Bradley v. McCabe

1967 OK 166, 438 P.2d 468
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 18, 1967
Docket41905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1967 OK 166 (Bradley v. McCabe) 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
Bradley v. McCabe, 1967 OK 166, 438 P.2d 468 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The action involved in this appeal arose out of a controversy between the defendants in error, Paul and Fern McCabe, as the owners of a parcel of rural real estate, containing more than 270 acres, with a 6-room house on it, and plaintiff in error, as lessee of said property.

Plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as “plaintiff”, leased the property in October, 1962, from its then owner, one Kenneth E. Smith, under a written “LEASE CONTRACT”, for a term of five years ending October 31, 1967, for an annual cash rental, payable one year in advance, in *470 the sum of $1200.00 said advance rental being due on November 1st of each of said years.

After plaintiff had paid the rent for the year November, 1962 to November, 1963, Smith sold the property to Paul and Fern McCabe, in January, 1963.

Thereafter, and after plaintiff had paid the rent for the year November, 1963 to November, 1964, the above mentioned house on the land was destroyed by fire in March, 1964; and plaintiff did not pay any of the lease’s next annual rental due on November 1st of that year.

Thereafter, in April, 1965, the McCabes brought suit in the Justice of the Peace Court of one Irl Alston, Justice of the Peace in Latimore County’s “Red Oak Township”, to recover possession of the property.

That suit was still pending when, in the latter part of the same month, plaintiff commenced the present district court action against both the McCabes and the Justice of the Peace hereinafter collectively referred to as “defendants”.

■ In his petition herein, plaintiff alleged most of the above facts, and, among other things, referred to certain of the lease’s provisions (a copy of the lease was attached to the petition) which were incorporated in its paragraph “IV”, in the following words:

“Lessors agree that they will pay taxes and insurance upon the property as the same become due and payable at no cost to the Lessee, and that the Lessee shall have the right to quiet enjoyment of the premises, free from interruption or interference by third parties during the term of this lease contract.”

In his petition, plaintiff complained that, despite the McCabes’ obligation under the lease to insure the premises free of cost to him, they had failed and refused to rebuild the above mentioned house on the property. Plaintiff further alleged that the house’s value was $8,000.00, and its rental value was at least $60.00 per month; that on October 29, 1964, (after the house burned and before the November 1st rental-paying date that year) plaintiff notified defendant, in writing, that he was entitled to “an adjustment and proration” of the rent “by reason of the burning of said house, and further notifying said defendant that he was ready and willing to pay said rent on said adjusted and prorated basis, but that said defendant has failed and refused to accept the same; * * * ”.

In another part of his petition, plaintiff alleged that a reasonable rent for the property (without the house) “would be $480.00 per year and the plaintiff is entitled to have the rent provided in the lease abated and prorated * * *” to that sum— which the petition recited plaintiff was tendering.

Plaintiff’s petition further alleged that since he went into possession of the property, he had improved it as follows: Repairs to the house $700.00; repairs to fences $300.00; cleaning well and building well house at a cost of $70.00; rebuilding a low-water bridge at a cost of approximately $100.00; and that he has further improved the premises by cutting brush and other clearing at a total cost of $300.00.

Another portion of plaintiff’s petition is as follows:

“ * * * Plaintiff further represents that he is entitled to a credit on any rents found due by the court in the sum of $1200.00 being the amount * * * (he) * * * had expended on said house destroyed by fire and for which * * * defendant recovered in insurance * * * plaintiff having lost the use or rental value of said house * * * for a period of eight months in the sum of $480.00, * * * plaintiff having at the time said house was burned paid the rent in advance in the sum of $1200.00.”

With reference to the McCabes’ aforementioned forcible entry and detainer action pending against him in the court of the defendant justice of the peace, plaintiff’s petition alleged that it was commenced without “the statutory 10 days nbtice in writing to pay rental or vacate * * * ” and that Justice of the Peace Alston, and *471 bis Court, is without jurisdiction therein, but, despite this, defendants “are now attempting by the use of judicial force to proceed in said cause * * * ”. Plaintiff’s verified petition further alleged:

“That plaintiff verily believes that unless a temporary restraining order is issued herein restraining and enjoining the said defendants from proceeding in said forceable entry and detainer case as alleged herein that the said defendants will, by judicial force, proceed in said cause to * * * (plaintiff’s) * * * irreparable injury and damage * * * ; that said Justice Court is without authority to hear or determine the equities existing between the parties to said contract and is without jurisdiction to proceed therein * * *; that plaintiff has no plain, complete and adequate remedy at law and an order further restraining the said defendants and each of them from interfering with the peaceable possession of said plaintiff and said described property.
“WHEREFORE PLAINTIFF PRAYS judgment and decree of this court abating and prorating the rents due on said contract and that a reasonable rent therefore be fixed by the court and that the plaintiff be credited on said rent for all sums advanced and that the said defendants be restrained and enjoined from interfering with the plaintiff in the peaceable possession of said described property and restrained and enjoined from proceeding in said forceable entry and detainer cause pending in said Justice Court and for all other proper and equitable relief to which plaintiff may be entitled herein * * * ’>

In June, the second month after the filing of the above described petition, the court issued a temporary restraining order against the defendants, upon plaintiff’s written motion therefor, and the next month, July, 1965, vacated it upon defendants’ motion.

After defendants had filed an answer to plaintiff’s petition, and plaintiff had filed a reply later that summer, the cause came on for trial in October, 1965.

When the parties, and their counsel, had appeared and announced “ready to proceed”, and the witnesses had been sworn, an oral demurrer to plaintiff’s petition was interposed by defendants, on the grounds that plaintiff had made “no actual tender or deposit of the rental for the current lease period”, and that plaintiff was not entitled to the relief he sought in his petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1967 OK 166, 438 P.2d 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-mccabe-okla-1967.