Evans v. Brown Et Ux.

1912 OK 518, 125 P. 469, 33 Okla. 323, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 23, 1912
Docket1874
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1912 OK 518 (Evans v. Brown Et Ux.) 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
Evans v. Brown Et Ux., 1912 OK 518, 125 P. 469, 33 Okla. 323, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 694 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

KANE, J:

This was a suit commenced by L. E. Parker, and afterward revived in the name of W. F. Evans, the plaintiff in error, against the defendants in error, to reform a deed 'to a certain piece of real estate. The parties hereafter will be designated plaintiffs and defendants as they were designated in the court below. By way of answer and cross-petition the defendant C. S. Brown set up fraud on the part of his agent who negotiated the sale of the realty out of which the controversy arose, and prayed that the deed sought to be reformed be canceled and his title to the land cleared. Upon trial to the court a decree was entered in conformity with the prayer of the defendant, to. reverse which this proceeding in error was commenced.

The court below made general findings in favor of the defendants, and therefore every allegation of their cross-petition which is reasonably supported by the evidence must be resolved in their favor. The defendants C. S. Brown and Margaret Brown were husband and wife; the husband being the owner in fee simple of the lot involved. Some time prior to the execution of the deed sought to be canceled, Brown and one Poole, the local agent of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, in Oklahoma City, had entered into an oral agreement, whereby Poole was to secure a purchaser for the land, for which service Brown was to pay the usual commission. Brown was unfamiliar with the value of properties in Oklahoma City, and in settling upon a price for the land he suggested to Poole that the land was worth $5,000, whereupon Poole said that in his judgment it was not worth over $4,000, and recommended that Brown take that amount for it, which proposition Brown finally accepted. Some four or five months before the execution of the deed, but subsequent to the agency of Poole, the general right of way agent for the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, upon the suggestion of Poole, advised his company to purchase the land for depot and terminal purposes. Several days prior to the contract of sale, Mr. Gray, *325 vice president of the company, instructed Mr. Poole, its local •agent, and the agent of Brown for the purpose of negotiating the sale, to purchase the land for the railroad company, to be used for terminal and depot facilities. Shortly after the instructions ■of the vice president, the right of way agent appeared in Oklahoma City, and had a conversation with Mr. Poole in relation to the purchase of the land. At this conference Poole and Williams, the right of way agent, agreed that they would tell Brown they wanted the property for a broom corn warehouse. Poole then telephoned Brown that the man who wanted to purchase his property for a broom corn warehouse was in town. Brown inquired where he could meet the prospective purchaser and talk with him. Poole answered that it would not do for Brown to see the purchaser, because he might “queer the whole deal,” that he (Poole) would arrange a meeting at the Indiahoma Club at, or a little after, ■noon of that day. Pursuant to this arrangement, Brown and the right of way agent were introduced by Poole, whereupon Brown asked the right of way agent what his business was, who answered that “he had no particular business now; that he was a retired •capitalist.” Brown then asked him what he desired this property for, and he said he wished to acquire it for the purpose of building a broom corn warehouse upon it. They (Brown, Poole and the right of way agent) discussed the price and other details of the trade, and Brown agreed to take $4,000, whereupon the right ■of way agent then suggested that they go to the office of his attorneys for the purpose of having the necessary papers prepared. On the way to the office of the attorneys, who, it transpires, were •also the attorneys of the railway company, Brown again asked Williams what he wanted this property for, and was again assured that he wanted it for the purpose of building a broom corn warehouse thereon. When they reached the attorneys’ office, Brown was left sitting in the reception room, and Poole and the right of way agent retired to one of the private offices, and after consulting with a member of the firm, came out with a contract drawn, prepared for signature, wherein it was agreed that Brown should sell the property to one Enderline, who was at that time *326 a clerk in the attorney’s office. Poole had with him cash belonging to the railroad to the amount of $200, which money was paid to Brown. A draft was drawn by Williams as the general right.of way agent for the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, and handed to Brown with the request that he indorse the same,'which he did, taking it, according to his testimony, to be simply a receipt for the money paid at that time. While they were in the attorney’s office, and before the money was paid, Brown again asked Williams what he wanted this property for, and insisted that he desired to know absolutely what the property was to be used for, and was again assured that the property was going to be used for the purpose of building a broom corn warehouse thereon. Poole was present during this conference and confirmed all the right of way agent said pertaining to the purpose for which the property was being purchased. Several days after this Poole telephoned Brown that he had the draft to pay the balance of the purchase price, whereupon Brown went to a bank designated by Poole for the purpose of closing the deal, where the deed was delivered to Poole by Brown, who executed the deed and laid it down on the desk. Poole delivered to Brown a voucher issued by the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company with a draft for $3,800. Poole’s version of what took place at that meeting is hereinafter set out in full. The deed executed by Brown and delivered to Poole conveyed the property to L. F. Parker, who at that time was at the head of the legal department of the railroad company. Subsequently Parker died, and W. F. Evans, his successor, caused the suit to be revived in his name.

The evidence also tends to show that at the time of the sale of the land its reasonable value was in the neighborhood of $10,000.

The cross-petition of the defendants substantially set up the foregoing facts. Originally the railroad company filed a disclaimer and afterwards admitted that it was the real purchaser of the land, and that it was being held for its use and benefit by Mr. Evans, its general counsel.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error present their contentions under three subheads, as follows:

*327 “(1) The alleged false representations complained of, and which were to the effect that the property was being purchased for a broom corn warehouse, and that Williams was a capitalist, and the purchaser, were not material. (2) Poole’s employment did not constitute him anything more than a mere middleman, whose duty it was to find a purchaser. He was not clothed with any discretion in the premises, and his employment by plaintiffs' herein was not fraudulent or against public policy. (3) Conceding, for the purposes of this argument, that everything defendants have alleged is true, still they are not entitled to the relief prayed for by them. Having discovered the alleged fraud while the contract was still executory, and having voluntarily elected to complete it, they thereby waived the alleged fraud and are es-topped from setting it up in impeachment of said contract.”

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Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 518, 125 P. 469, 33 Okla. 323, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-brown-et-ux-okla-1912.