oral sharecrop agreements were voluntary payments and a party cannot by direct action or by way of set-off or counterclaim recover money voluntarily paid with a full knowledge of all the facts and without any fraud, duress or extortion, although no obligation to make such payment existed.
“II
“That the defendants by making said voluntary payments and then entering into the change of position brought about by the execution of the written lease on December 28, 1956, and thereby allowing the plaintiffs to change their position without any knowledge that a claim was made against them by the Defendants, are'not estopped from [442]*442claiming that said voluntary payments were made under a mistake of fact.
“HI
“That the Plaintiffs are entitled to recover upon their Complaint in the sum asked for against the Defendants.
“IV
“That the Plaintiffs are entitled to be dismissed upon the Counter-claim filed by the Defendants.
“Judgment to be entered by the Clerk forthwith upon the filing of these Findings & Conclusions.
“DATED this 15th day of May, 1961.”

Where the evidence supports findings of fact we are bound thereby although we are not bound by the trial court’s conclusion of law based upon those findings of fact. The evidence presented to the trial court was a recalculation of income and expenses beginning with the year 1953. Timely objections were made on the basis of the three year statute of limitations and also on the basis of immateriality as well as other well stated objections. In view of the fact that the case was tried to the court without a jury the court did not make specific rulings on these objections and was liberal in relation to his receipt of evidence. As a consequence we have the historical background both in the reporter’s transcript of the evidence of the trial and in the depositions of Mrs. Sitts and Mrs. O’Brien which depositions were received in evidence, all of this testimony having been read by this Court.

The record fully reflects that in all of the years of dealings between the parties there was never a formal accounting.

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Bluebook (online)
404 P.2d 100, 1 Ariz. App. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ali-v-sitts-arizctapp-1965.