Bartlesville Oil & Improvement Co. v. Hill

1911 OK 492, 121 P. 208, 30 Okla. 829, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 12, 1911
Docket1345
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1911 OK 492 (Bartlesville Oil & Improvement Co. v. Hill) 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
Bartlesville Oil & Improvement Co. v. Hill, 1911 OK 492, 121 P. 208, 30 Okla. 829, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 205 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHARP, C.

(after stating the facts as above). What interest, if any, had defendant in error in lot 10, block 8, McDaniel’s addition to the city of Bartlesville, on April 8, 1909, the date of the filing of plaintiff’s petition to foreclose the Wise mortgage on said lot? A determination of this question is decisive of this cause. The contract of July 24, 1907, between plaintiff in error and Ferdinand N. Lewis, provides, among other things, for the payment of the purchase price, equal installments maturing in 6, 12, and 18 months from date. It contains numerous provisions and conditions to be performed and observed on the part of Lewis, the breach of any one of which should work a forfeiture of the contract to all intents and purposes as fully, effectually, and completely as if the contract had not been made. Among the conditions named was that of payment of said installments, with interest, within sixty days after the same became *833 due and payable. The contract specifically provided that upon the failure to make said payments within the time fixed after maturity the Bartlesville Oil & Improvement Company should have the right to declare the contract void and at an end, retaining all payments received and all improvements erected on said premises as rental and liquidated damages, and that, until the completion of the payment of the purchase price, Lewis should hold as tenant of said company. Upon the happening of this contingency, the company was given the right of immediate possession of the premises, including the improvements thereon erected. It further provided that Lewis should have no right or power to sell, assign, lease, sublet, or in any manner transfer any interest or right he may have under and by virtue of said contract, except with the written consent of the company. This consent it is not contended was ever procured. It is also agreed that none of the installments or any interest thereon were ever paid. The lot belonged to plaintiff in error, and in making a contract concerning the sale thereof the owner had the undoubted right and authority to impose such terms and conditions as it saw fit, so long as the same violated no law or rule of public policy.- The conditions imposed were for its own benefit, and the rights of Lewis were fixed by the terms of said contract. Certainly it cannot be said that those claiming through Lewis would have any' greater rights than he had. Lewis only had the right to acquire title within the time and in the manner set out in the contract. Neither he nor those claiming under him ever complied with the contract in paying the installment notes or either of them.

In Ish v. McRae et al., 48 Ark. 413, 3 S. W. 440, Cockrill, C. J., in speaking for the court in a similar case, said:

“The first stipulation of the contract is one of purchase and sale. It binds the vendor to convey to the defendant, but to the terms of this agreement there is annexed the condition that, in case of failure in the performance of the agreement to pay the first installment of purchase money, the intended vendee shall thereafter pay rent for the use of the land. It was certainly competent for the parties to enter into a binding agreement of this nature. Wells v. Smith, 2 Edw. Ch. [N. Y.] 78; Id., 7 Paige [N. Y.] 22 [31 Am. Dec. 274], The vendor, being unwilling *834 to take the hazard of losing both principal and interest of the purchase price, and the rent of the land as well, may make a sale upon condition, and give the vendee an option to hold as purchaser or as tenant after a given day. The vendee here had, in effect, agreed that his right should depend upon the scrupulous adherence to the engagement be made to pay the purchase price, and that time should be a material consideration in the contract.”

Carpenter v. Thornburn, 76 Ark. 578, 89 S. W. 1047, was an appeal from the chancery court in a case similar in some of its aspects to the one under consideration. It was there held:

“The law on this point, so far as it applies to this case, is very clearly stated by Prof. Pomeroy as follows: ‘It 'is well settled that, when the parties have so stipulated as to make the time of payment of the essence of the contract within the view of equity as well as of the law, a court of equity cannot relieve a vendee who has made default. With respect to this rule there is no doubt. The only difficulty is in determining when time has thus been made essential. It is also equally certain that, when the contract is made to depend upon a condition precedent — in other' words, zuhen no right shall vest until certain acts have been done, as, for example, until the vendee 'has paid certain sums at certain specified times — then also a court of equity will not relieve the vendee against the forfeiture incurred by a breach of such condition precedent.’ ”

1 Pomeroy on Equity, sec. 445; Quertermous v. Hatfield, 54 Ark. 16, 14 S. W. 1096; Nelson v. Sanders, 123 Ala. 615, 26 South. 518; Wilcoxson v. Stitt, 65 Cal. 596, 4 Pac. 629, 52 Am. Rep. 310; Prather v. Brandon, 44 Ind. App. 45, 88 N. E. 700; Kerns v. McKean, 65 Cal. 411, 4 Pac. 404; Sutherland v. Parkins, 75 Ill. 338; Verstein v. Yeancy, 210 Pa. 109, 59 Atl. 689; Murphy v. Myar (Ark.) 128 S. W. 359; Sheehy v. Scott, 128 Iowa, 551, 104 N. E. 1139, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 365.

In Chambers et al. v. Anderson et al., 51 Kan. 385, 32 Pac. 1098, it was held that where by a written agreement for the sale of land parties stipulate that in case the second party shall fail to make the pa)nnent punctually and upon the strict terms and conditions named, and likewise perform each, all, and every agreement and stipulation, strictly and literally, without failure or default, then the contract, so far as it may bind the first party, should become utterly null and void, and all rights and interests *835 therein created or then existing in favor of or derived from the first party should utterly cease and determine, and the right of possession and all equitable and legal interests in the premises contracted for should revert to and revest in the first party, without any declaration of forfeiture or act of re-entry, or any other act by the first party to be performed, and without any right of the second party of reclamation or compensation for moneys paid or services performed as absolutely,_ fully, and perfectly as if the contract had never been made — that such provision was for the benefit of the first party, and the contract should be void only at his election, and that he could either avoid or enforce the contract at his own election. It was said by Horton, C. J.:

“The provision that this agreement should be void was for the benefit of the vendor. On the vendee’s default, the vendor might, therefore, consider the agreement void at his own election, or affirm it, and bring his action on the covenants.”

In Prather v. Brandon, supra, it was said:

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 492, 121 P. 208, 30 Okla. 829, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlesville-oil-improvement-co-v-hill-okla-1911.