Farm Mtg. Inv. Co. v. Cassell

1934 OK 172, 32 P.2d 736, 168 Okla. 312, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 20, 1934
Docket21893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 172 (Farm Mtg. Inv. Co. v. Cassell) 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
Farm Mtg. Inv. Co. v. Cassell, 1934 OK 172, 32 P.2d 736, 168 Okla. 312, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 169 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be referred to as they were in the trial court. This is an action for specific performance brought by plaintiff, A. R. Cassell, against the defendants, the Farm Mortgage- Investment Company, formerly the Farm Mortgage Trust Company, of Topeka, Kan., the Oklahoma Land & Loan Company, Otis R. Cureton, and Tom J. Ballew for specific performance, whereby plaintiff seeks to compel the. defendant the Farm Mortgage Investment Company, formerly the Farm Mortgage Trust Company (hereinafter referred to for brevity as the mortgage company), to execute and deliver to him a good and sufficient warranty deed to the south half of the southeast quarter and the south half of the southwest quarter of section 32, township 1, range 14, in Comanche county, Okla., in accordance with the terms and conditions of a written contract attached as exhibit A to plaintiff’s original petition, said contract being dated April 6, 1928, and signed by plaintiff and by the “Farm Mortgage Trust Company, of Topeka, Kan., by Oklahoma Land & Loan Co., by Otis R. Cureton,” and providing for said deed for a consideration of $2,340, $1,140 of same in cash on execution of contract and the $1,200 balance to be paid in three equal installments of $400 each, on or before April <3, 1929, 1930, and 1931, respectively, evidenced by notes of date April 6, 1928, bearing 6 por cent, interest per annum from date, to lie secured by mortgage on said property, and said contract also providing that plaintiff have the rents from said premises for the year 1928, plaintiff pleading that he has fully performed all the terms and conditions imposed upon him by said contract, but that the defendant mortgage company has failed and refused to execute and deliver to him the said deed to said property. In addition to his prayer for specific performance, plaintiff asks judgment against all the defendants for $1,000 as damages sustained by him by reason of his loss of rents and delay in the execution of said deed and obtaining possession of said property, and in event specific performance is not decreed he asks judgment against defendant Oklahoma Land & Loan Company, Otis II. Cureton, and Tom J. Ballew for the $1,130 cash paid on said contract, and also for $1,000 damages. Amended and second amended petitions were filed by plaintiff, but it is not necessary to set out the substance thereof as the relief prayed is in effect the same as prayed in his original petition, the main purpose of such amended petitions being to plead that in said transaction the defendant the Oklahoma Land & Loan Company acted as agent for the mortgage company, the owner of said prop *313 erty, and ratified and adopted the acts of said agent in the premises and accepted and retained the benefits thereof. The defense of the mortgage company is a general denial and an allegation that it is the owner and in possession of said property and a specific denial under oath of the agency of the Oklahoma Land & Loan Company, or Otis R. Oureton, at any time or of any authority on the part of either of them to make on its behalf the contract pleaded by plaintiff or any contract on its behalf for the sale of said lands and a denial that it ever ratified and adopted any of the alleged acts of said land company, or Oureton, in connection with said contract, or otherwise in relation to said lands, or accepted or retained any of the benefits thereof, and also a denial that the purchase price of such lands had been paid as alleged by plaintiff, but alleges the facts to be in substance that upon receipt of the alleged contract plaintiff was advised of the lack of authority of said land company and said Oureton to make any such contract for and on its behalf, or for any sale of said lands, but that it would sell said lands to him upon the terms stated in said contract provided the consideration was paid to it and that upon receipt of the note and mortgage under said contract it again advised plaintiff it would not recognize said contract, but would sell said lands to him upon the terms and conditions set out in said contract and would hold the note and mortgage until plaintiff had an opportunity to make the cash payment provided for therein, and that it has at all times held said note and mortgage as the property of plaintiff and has never accepted them for the reason that the cash payment provided in said contract was never paid by plaintiff and ■ tenders back to plaintiff ■ said note and mortgage. Said answer is duly verified. Plaintiff replies by way of general denial. Although defendant Ballew was served with process, no pleading was filed and no appearance was made by him, and evidently, the ease was abandoned as to him and no judgment was rendered against him. The defendants Oklahoma Land & Loan Company and Otis R. Oureton answered by way of general denial, except admitting the contract pleaded by plaintiff and compliance therewith by plaintiff and also alleging that in the execution of said contract they acted in good faith and on the belief that they were the authorized agents of defendant mortgage company to so act. In the course of the litigation Otis R. Oureton died and the action as to him was revived in the name of his representatives, and the case was evidently also abandoned as to the defendants Oklahoma Land & Loan Company and the Oureton representatives, as no judgment was rendered against them. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff, Cassell, against the defendant mortgage company, decreeing specific performance of said contract, but no money judgment of any kind, was awarded.

Defendant mortgage company appealing assigns seven errors as grounds of reversal, but in its brief discusses only the fourth assignment of error, to wit:

“Said court erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence of the plaintiff as not being sufficient to establish a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.”

At the close of plaintiff’s- evidence, said defendant demurred thereto and its demurrer was overruled and exception saved, whereupon defendant submitted its evidence.

Under the record, the question of agency and agency authority is decisive of this case. Was the defendant Oklahoma Land & Loan Company the agent of the defendant mortgage company, with authority to enter into the contract with plaintiff for the sale of the property involved, or, if not, did the mortgage company thereafter by its acts and conduct ratify and adopt the acts of the land company in the making of said contract, and become bound thereby? Did the mortgage company accept and retain the benefits and proceeds thereof? It is conceded by all the parties that at the time of the contract the mortgage company was the owner and in possession of said property, and had the right to sell or to contract for the sale thereof.

The trial court made exhaustive findings incorporated in the journal entry of judgment, and we quote from such findings:

“That about the 1st of March, 1928, the mortgage company was the owner of several tracts of land in the state of Oklahoma, among which were the lands involved in this action in Comanche county, Okla., and about that time listed such lands for sale with the Oklahoma Land &

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 172, 32 P.2d 736, 168 Okla. 312, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-mtg-inv-co-v-cassell-okla-1934.