Crutchfield v. Martin

1911 OK 15, 117 P. 194, 27 Okla. 764, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1911
Docket724
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1911 OK 15 (Crutchfield v. Martin) 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
Crutchfield v. Martin, 1911 OK 15, 117 P. 194, 27 Okla. 764, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 47 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

Defendant in error, plaintiff below, filed Ms petition in the lower court on the 19th day of December, 1907. In his petition plaintiff alleges for his cause of action that on the 24th day of May, 1907, one Johnson Buford was indebted to Mm in the sum of $202; and that on said date Buford drew an order evidencing said amount of indebtedness on plaintiff in error, defendant below; and that defendant accepted the order in writing and agreed to pay it when Buford made him a deed to certain land after Buford became of age; that on the 18th day of October, 1907, Buford, being ’then of age, made, executed, and delivered to defendant a deed to Ms surplus allotment of land as per the terms of said order ; but that defendant has failed and refused and still refuses to pay plaintiff the amount of said order. The order and the acceptance thereof are made part of the petition, and are as follows;

“Vinita, I. T., May 24, 1907. Mr. John H. Crutchfield, Please pay to Jasper S. Martin the sum of two hundred and two and no hundredth dollars out of the money for my land. Johnson Buford.'” “I, John H. Crutchfield, accept the above order and agree to pay same to Jasper S. Martin, provided Johnson *766 Buford makes me a deed to his laud when he becomes of age. John H. Crutchfield.”

• Hpon the foregoing facts, which constitute substantially the allegations of the petition, plaintiff prayed for judgment against defendant in the sum of $202, with interest at 6 per cent, from October 8, 1907. There are some allegations in the petition, the substance of which is not set out above, which, taken alone, would ii'dicate that plaintiff was bringing suit for conversion of a specific fund; but the court below and all the parties appear in that court to have treated the petition and action as one upon the contract made by the acceptance of the order; and we shall so treat it in the proceeding here.

Defendant filed his answer containing five different paragraphs. In the first paragraph he admits the execution of the order and the acceptance thereof as set forth in the petition. By the second paragraph he alleges that at the time the order was executed and accepted there wag outstanding between defendant and Buford an agreement whereby defendant was to purchase the surplus allotment of Buford, and Buford was to execute to him a deed therefor as soon as Buford, who was then a minor, should become of age. This agreement between him and Buford and all the terms thereof were well known to the plaintiff at the time the order was executed and the acceptance thereof was made. He alleges that there was then outstanding deeds for said land which had been executed by Buford to other parties than defendant, and which deeds, outstanding, were voidable on the part of Buford, because of the fact that they were executed during his minority; but that they constituted a cloud upon the title to the land to be conveyed to defendant, all of which facts he alleges were known by plaintiff. By way of further allegation, he admits that on the 8th day of October, 1907, said Buford did execute and deliver to him his deed for the lands as stated in the petition, but he alleges that the deed was insufficient to convey a full and perfect title, because of the outstanding deeds executed by Buford during minority, and further alleges “that by reason of said outstanding deeds *767 so executed by the said Johnson Buford, during his minority as aforesaid, and the knowledge thereof on the part of plaintiff, as aforesaid, this defendant believed at the time of giving said acceptance that this plaintiff understood the conditions on which said order was accepted to be that the said Johnson Buford should make to this defendant a deed conveying to this defendant a full and perfect title to said land before the condition of said acceptance should be fulfilled and any liability arise thereon in favor of this plaintiff and against this defendant.” He alleges that said condition has not been complied with by Buford, and that the outstanding deeds are still in existence and of record. By the third paragraph of his answer, he alleges that the deed executed’ by Buford to him is a warranty deed and contains an express covenant on the part- of Buford to warrant and defend the title therein conveyed; that by reason of the outstanding deeds a breach of this covenant exists; whereby defendant .has been damaged in a sum in excess of the amount of plaintiff’s claim sued on, and prays that he be allowed to set off a counterclaim against plaintiff to the full amount of the order by reason of said damages. Bj» the fourth paragraph he alleges that at the time the order was executed by Buford and accepted by defendant, Buford was a minor, and for that reason the order was voidable and subject to the right of disaffirmance by Buford after he attained his majority; and that Buford did, after attaining his majority, to wit, on the 8th day of October, 1907, at the time he executed his deed to defendant, disaffirm said order; and denies that he, defendant,-retained from the purchase price agreed to be paid to Buford the sum of $202 or any other sum for plaintiff,, but that he paid to Buford the full amount of the purchase price. By the fifth paragraph he alleges that plaintiff holds a mortgage from Buford to him covering certain property, sufficient to secure the payment of Buford’s indebtedness to plaintiff; and that if plaintiff does not make the amount of his claim out of the property covered by the mortgage, it will he because of plaintiff’s negligence in permitting the property described in-the mortgage to pass from the control of plaintiff; and, *768 by way of cross-petition, prays that, in the event plaintiff prevails, that he be subrogated to all the rights of plaintiff under and by virtue of said mortgage; and that plaintiff be compelled to account to the court for all moneys received by him under said mortgage; and that defendant have credit therefor for whatever judgment may be rendered against' him; and, further, that defendant have credit against plaintiff in the nature of damages for any loss or impairment in the security of said mortgage that has arisen through the negligence of plaintiff.

To this answer plaintiff filed a demurrer, by which he demurred to each paragraph thereof, except one; and the demurrer was “sustained as to the second and third paragraphs, but overruled as to the others. Whereupon plaintiff filed his reply, in which he denies that Buford ever disaffirmed the order; and, by way of reply to the fifth paragraph, denies that he ever took any security for the payment of the debt for which the order was given. Thereafter, upon motion for a judgment on the pleadings, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, to reverse which this proceeding is prosecuted.

There was a motion for continuance by defendant, the overruling of which is the first error assigned for reversal of the cause. The grounds of the motion were that certain witnesses who would testify on behalf of defendant and who resided fifteen or twenty miles from the place of holding court were absent, and if they were present they would give testimony material to defendant’s defense, which evidence was set out in the motion; and it was further alleged “that the defendant has used due diligence to get the attendance of these witnesses at the trial of this cause at this time and has been unable to do so, and he believes he can obtain them by the next term of this court.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 15, 117 P. 194, 27 Okla. 764, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crutchfield-v-martin-okla-1911.