Collins v. Baldwin

1965 OK 55, 405 P.2d 74, 1965 Okla. LEXIS 307
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 23, 1965
Docket40866
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1965 OK 55 (Collins v. Baldwin) 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
Collins v. Baldwin, 1965 OK 55, 405 P.2d 74, 1965 Okla. LEXIS 307 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves two contracts pertaining to the Hacienda Holiday Motel, located at 3000 North Lincoln Boulevard, Oklahoma City. Both were entered into in January, 1959, by Alice M. Collins, plaintiff in error and owner of the lots comprising the motel’s site. The first one was for the motel’s construction on the lots and will hereinafter be referred to as Contract 1. The other party executing it was D. D. Baldwin, defendant in error, acting for Baldwin Construction Company, as contractor and builder. Mrs. Collins entered into the other contract, hereinafter referred to as Contract 2, with D. D. Baldwin, as an individual.

The cash consideration prescribed in Contract 1 for Mrs. Collins to pay Baldwin Construction Company for constructing the motel was $83,000.00, but, by Contract 2, she promised to sell D. D. Baldwin a one-fourth interest in the motel for $25,000.00. According to Contract 2, when Mrs. Collins had paid Baldwin Construction Company $73,000.00, she would be credited with the outstanding balance of $10,000.00 remaining due on the Contract 1 consideration of $83,000.00, and she, in turn, would credit Baldwin for that $10,000.00 on his interest’s purchase price of $25,000.00.

Contract 2 further provided in detail how the 15-thousand-dollar balance, due on the agreed purchase price of Baldwin’s one-fourth interest, was to be paid out of the profits of- the motel business, how Mrs. Collins was to be reimbursed for her investment also out of those profits, and further provided that she was to have the exclusive management and control of operat *76 ing the motel, without salary, until the full purchase price of Baldwin’s interest was thus paid for; and that when this finally occurred, he would be entitled to a recordable conveyance evidencing his interest. Contract 2 further provided that during this “paying out” period, Mrs. Collins was to keep “adequate records and books to reflect the total income and disbursements” from her operation of the motel, that she should “well and truly account” for same, and that she should furnish Baldwin a statement, each month, as to the motel’s operation. The contract also gave Baldwin the right to examine the motel’s books and records at any time he desired.

After Baldwin Construction Company undertook performance of Contract 1, it was the first week in August, 1959, before portions of the motel had reached sufficient stages of completion that they could be turned over to Mrs. Collins and she could begin furnishing them and renting rooms to motel customers. Since that time, Mrs. Collins had operated the motel without any apparent recognition of D. D. Baldwin’s potential, or actual, rights or interest therein until compelled to do so in the present litigation, which commenced in the Spring of 1960. The motel’s business had not •proved as profitable, and as capable of defraying its financial obligations, as apparently was anticipated when Contracts 1 and :2 were entered into; and it appears probable that Mrs. Collins supplemented her original investment therein by additional contributions of personal funds to meet operating expenses.

The subject controversy between the parties progressed through the lower court in substantially the following manner. Mrs. Collins first invoked the court’s jurisdiction by filing Cause No. 149528. Therein, she named both D. D. Baldwin and his architect father, M. B. Baldwin, as defendants, both individually, and as comprising Baldwin Construction Company.

In her pleadings, Mrs. Collins, hereinafter referred to by name or as plaintiff, alleged, among others, the following material breaches of Contract 1 by the builder:

(b) Breach of said contract in the construction of the motel’s roof, resulting in damages amounting to $5,000.00;

(c) Breach of said contract in failing to provide proper drainage for the south 300 feet of the motel’s east wall and foundation, which Mrs. Collins was compelled to expend $1400.00 to correct, plus damages in the sum of more than $5,000.00 to furnishings and carpeting, and from loss of income due to water seepage;

(d) Breach of said contract in failing to install the kind of air conditioning and heating prescribed in the contract, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $6,000.00, plus damages of another $8,000.00 through loss of business profits because of uninhabitable conditions thereby created in certain of the motel’s rooms or units;

(e) Breach of the contract in the use of inferior and unsuitable material in the sub-flooring of the second story units, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $5,000.00.

In their pleadings, the Baldwins, hereinafter referred to by name, or as defendants, denied all of plaintiff’s allegations as to the improper construction of the motel, and alleged, in substance, that any variations between the construction of the motel and Contract 1, were cured and/or ratified by accepting and going into possession of the motel, thus effecting a waiver on the part of the plaintiff. They further alleged, on information and belief, that profits from said motel had been, or with proper management, should have been, sufficient to entitle D. D. Baldwin to a conveyance of his 25% interest therein; that plaintiff, contrary to the provisions of said contract, had withdrawn the sum of $150.00 per month from the motel’s proceeds for her own use and benefit, since, and including, September, 1959; that plaintiff had breached the provisions of Contract 2 by refusing defendant, D. D. Baldwin, his right to personally inspect the motel’s books and records, and refusing to furnish him monthly statements as to the motel’s operations, and *77 excluding him from all knowledge as to the business’s earnings and operations. Defendant, D. D. Baldwin,' further alleged, on information and belief, that plaintiff had failed and refused to keep accurate books and accounts on said motel, thereby making it impossible to determine its earnings and expenses, and that such neglect would continue unless a receiver was appointed to take charge of, and operate, the motel for the benefit of both interested parties.

Defendants prayed, among other things, that plaintiff recover nothing, and that she be required to convey a 25% interest in the motel to defendant D. D. Baldwin, or, in lieu thereof, that the court order the sheriff to execute such a conveyance. They further prayed that plaintiff be required to account to defendant, D. D. Baldwin as to the operation of the motel, and that a receiver be appointed to hold and manage it under the orders and direction of the court.

After a protracted trial, at which three volumes containing more than a thousand pages of testimony was elicited, and a volume of documentary evidence was introduced, the court entered judgment finding, among other things, that M. B. Baldwin was never a partner of D. D. Baldwin in any entity with which plaintiff had contractual relations; and refused to enter any judgment against him. The court further found that D. D. Baldwin, to whom it referred as the sole defendant in the case, substantially performed Contract 1, but failed to meet certain of its specifications, to plaintiff’s damage, as indicated by items set forth in the judgment as follows:

“Repair of swimming pool $1,800.00

“Baseboard heating 3,100.00

“Replacement cost of air conditioners 7,444.00

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Related

Baldwin v. Collins
1970 OK 210 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Burke v. Donnermeyer
1968 OK 174 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1965 OK 55, 405 P.2d 74, 1965 Okla. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-baldwin-okla-1965.