Coyle v. Stahl

1914 OK 315, 142 P. 389, 42 Okla. 651, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 7, 1914
Docket3296 and 4860
StatusPublished

This text of 1914 OK 315 (Coyle v. Stahl) 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
Coyle v. Stahl, 1914 OK 315, 142 P. 389, 42 Okla. 651, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 418 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

In July, 1906, Mrs. M. A. Stahl was the owner and in possession of lots 32, 33, and 34 *652 in block 24t in the city of Perry, Noble county, Okla. The property was heavily incumbered by mortgages and judgment liens. A sale in foreclosure had been made, W. PI. Coyle being the purchaser thereat, and being also the owner of the various liens against the property. Objections to the confirmation of the sale made by Mrs. Stahl, who will hereafter be called plaintiff, were pending in the court. These objections were withdrawn and an order of confirmation entered, vesting the legal title to the lots in Coyle, who will hereafter be called defendant. Shortly after this order of the court, the defendant went into possession of the property, the same being a hotel, and thereafter received the rents and profits from the same. The plaintiff instituted this suit on the 26th day of June, 1908, and, after averring substantially the above state of facts, alleged in substance, that the defendant entered into a contract with her at the time she withdrew her objection to the confirmation of the sale, in which it was agreed that she should withdraw same, permit the confirmation of the sale, surrender possession of the property to defendant, together with valuable furniture and fixtures contained in the hotel, and that plaintiff was to hold and manage the same, receiving the rents and profits thereon, and, after deducting expenses, taxes, insurance, etc., credit the remaining revenues upon the amount due on account of the mortgages and liens against the property, until such time as the net revenues had extinguished the amount of the indebtedness against the property; that therefore, while defendant so held under a technical legal title, yet • because of this fact he was really holding in trust for the benefit of plaintiff, and that his possession in the matter was that of a mortgagee in possession. Plaintiff also alleged that the revenues from the property had been sufficient to discharge the obligations outstanding against it, and she prayed that defendant be adjudged as holding the same as trustee for her, and that an accounting be ordered between the parties, and that she be declared the owner of the property free and clear of any claims upon the part of defendant. Issue was joined on this petition, and the evidence was submitted to *653 the court, and it sustained plaintiffs contention and ordered that an account be taken and stated between the parties, and for this purpose appointed Hon. IT. A. Smith as referee to take said accounting, and report his findings of fact and conclusions of law at the succeeding term of court. The defendant took exception to this judgment and order of the court and appealed therefrom to this court, said appeal being numbered 3296. Thereafter the referee took testimony and heard arguments in the case, and stated the account between the.parties. In this report, which is somewhat lengthy, the referee found that the plaintiff was still indebted to the defendant in the sum of $8,077.49, after allowing her credit for the rents and profits received from the buildings, and charging her with interest on the original sums of money due by her, together with subsequent taxes, insurance, etc., expended on the property. The referee also found that the property at the time the same was received by Coyle was of the value of $3,500, and that its value remained practically unchanged until it was later destroyed by fire; that the property had been sold or traded in the meantime. Thereafter the court entered judgment confirming the report of the referee, and decreed that the defendant have and recover of and from the plaintiff the sum of $8,077.49, and interest, and that said judgment be a lien upon the property in controversy. The court further decreed that the plaintiff have and be given a period of six months from the date of the judgment to pay to defendant the amount of same, and interest, and that in the event she should do so, the title of the property be quieted in her, and that the defendant be forever barred from claiming any right, title, or interest in the same. The court further decreed that in the event plaintiff should not pay said judgment within the time named, defendant should have execution and order of sale against the property, and that the same should be sold and the proceeds thereof applied on said judgment, the balance, if any remaining, to be paid to plaintiff. The court further adjudged that the costs be taxed one half against plaintiff and the qther one half against defendant. From this last judgment the plaintiff appeals and *654 brings this branch of the case here as No. 4860. The two appeals have been consolidated, and the whole case will therefore be disposed of as though it were but one appeal.

1. »The first appeal by defendant complains of the ruling of the court that he held the property in a trust capacity, and that an accounting should be had, and of the appointment of a referee. This contention is not sound. It is abundantly, we are tempted to say conclusively, shown that there was an agreement between these parties substantially as stated in plaintiff's petition, and that this agreement induced the withdrawal of the protest against the confirmation of the foreclosure sale, through which defendant took the legal title; that it also resulted in plaintiff turning defendant into possession of the furniture of the hotel, which was not included in the sale. This item was a consideration for the agreement. And while several nice law points are urged, we are sure they could be demonstrated to be unsound under the facts; but we deem it unnecessary to go into them, in view of the decision of the main case, brought up in the second appeal.

2. On the second appeal nothing is brought up but the report of the referee and the judgment of the court pronounced thereon. In this situation the findings of the referee are accepted as true and binding in the case. This leads inevitably to the affirmance of the court’s order confirming the report; but the form of the ^decree and the terms thereof and the relief granted do not seem to us to be a proper application of the law to the facts found. Defendant Coyle held the legal record title, and it is not contended but that, so far as notice was concerned, he could, and did, convey the title to innocent purchasers. The buildings thereafter were burned. As between defendant and plaintiff, there was a trust relation; and ordinarily, if plaintiff had been able to show that she had fully performed her part of the trust agreement by paying, through rents and profits, or otherwise, all the money due defendant, and that defendant had it in his power to restore the property, the order would have been that he do so; if out of his power to restore the *655 property, plaintiff would have been awarded damages in the amount of the value of the property, and, if need be, could possibly have followed and impressed a lien on any property received in exchange for the trust property.

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 315, 142 P. 389, 42 Okla. 651, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyle-v-stahl-okla-1914.