Cornelius v. Keegan

1935 OK 524, 45 P.2d 58, 172 Okla. 235, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1935
DocketNo. 25274.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1935 OK 524 (Cornelius v. Keegan) 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
Cornelius v. Keegan, 1935 OK 524, 45 P.2d 58, 172 Okla. 235, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 424 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is an action in ejectment commenced in the district court of Comanche county, by the defendants in error, T. R. Keegan and Jay Keegan, as plaintiffs, against A. L. Cornelius, sometimes known as Ardeta L. Cornelius, J. P. Cornelius, Ira E. Cornelius, Nellie M. Cornelius, and F. E. Green, as defendants, for the recovery of possession of a hotel property known as the Keegan Hotel in Lawton. The cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the said plaintiffs and against all the defendants, and the court rendered judgment accordingly. The defendants J. P. Cornelius and Ardeta L. Cornelius took separate appeals to this court for a reversal of said judgment. For convenience the parties to this appeal will be referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, as they appeared in the court below.

For a proper understanding- of the case a lengthy statement of facts is required. The record shows that prior to 1921 Margaret Keegan, the mother of the plaintiffs, was the owner of lots 1, 2, 3, and 4, block 62, of the government townsite of Lawton, on which was situated what is known as the Keegan Hotel. The said Margaret Keegan became the wife of C. A. Carney, and in the year 1921, joined by her said husband, sold the said hotel property, including the furnishings, to O. Z. Nesbitt by written contract. The contract provided for the payment of $32,500, represented by 65 promissory notes of $500 each, payable one each month. A warranty deed was executed by the Carneys to Nesbitt, and the contract and deed were placed in escrow in a bank in Lawton of which T. R. Keegan was then and at all times since has been the actual manager. The contract contained the ordinary provision that the deed should be delivered to Nesbitt upon full payment of the *236 purchase price and the interest thereon, but in the event of his failure to pay any of said notes, the taxes, or insurance when due, that said default should'work a forfeiture of the rights of said Nesbitt under said contract, and that the said Carneys should have the right to declare the contract terminated, and that upon notice the said Nesbitt, his heirs or assigns, should at once and without further delay deliver up possession of the premises to the said Carneys, their heirs or assigns, and all money previously paid by Nesbitt to the Carneys under said contract was to be considered as rent paid for the previous use and occupancy of the said premises. Nesbitt was given possession of the hotel property and operated it under said contract until the year 1929, when the Cornelius family assumed its management as hereinafter set forth.

Ira E. Cornelius and his son, J. P. Cornelius, of Siloam Springs, Ark., came out to Lawton in May, 1929, and started to negotiate the purchase and transfer to the said Ira B. Cornelius of the rights and equities of Nesbitt under his contract with the Car-neses for the Keegan Hotel, and Ira E. Cornelius and Nesbitt called Mr. Carney to the hotel and conferred with him relative to the contract and Carney agreed to reduce the installment payments to $250 per month. Cornelius was purchasing Nesbitt’s equity in the property under the contract and was to complete the payment of the purchase price at the reduced monthly installments of $250 each.

On October 8, 1929, Nesbitt and Ira E. Cornelius sent a joint telegram to Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Carney at Rochester, Minn., stating in substance that they were completing their deal on the Keegan Hotel, and the Carneys were requested to cancel the old contract and make a new contract to deed the hotel property to A. L. Cornelius, execute a deed and place the same in escrow in the bank at Lawton, the amount of the contract not to exceed $19,000, and payable $250 each month, with interest on deferred payments at 10 per cent., and the personal property in the hotel to be released and the entire indebtedness to be secured by the real estate, and asking for approval and confirmation by wire.

Subsequently, upon returning home, Mr. C. A. Carney contacted Ira E. Cornelius and stated that the contract would be drawn, and Cornelius informed him that he wanted the contract signed by his daughter Ardeta L. Cornelius, and the escrow deed to the' property made to her as grantee. The contract was drafted and delivered to Ira E. Cornelius and was returned by him to Mr. Carney signed by his said daughter A. L. Cornelius, who is the same person as Ardeta L. Cornelius. Neither of the Carneys at any time in these various transactions met Ardeta L. Cornelius,' but in all these matters she was represented wholly by her father, Ira E. Cornelius.

The form of the contract was practically the same as the Nesbitt contract, but the monthly payments were reduced -to $250 per month. The deed to A. L. Cornelius was executed by the Carneys and placed in escrow in the bank with the new contract for $18,000. There was due the Carneys from Nesbitt $1,000 on the hotel furnishings, which Cornelius paid, reducing the ■debt to $18,000. These instruments were executed on December 14, 1929.

On] October 29, 19291, the said O’. Z. Nes-bitt and Ruby Nesbitt, his wife, executed an instrument, which at the trial of the case appeared to be a special warranty deed and bill of sale, transferring the furniture and. equipment in the hotel to J. P. Cornelius, a son of Ira E. Cornelius, and conveying to him the Keegan Hotel. This instrument was signed and acknowledged before T. R. Keegan, a notary public, at Keegan’s bank. It was on a regular bill of sale printed form, and in the blank space following the description of the personal property there was written by a different typewriter the description of the real estate. This instrument was not placed of record until after this action was filed by the Keegans to recover possession of the property. The Keegans undertook to show at the trial that the instrument was a forgery in so far as the real estate was concerned.

The Cornelius family, consisting of Ira E. Cornelius and his wife, Nellie M. Cornelius, and his son, J. P. Cornelius, and his two daughters, A. L. Cornelius, otherwise known as Ardeta L. Cornelius, and E. E. Green, occupied the hotel and operated it until the ejectment action was filed and a receiver appointed for the property in December, 1932, the said Ira E. Cornelius having active management of the hotel business.

Cornelius made the first eight payments of $250 each provided for in the contract, making a total of $2,000 paid on the principal, and Ardeta gave a series of notes for the first year’s interest, which were paid. This is all that was paid on the contract. She defaulted in the payment of taxes and in keeping up the insurance on the prop *237 erty, ancl .thereafter wholly failed to comply with the terms of the contract.

Mrs. Carney died in June, 1931, and by her will left the hotel property to her husband, C. A. Carney, and her son, Jay Kee-gan. Later C. A. Carney transferred his interest in the property by warranty deed to T. R. Keegan, and thereby the plaintiffs became the owners of said property, subject to the contract between the Carneys and Cornelius.

On December 14, 1932, the said T. R. Keegan and Jay Keegan caused a written notice to be personally served upon A. L.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 524, 45 P.2d 58, 172 Okla. 235, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornelius-v-keegan-okla-1935.