Dawson v. Cobb

1935 OK 200, 42 P.2d 269, 171 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
DocketNo. 24235.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1935 OK 200 (Dawson v. Cobb) 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
Dawson v. Cobb, 1935 OK 200, 42 P.2d 269, 171 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 187 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be referred to as same appeared in the trial court. The plaintiffs sued on a promissory note in the amount of $1,000, executed by the defendants to-the plaintiffs on July 7, 1930, due November 7, 1930, and bearing interest at 10 per cent, per annum from September 1, 1930. The defendants in answering admitted the execution of the note, and as a defense against its payment alleged, in substance, that the said note was executed as a part of the consideration to be .paid by the defendant Cecil C. Cobb for a tract of Roger Mills county land, and that at the time of the execution of the note it ■was agreed that the same was to be placed in escrow and not to be delivered to the plaintiffs or to become payable until there was conveyed to the defendant a merchantable title to the said land, and that the plaintiffs and another agreed to deliver such merchantable title on or before September 1, 1930. That at the said time the defendant Cecil O. Cobb was dealing in oil leases and royalties on lands in the locality where the said land was located and that the same was known to the parties to have some present oil value and that it was understood that the defendant Cecil C. Cobb desired title to the said land for the principal purpose of dealing with same in oil leases and royalties, and that it was agreed and' understood between the parties that time in the delivery of the said merchantable title to the said land was of the essence of the contract of purchase and that on that account it was agreed that said merchantable title should be promptly conveyed to the defendant. ’

The answer further alleged that on that account it was orally agreed between the parties that a merchantable title would be delivered to the said Cobb on or before the 1st of September, 1930, or all papers and the note in suit would be returned to the persons who executed same, and for that reason said' note in this action was made to bear interest from said date, September 1, 1930, although executed on July 7, 1930, and that when said note was signed it was the understanding that it should be héld in escrow with the other papers, and should be returned to the defendants in the event Finkenbinder should fail to deliver title according to said agreement. That said note was made payable to Dawson and Rowland, the plaintiffs, instead of Finkenbinder, the holder of the title to the Roger Mills county land, or. Garland, who had contracted to purchase said land from Finkenbinder, because said plaintiffs were then trading some Custer county land to said Garland for said lands in Roger Milis county, and the note in suit as part consideration for said land represents the profits to the plaintiffs in their said sale to Garland, and said Cobb’s negotiations for the purpose of purchasing said Roger Mills county land were directly with Dawson and Rowland, and it was agreed that a deed to said land direct from Finkenbinder to Cobb would be used for convenience. The defendants further state that Finkenbinder and the plaintiffs did not furnish title to said land according to said agreement; that the title to said land-w.as-not merchantable and the defendant-report-,: ed the objections to and defects in said-title., to the said Dawson and plaintiffs • about July 30, 1930, and that Finkenbinder and plaintiffs have failed, within the time ah lowed by said agreement, to deliver merchantable title, or to do so within a reasonable time thereafter, which the defendants-voluntarily allowed them, and the defendants have been prevented thereby, and excused from further performance; that the plaintiffs violated the escrow agreement and illegally procured possession of said note. That, the defendants have demanded the return of said note, and asked that the same be canceled and held for naught.

The reply of the plaintiffs is a denial of the allegations of said .answer. As will appear from the discussion of the assignments of the plaintiffs, the questions presented on this appeal are not as to the- soundness of the principles of law applied by the court, but are as to the applicability of same to the facts.

The uncontroverted material facts in evidence are that Finkenbinder, sometime prior to January, 1930, owned a tract of Roger Mills county land and entered into -a contract with Luther Garland of Custer county in which Finkenbinder agreed to trade the said land to Garland for some Colorado property; however, no conveyance of this land had been executed. Garland did not desire to keep this Roger Mills county land *298 and placed the sale of the same with Luther Samuels, a real estate dealer.' The plaintiffs, Dawson and Rowland, owned a tract of Custer county land which they were at the time on a deal to sell to Garland. Samuels tried to sell the Roger Mills county land to the plaintiffs, Dawson and Rowland. Dawson was the managing officer of the First National Bank of Custer City, Okla., and, while said plaintiff did not desire .to buy the. Roger Mills county land, said plaintiff, M. O. Dawson, and Samuels worked out a four-cornered deal under which the Roger Mills county land was to be sold to the . defendant Cecil C. Cobb for a consideration of $2,200, and of which $1,200 was to be represented by a note which was to be - delivered through Finkenbinder to Garland, and a note for $1,000, representing the balance of the said $2,200 consideration, which was to be delivered to the plaintiffs as being paid by Garland as part payment on the consideration for the sale of '200 acres of Custer county land which the plaintiffs were to- convey to Garland. Samuels had authority to purchase .for Garland the 200 acres of Custer county land from the plaintiff - in the event the defendant Cecil C„ Cobb purchased the Roger Mills county land which Garland had agreed to purchase from Finkenbinder, and to that extent the plaintiffs and Samuels were interested in the consummation of the sale of the Roger Mills county land to the defendant. Finkenbinder was agreeable to conveying the said land to any one Garland might desire.

The plaintiffs and Samuels then reached an agreement with the defendant under which the defendant agreed that he would pay $2,200 for the Roger Mills county land, which consideration was to be represented by two notes, one for $1,200, due in three years at 6 per cent, .interest, secured by a mortgage on the land, and one for $1,000, and the plaintiff and Samuels then arranged for Finkenbinder to meet the defendant at the bank of the plaintiff, M. O. Dawson, to act as the holder of the legal title of the land, and it is the alleged subsequent occurrences and agreements between the parties’ which present the issues of fact, being the only issues in this case.

The plaintiff and Samuels conceived the. idea that it would be best to have Finkenbinder convey the Roger Mills county land directly to the defendant Gobb, instead of conveying same to Garland and having Garland convey it to Cobb, arid in that manner save the ■ necessity of having Garland present, and save the execution of one deed and some recording- expense. The defendant Cecil C. Cobb agreed to this arrangement, and a written memorandum was then prepared by the plaintiff M. O. Dawson to be executed by Finkenbinder and the defendant Cecil C. Cobb which set forth the agreement as to the $1,200 note which the defendant was to execute on certain conditions for the benefit of Garland, but which writing did not refer to any agreement between the plaintiffs and the said defendant relating to the $1,000 note representing the balance of the consideration for the said sale of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 200, 42 P.2d 269, 171 Okla. 296, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-cobb-okla-1935.