Ammerman v. Karnowski

1924 OK 941, 234 P. 774, 109 Okla. 156, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 761
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 21, 1924
Docket13736
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1924 OK 941 (Ammerman v. Karnowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammerman v. Karnowski, 1924 OK 941, 234 P. 774, 109 Okla. 156, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 761 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

LOGSDON, C.

There are 35 assignments of error in the petition in error, but there is no effort to follow them seriatim in the briefs. Their discussion here will be comprehended by the answers to the following questions:

1. Was there such an acceptance of the deed by defendant as relieved plaintiff from the obligation of his contract to convey a “clear title of record”?
*158 2. If not, did tlie abstract furnished show a clear title of record?
3.- Were any of the instructions of the court to which exceptions were taken, prej-udicially erroneous?
4. Are the verdict and judgment sustained by the evidence?

It is disclosed by the record that on July 22, 1919, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to convey and defendant agreed to purchase 200 acres of land for a consideration of $12,000. On the same day plaintiff and his wife executed a warranty deed to the land in favor of defendant. This contract and deed, together with $500 deposit on the purchase price, were placed in a bank to be there held until possession was delivered by plaintiff, when the deal between the parties was to be closed. By this contract defendant bound himself to pay $4,000 on or before January 1, 1920, and to execute a note and mortgage for the balance of $8,000, payable one year after its date. Plaintiff, by said contract, bound himself to furnish defendánt an “'abstract of title showing clear title of record.”

It is not disclosed by the record just when possession was given and deed delivered to defendant, but the $4,000 was paid December 23, 1919, and on the same day the note and mortgage sued on were executed, so it may be assumed that possession was given and deed delivered on or before that date. It is contended by plaintiff that this delivery of deed and possession operated to discharge the executory obligation of plaintiff, expressed in the contract, to furnish “abstract of title showing clear title of record.” In other words, that the acts of defendant in taking possession, receiving the deed, and executing the note and mortgage back constituted an acceptance of the title which the deed purported to convey.

The testimony on both sides is in agreement as to the intention of defendant to obtain a loan on the land as a means of paying it out. The only material disagreement in the testimony on this point is as to whether plaintiff knew that the State School Land Department was to be satisfied with the title. It may therefore be said that both parties to the contract knew that someone other than defendant was to be satisfied with the title. Plaintiff contends that defendant’s attorney was to approve the title, while defendant contends that the School Land Department was to approve it. For the purposes of the present discussion it will be' assumed that plaintiff’s contention in this respect is the correct one, and that the title was to be approved by defendant’s attorney.

It. could not have been approved by him; when the deed was delivered December 23, 1919, because the abstract was not certified by the lalbstracter until 3 p. m., December 30, 1919. Therefore, the acceptance of the deed toy defendant on December 23rd, could only have been conditional, as contended by him. After the abstract was furnished defendant’s attorney disapproved the title to 20 acres of the land, and thereafter, by an instrument acknowledged May-13, 1920, plaintiff sought to meet this objection.

It is therefore concluded that there was not such an acceptance of the deed by defendant as relieved plaintiff from the executory obligation of his contract.

"Was the title shown by the abstract a, clear title of record?

After the abstract had been examined by the attorney for defendants he disapproved the title to 20 acres of the land. This 20-acres is referred to as the Wade S. Miller land. Miller was a minor and the land was-«old by his guardian through the county court of Tulsa county. The petition for the sale of this land was not verified as required by Comp. Stat. 1921, sec. 1470. Apparently conceding the defective title to-this 20 acres, plaintiffs executed an, instrument acknowledged May 13, 1920, the obligatory paragraph of which reads:

“Now, Therefore, in consideration of $1.00 and as a part of the consideration to the said Ammerman for the acceptance by the said Karnowski of said deed in fulfillment of said contract, the said E. Ammerman. and Birdie Ammerman, his wife, hereby agree with the said Peter Karnowski, his heirs and assigns, that the covenant of warranty, together with all the rights arising therefrom shall be and the same is hereby extended until the full expiration of the period of time within which said minor and all persons claiming under him, may institute an action for the recovery of said twenty acres of land, hereby acknowledging to the said Karnowski that until the expiration of said period of time we and our heirs will respond to all the obligations of said covenant of warranty, even though the statutory period of our liability thereunder may have expired before the expiration of the time within which said minor might institute an action to-recover said land.”

Defendant Peter Karnowski testified that *159 he refused to accept this as a discharge of the original contract except upon condition that it was approved as the basis for the loan which he was seeking to procure. This testimony is not contradicted.

As to another 20 acres, referred to as the Morris F. Isbell land, requirements were made by the School Land Department as conditions to the approval of this title. One requirement was .the procuring of .the allotment certificate; another was that the order removing restrictions must show the roll number of the allottee; another was the procuring of an affidavit of identity as to one of the 'grantees through whom title had passed, and whose name appeared in the abstract in two different ways.

As to the 160 acres, known as the Bessie M. and Daniel O. Dotts land, the School Land Department disapproved the title for the reason that the guardian’s deed was executed more than one year after the entry of the order of sale, the department holding that this rendered the title uncertain under Comp. Stat. 1921, sec. 1479.

These objections to the title to the Isbell land and to the Dotts land are merely referred to as showing the justifiable doubts of the defendants as to the character of title they were receiving. As to these two tracts plaintiffs argue in their briefs against the validity of the objections to these two titles. It is not considered necessary to pass upon these matters in reaching a conclusion on this case in view of the undisputed record on the Miller land.

In the recent case of Abraham et al. v. Homer, 102 Okla. 12, 226 Pac. 45, this court said:

“In probate cases a proceeding for a sale of real estate is a distinct and independent proceeding, although had in the general cause (course) of administration.”

After defining quasi jurisdictional facts, as to which statutory requirements are held to be merely directory, this court said further :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 941, 234 P. 774, 109 Okla. 156, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammerman-v-karnowski-okla-1924.