Anselman, Adm'r v. Oklahoma City University

1946 OK 161, 172 P.2d 782, 197 Okla. 529, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1946
DocketNo. 31995.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1946 OK 161 (Anselman, Adm'r v. Oklahoma City University) 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
Anselman, Adm'r v. Oklahoma City University, 1946 OK 161, 172 P.2d 782, 197 Okla. 529, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 584 (Okla. 1946).

Opinions

DAVISON, J.

Many years ago, Ir-minda and Sophia Banning, sisters, came to Oklahoma City, took up their abode together, went to work, never married, and accumulated sizable estates in Oklahoma City real estate. In 1931 they made mutual identical wills providing that in the event of the death of either, the decedent’s property should go to the survivor. On February 28, 1942, Sophia died and all her- interest in the property passed under her will to Irminda. Soon after the death of Sophia, Fred Anselman, their grandnephew, came to Oklahoma City and thereafter made his home with Irminda, who was then nearing 70 years of age. Before many months had elapsed she was talking of relieving herself of the burden of looking after the property and contributing it to the use and benefit of some worthy cause. The first institution she mentioned as a possible donee of such a gift was Phillips University, a school sponsored and supported by the Christian Church, at Enid, Okla. Later, after talking with Mr. D. W. Hogan, president of the City National Bank & Trust Company,. where she did her banking, she finaly decided upon Oklahoma City University, a Methodist school, as the donee for such a gift. After several conferences concerning the matter, in early April, 1943, she directed Mr. Roy C. Lytle, an Oklahoma City attorney, to draw up a contract between herself and Oklahoma City University in which it was agreed that she would convey to said institution various pieces of her real estate described therein for the purpose of activating a fund to be established in memory of herself and her deceased sister, to be known as the “Banning Scholarship Foundation”. Among other things, the contract also provided that the deed and instruments to effect such conveyance were to be placed in the above-named bank, as escrow agent, to be delivered to the University upon the bank being furnished with satisfactory proof that the University had raised in money or obtained pledges of not less than $100,000 and that the Oklahoma Methodist Conference had made certain commitments, but that delivery of the conveyance to the University should not be delayed later than December 31, 1943, in any event. In the contract the University agreed, among other things, to accept such conveyance, to pay the 1943 taxes on the property; to keep it insured and free from mortgage or encumbrance and to pay Miss Banning out of the income therefrom during the rest of her life the sum of $500 per month, or a sum substantially its equivalent in purchasing power, to be deter *531 mined on the basis of the Dow-Jones indices.

On Wednesday, April 14, 1943, before the final draft of the contract was ready for signing, Miss Banning was stricken with a heart attack and taken to Wesley Hospital. On Thursday afternoon, April 15th, Mr. Lytle brought the contract to the hospital, where she signed it, and the following Saturday afternoon, Hogan brought the deed, which she likewise signed in her hospital bed. She died there the following day, Sunday, April 18, 1943.

Thereafter, Fred Anselman was appointed administrator of Miss Banning’s estate and in said capacity commenced this action against Oklahoma City University to set aside said deed and contract, alleging in general substance that due to the circumstances of the case, Miss Banning’s execution of said instruments was ineffective to make them valid and binding. By answer and cross-petition the defendant University denied the administrator’s charges and asked, among other things, that its title to the property be quieted against any and all claims thereto by said administrator and/or any and all persons claiming by, through or under him. Upon a trial to the court, judgment was for the. defendant quieting its title and refusing cancellation of the deed and contract on the basis of specific findings to the effect that at the time Miss Banning executed the deed and contract she was not incapacitated by age, infirmity, or illness from entering into a valid and binding contract and that she was not acting under undue influence.

In discussing the questions involved herein, we will henceforth refer to Fred Anselman, administrator, as plaintiff, and Oklahoma City University as defendant, or the University, and sometimes to Irminda Banning as the deceased or decedent.

Plaintiff argues his assignments of error under four propositions, the first of which is as follows: “Deeds to real property must be delivered and accepted during the lifetime of the grantor.” In support of this proposition plaintiff argues that in order for the agreement set forth in the written contract to be enforceable, it must have been accepted by the University and Miss Banning’s deed have been delivered to said University during her lifetime, citing authorities to the effect that to make a valid gift, there must be a delivery of the thing given and acceptance by the donee; that a gift cannot be made to take effect in the future; that a promise to make a gift, being without consideration, is unenforceable, and that a deed does not take effect until delivered. On the hypothesis that the gift was never completed hinges also counsel’s argument that the evidence of Miss Banning’s previous intention to make it was inadmissible. In our opinion such arguments do not deserve serious consideration, for they concern a matter which does not appear to have been in issue at the trial. As to the University’s acceptance of the contract, this was done when its president, Dr. C. Q. Smith, pursuant to authorization by the board of trustees of said institution, affixed his signature to the contract in his official capacity, and said signature was duly attested by the secretary of the University. Plaintiff attached a copy of the contract to its petition showing that said president and secretary signed it on April 16th (prior to Miss Banning’s death). In its answer, the defendant admitted the execution of said contract and in his reply plaintiff denied that there was a good and valuable consideration for it, but did not question that it was duly executed as it purported to be. It is elementary that a litigant may not change the theory of his case on appeal, and that ordinarily this court will not decide an issue not raised at the trial. Small v. Shull, 190 Okla. 418, 124 P. 2d 381; McCann v. City of Enid, 192 Okla. 495, 137 P. 2d 586; Butterick v. Molen, 192 Okla. 602, 138 P. 2d 89. Plaintiff’s contention that Miss Banning’s deed was not delivered to the University before her death is based solely on the fact that after signing the deed, she handed it to D. W. Hogan, and the suggestion that he was *532 her agent for delivery of the deed, and that with her death, such agency terminated. Such a suggestion or assumption is contrary to the facts. It is true that after Miss Banning went to the hospital she sent word through Mr. Hogan to her attorney that she wanted the contract brought to her hospital room, but there is no proof that when Hogan later took the deed there for signing, he was acting in any capacity other than his official one, as president of the bank which had been designated in the contract as escrow holder for the parties thereto. After Miss Banning signed the deed and Hogan received it back from her, it was then in escrow and Miss Banning’s subsequent death had no effect on the passage of title to the property therein described. See 19 Am. Jur. 448, par. 27.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 161, 172 P.2d 782, 197 Okla. 529, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anselman-admr-v-oklahoma-city-university-okla-1946.