Bradford v. Jones

1935 OK 193, 41 P.2d 857, 170 Okla. 636, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 789
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
Docket23111
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1935 OK 193 (Bradford v. Jones) 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
Bradford v. Jones, 1935 OK 193, 41 P.2d 857, 170 Okla. 636, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 789 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

OSBORN, V. C. J.

This action was filed in the district court of Oklahoma county by Willis Jones, as plaintiff, against W. A. Bradford, D. L. Bradford, and Owen F. Renegar, as defendants, to cancel certain instruments and quiet title to lots 9, 10, and 11, block 4, Reno addition to Oklahoma Oity, Okla. On application of defendants, the Olassen Company and A. B. McDonald were made parties defendants. The cause was tried to the court and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff, from which defendants have appealed. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

'On January 22, 1921, J. L. Trentman, being the owner of the property involved, entered into a contract with the defendant W. A. Bradford to convey the said lots to him. Said contract in part provided:

“This Agreement Witnesseth: That J. L. Trentman, of Wichita, Kansas, hereinafter designated as the Seller, hereby agrees to sell and convey to W. A. Bradford, of Oklahoma Olty hereinafter designated as the Buyer, upon the terms and conditions hereinafter expressed.
“Lot No. 9-10-11. Block 4, Reno- Addition Avenue. As recorded in the register office of Oklahoma county, Oklahoma, and the Buyer hereby agrees to pay to the Seller for said lot the sum of three hundred & fifty-seven dollars ($357.00), payable-three dollars ($3.-00) cash, then one 50/100 dollars ($1.50) per week In advance until said purchase price is paid in full without interest for the first two years; after two years from this date all deferred payments that then remain unpaid shall bear interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum. Interest to be paid semi-annually.
“Second: It is agreed that when the said purchase price and all special assessments or taxes, should any be levied, have been paid the Seller will execute to the Buyer a warranty deed, conveying, said lot free and clear of all encumbrance together with a printed copy of an abstract brought down to date and certified to by a reputable abstractor.
“Fifth: If such special assessments be not paid when due, or If the weekly or monthly payments shall be more than eight weeks delinquent (except in case of sickness, as hereinbefore provided), the Seller may, at his option, either declare the entire balance of the purchase price due and collectible, or he may rescind this contract to sell and convey said lot or lots and take possession thereof at his option; and in the event of such rescission, all payments already made by the Buyer shall be taken and retained by the Seller, not as penalty, but as and for liquidated damages for the breach of this contract, but failure or delay to *637 exercise said option at tlie time of any default shall not be or operate as a waiver of the r^glit to exercise such option at any time thereafter at his option.”

About a year after the date of the above contract, W. A. Bradford married Alice Bradford. The plaintiff, Willis Jones, is the son of Alice Bradford and the stepson of W. A. Bradford. These parties moved upon the property and lived thereon until about October 3, 1923. About that time W. A. Bradford moved to Arizona, leaving his wife and stepson in Oklahoma City. At that time he had paid on the contract the sum of $169.50. On the 1st day of May, , 1924, the above property was transferred by Trentman to the Classen Company subject to the outstanding contract. After W. A. Bradford moved to Arizona he made no further payments, and by agreement with the Classen Company, Alice Bradford continued to make payments on the contract, aggregating $111.50. Alice Bradford died on August S, 1925. Thereafter plaintiff, Willis Jones, continued with the payments. When plaintiff was 19 years of age, by proper proceedings in the district court his majority rights were conferred' upon him, and in another action in the district court, wherein he was plaintiff and the Classen Company was defendant, the court ordered that a deed issue to him upon payment of the balance due on the contract to the property herein involved. In pursuance of said judgment and on May 2, 1930, the Classen Company conveyed said property to him by warranty deed.

Thereafter the property became valuable for oil, and on July 25, 1930, W. A. Bradford, who had been a resident of Arizona continuously since October 3, 1923, executed a power of attorney to his brother, the defendant D. L. Bradford, and joined by his brother executed a contract to Owen F. Renegar, defendant, conveying to him a one-half interest in the property herein involved for his contemplated services as attorney in clearing the title to the property. Both instruments were recorded, and the purpose of this action is to have said instruments canceled and set aside as clouds upon plaintiff’s title.

The trial court made and included certain findings in the journal entry of final judgment which are in part as follows:

“The court further finds that W. A. Bradford entered into a contract to purchase above-described real estate with the Trentman Company and that afterwards the Trentman Company assigned contract to Olassen Company on or about the 1st day of May, 1924, and that since which time W. A. Bradford never made any payments on said contract to purchase real estate, conditions of which were to be performed in the future, and that conditions precedent to said contract was that installments be made when they became due, and the court finds that no payments were made by W. A. Bradford to the Classen Company, nor did he pay any of the taxes, and that W. A. Bradford left the state of Oklahoma during the month of October, 1924, and that shortly afterwards he wrote a letter to his wife, Alice Bradford, in which he stated that he did not want the real estate and if she wanted it to make payments thereon, which she did, and the name of Alice Bradford was substituted for that of W. A. Bradford by the Classen Company as the purchaser of • the above described real estate, and that Alice Bradford made payments on contract to purchase real estate up to the time of her death, which occurred on the 9th day of August, 1925, and that at the time of her death there were installments due, and that after her death Willis Jones made all of the payments due on said contract to purchase real estate in future, and that in pursuance of said payments the Classen Company issued a warranty deed to Willis Jones, the plaintiff herein
“The court further finds from the evidence that W. A. Bradford abandoned his contract to purchase real estate by assignment of his claim of right to Alice Bradford and by liis failure to make installment payments when they became due and by being absent from the state of Oklahoma for seven (7) years, being a resident of the state of Arizona, not exercising any rights of possession, nor paying any of the taxes and by contracting a bigamous .marriage eleven (11) months prior to , the death of Alice Bradford, from whom he had never been divorced.
“The court also finds from the evidence that Alice Bradford had only a claim of right to purchase real estate in question in future and that by her failure to keep installments paid she did not acquire any title to said real estate at the time • of her death, and that the plaintiff herein, Willis Jones, being substituted by the Classen Company as purchaser of the real estate, made and performed all the conditions precedent provided in said contract to purchase real estate in the future by making all the payments due thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 193, 41 P.2d 857, 170 Okla. 636, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-v-jones-okla-1935.