Farrow v. Work

1913 OK 652, 136 P. 739, 39 Okla. 734, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1913
Docket3084
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1913 OK 652 (Farrow v. Work) 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
Farrow v. Work, 1913 OK 652, 136 P. 739, 39 Okla. 734, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 578 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHARP, C.

October 16, 1905, Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker, the latter a Seminole freedwoman, executed and delivered to E. S. Billington a warranty deed to 80 acres of land, located in Seminole county, and constituting a part of the allotment of the latter. The deed was of the usual form, and recited a consideration of $598.30. On the 20th day of March, 1906, said E. S. Billington, joined by his wife, Stella, executed a warranty deed to said land to the plaintiff in error, Earrow, which deed recited á cash consideration of $605. Thereafter, and during the month of May, 1906, said Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker, by warranty deed duly executed and delivered, attempted to convey said lands to the defendant in error, Work. On August 16, 1908, said Work brought suit, seeking to have the deed from the Walkers to Billington declared a mortgage, and the deed given by Billington to Farrow as an assignment of the said mortgage, and tendered to said defendant the sum of $625, being the amount, with interest, alleged to be owing by the Walkers to Billington, and for which, it was charged, the deed was given as security. Defendant’s answer consists of a general denial. By agreement of the parties the case was referred to T. S. Cobb, as referee, with authority to take the testimony and report to the court both his findings of fact and conclusions of law. The report, thereafter made, contained, among other findings, the following:

“First, I find that on the 6th day of October, 1905, Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker made, executed, and delivered their warranty deed to E. S. Billington to the east half of the northwest quarter and 'the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 35, township 10, range 5, save and except the 40-acre homestead of Dinah Walker therein included; that said *736 warranty deed purported to be executed for and in consideration of the sum of $598.30; that said deed was duly recorded on October 10, 1905, in the office of the recorder of deeds of the Thirteenth recording district of the Indian Territory, the district wherein said land lies, as required by law.
“Second. That said deed was in truth and in fact executed for the purpose of securing the payment to said E. S. Billington of the sum of $598.30 by Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker within 60 days from that date; that said deed was intended by the parties thereto as being given for the purpose of securing the payment of said sum of nioney; and that at the time said deed was executed it was agreed by the parties thereto that, in case said sum of money was paid within 60 days, that the land described in said deed should be by the said E. S- Billington reconveyed to .said Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker. I therefore conclude as a matter of fact that said deed was and is a mortgage upon said land, securing the payment of said sum of money.”
“Sixth. I find that C. W. Rodman, that V. R. Biggers, and that Sam Norton knew at the time the -deed to said Farrow was executed and delivered that the deed to said Billington was given for the purpose of securing a lumber bill in the said sum of $598.30; that said Sam Norton was also the agent of said Martin T. Farrow, W. E. Evans, and the Canadian Valley Investment Company; and all persons who expected to profit by said deed to Farrow had knowledge and were informed that said deed to Billington was made for’ the purpose of securing a lumber bill in the sum of $598.30.”
“Eighth. I find that the said deed \from Billington to Farrow operated as an assignment of the mortgage and claim of Billington against said Eugene Walker and Dinah Walker, and that he got no greater right or- title to said land than that held by said Billington.”

In his conclusions of law, it was found by the referee that the deed from the Walkers to Billington should be decreed to be a mortgage to secure the payment of $598.30, which, with interest, then amounted to $625; that the deed from Billing-ton to Farrow should be decreed to be an assignment of said mortgage and the debt thereby secured; that the plaintiff be required to pay into court said sum of $625 in satisfaction of the mortgage and debt; and that upon said payment the deeds from the Walkers to Billington and from Billington to Farrow *737 be canceled. The report, coming on to be heard before the court, was sustained, and a decree entered in conformity thereto.

Three errors are assigned in this court: (1) The finding of the referee that the deed executed by the Walkers to Billington was intended as a mortgage is not reasonably supported by the evidence. (2) The finding of the referee that Earrow bought with knowledge that the deed from the Walkers to Billington was intended as a mortgage, and not as a deed, is not reasonably supported by the evidence; but that, on the other hand, the said Earrow was an innocent purchaser for value. (3) Plaintiff in error being in possession under color of title of the lands at the time of the purchase from the Walkers by defendant in error, the latter’s deed was champertous and void.

The first two questions involve a consideration of the evidence. It is contended by plaintiff in error that the deed from the Walkers to Billington evidences a conditional sale; that at the time Billington obtained the deed from them they were indebted to him on account for merchandise amounting to $598,-30; that the deed was executed in settlement of this indebtedness; that the agreement, however, was that, upon a repayment of said sum within a fixed time the grantee therein would re-convey said lands; but the Walkers, having failed to pay the amount of the original indebtedness within the time fixed, were without further rights in the premises.

On the part of the defendant in error, it was claimed that the deed from the Walkers to Billington was intended only to secure the payment of their indebtedness, the debt not being thereby extinguished, but, instead, that the relation of debtor and creditor continued to exist. In Worley, Receiver, v. Carter, 30 Okla. 642, 121 Pac. 669, a case also arising in the Indian Territory, we had occasion to consider the rules of law applicable to a deed, absolute on its face, intended merely as security for a debt and a conditional sale, and it was there said:

“A mortgage and a conditional sale differ materially; the latter is not a security for money, while the former is. ‘A conditional sale is not a security for money, but is what its designation imports, namely, a sale in good faith, and a sale *738 on condition that the vendor may repurchase on certain terms, which must be strictly complied with. Of course, therefore, no equity of redemption is incident to such a sale, because, as it is not the design of the transaction to secure the payment of money, a court of equity has no ground to say the substantial object can as well be reached by the payment at a subsequent time, 'with interest, a's by a prompt compliance with the conditions, nor does it follow that the party can thereby be put in statu quo/ Minor’s Institutes, art. 329. In Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 652, 136 P. 739, 39 Okla. 734, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrow-v-work-okla-1913.