Baldwin v. Chappell

231 P. 496, 105 Okla. 38, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 23, 1924
Docket12630
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 231 P. 496 (Baldwin v. Chappell) 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
Baldwin v. Chappell, 231 P. 496, 105 Okla. 38, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 455 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

-.Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The defendant in error was plaintiff in the trial court, and the plaintiff in error was a defendant. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the court below.

On the 18th of September. 1920, the plaintiff and defendant Mrs. Emma Baldwin entered into a contract concerning real estate whereby plaintiff agreed to buy and the said defendant to sell a quarter section of land in Beckham county. In the contract it was agreed by Mrs. Baldwin that she would make a good merchantable title to the plaintiff within a specified time, conveying the land to hiin, and the plaintiff deposited $1,000 in the Farmers State Bank of Elk City to be delivered to defendant as part purchase money on her furnishing merchant *39 able title as in the contract agreed, and the plaintiff agreed to pay an additional, sum of $11,000 in installments. The plaintiff turned down the title, refused to complete the transaction, demanded his $1,000 from' the bank,. and upon refusal of the bank to turn the money back to ¡him he filed this action against the bank for the money. The petition alleges the making of the contract, and attaches a copy thereof; that defendant’s title to the land was not merchantable for the reason that she claimed under a will made by her husband, and that because of the peculiar language of tbq will it was uncertain where the title is vested and defendant is unable to deliver merchantable title as was agreed in the contract; that the bank withholds the $1,000 and has refused to pay it to plaintiff on demand; as to Mrs. Baldwin the petition alleges that she is claiming some interest in the money, but such claim is inferior to the plaintiff’s rights and asks that she be required to set out her claim. Plaintiff prays judgment against the bank for the $1,000, and for an attorney’s fee of $300, and for general relief against both defendants.

The defendant Emma Baldwin filed answer and cross-petition. The answer is, first, a general denial, and, second, affirmative allegations that the contract was enforceable and that she had complied with its terms and had tendered to plaintiff merchantable title to the land. By way of cross-petition she alleges the making of the contract, compliance with its terms upon her part, and breach thereof on the part of the plaintiff. That by reason of the breach she has been damaged in the sum of $4,000, for which she prays judgment. The bank answered to the effect that the $1,000 was placed in the bank by the parties to be held in escrow, that the bank has no interest in the money, and tenders and offers to pay it into court, and denies any liability to plaintiff for attorney’s fees.

The case was called for trial on the 29th of March, 1921, a jury was waived and the cause tried to the court. The bank paid into court the $1,000 escrow money, and plaintiff dismissed the case as to the bank. The trial was had as between the defendant Emma Baldwin and the plaintiff, upon the defendant’s cross-petition for damages for breach of the contract of purchase and sale of the real estate. At the close of the evidence the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, denying the defendant any relief upon her cross-petition for damages, and directed the court clerk to pay the $1,000 escrow money to the plaintiff. The defendant Emma Baldwin prosecutes appeal and assigns as error that the judgment for plaintiff ayhinst the defendant, denying the defendant relief upon her cross-petition, is not supported .by the evidence and is contrary to the law.

The finding and judgment of the court was, in effect, a finding that the title to the land, tendered by the defendant Emma Baldwin, was not a merchantable title, or, at best was in doubt, and for that reason there was no breach of the contract entered into between the parties, and consequently defendant Baldwin was not entitled to have her claim for damages considered. The question of whether or not the title was good in Emma Baldwin, or whether she tendered good merchantable title to the plaintiff depended upon the language of a will. The land had formerly been the property of Thomas Jefferson Baldwin, the husband of Emma Baldwin. There is no question raised as to the title of Thomas Jefferson Baldwin. On the 13th of March, 1998, he made a will, and subsequently died, and the will was probated and an order of distribution made according to what was understood to be the wishes of the testator as expressed by his will. The beneficiaries under the will thought that the effect of the will, as to the property involved here, was to carve out a life estate in the property in favor of Emma Baldwin, with the remainder over to Melvin R. Baldwin, one of the sons of the testator and defendant Emma Baldwin. The title, as tendered to the plaintiff, was a joint deed from Emma Baldwin and Melvin R. Baldwin and his wife, as grantors, to the plaintiff as grantee. If on the one hand, this deed had the effect of passing title to the grantee upon its delivery the judgment was wrong, and plaintiff had breached his contract and defendant had a right to have her claim for damages considered. If, on the other hand, there was a doubt as to whether the will passed a life q'state to Emma Baldwin with remainder over to Melvin R. Baldwin, the contract had not been breached and the defendant was not entitled to recover, and the judgment was correct. There is no dispute about the rights of Emma Baldwin. It is tacitly admitted, and seems certain, that the will devised to her a life estate in the property involved here. After giving to Emma Baldwin a life estate in the land, the will then provides:

“To my son, Melvin R. Baldwin, I give the remainder in fee to the southeast quarter of section three in township eleven, range twenty-one in said county; and in case of his death before said remainder vests, then to his heirs or assigns.'’

*40 The. court, in making the order and decree of distribution of the Baldwin estate, decreed as follows:

“To Emma Baldwin, a life estate in the S.B. Qr. of sec. 3 in township 11 N. of range 21 W. I. M., remainder in fee to Melvin R. Baldwin, his heirs and assigns.’’

It seems that the decree of distribution had become final, or at least there is no question raised about it here. The defect in the title pointed out by the plaintiff is that this language is susceptible of the construction that Melvin R. Baldwin was given a contingent remainder, dependent upon his outliving his mother, Emma Baldwin, and unless he outlives his mother, the remainder can never be vested in him, or at best there is doubt about it, and therefore a deed from him cannot or may not convey title. He contends that the remainder over is not vested in Melvin R. Baldwin, and can never vest in him if he dies before Em,ma Baldwin dies, but the remainder will vest in the children of Melvin R. Baldwin, who will take the land, and since they do not join in the deed, the title to the remainder does not pass. This contention must of necessity be based upon the last clause of tbe paragraph, which reads:

“And in case of his death before said remainder vests, then to his heirs or assigns.”

Reading the paragraph without the last clause, it seems that the language is plain and unmistakable: “To my son, Melvin R. Baldwin, I give the remainder in fee to” the land, describing it. The testator gave to Melvin R. Baldwin the remainder in fee at the closing of the life estate.

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Related

Goodwin v. Thomas
232 F. Supp. 193 (W.D. Oklahoma, 1964)
Oberlander v. Eddington
1964 OK 98 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Riddle v. Jay
1960 OK 223 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P. 496, 105 Okla. 38, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-chappell-okla-1924.