Floyd v. Dodson

692 P.2d 77
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 1984
Docket60970
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 692 P.2d 77 (Floyd v. Dodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd v. Dodson, 692 P.2d 77 (Okla. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinions

STUBBLEFIELD, Judge.

In this action for foreclosure of a “joint venturer’s lien” and damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress, the defendant appeals the jury’s verdict and award of damages in favor of the plaintiff on both causes of action. The plaintiff cross-appeals for attorney fees on her first cause of action. After reviewing the record and applicable law, we affirm the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff on her first cause of action but reverse and remand the matter for new trial on plaintiff’s second cause of action. We find that plaintiff was entitled to recover a reasonable attorney fee and remand the case with instructions to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine such fee and assess the same against the defendant.

I

In September 1979, the plaintiff, Vicki Floyd, and the defendant, Robert L. Dodson, began living together in a house located in northwest Oklahoma City. Although the home had been transferred to Dodson in Dodson’s name alone, Vicki had supplied a portion of the proceeds used for the down payment and testified at trial that she and Dodson were “partners” in its purchase. Dodson denied the existence of this agreement but conceded that Vicki had expended money on improvements to the home.

At the time of the purchase, the parties had planned to be married. By September 1980, however, their relationship had crumbled, and Dodson demanded that Vicki move out of the house. Although Vicki complied, she filed a “joint venturer’s lien” against the property to protect her financial interest.

In the years which followed, Vicki, an insurance agent, moved to Stillwater, and Dodson, a landman, remarried. The decline of the óil and gas industry coupled with the financial obligations of his new marriage, however, soon forced Dodson to enter into a contract for the sale of the home. Several days before closing, he learned for the first time of the existence of the lien.

Outraged by the discovery, he drove to Stillwater the next day, carrying with him several nude photographs of Vicki and a cassette tape upon which he had secretly recorded their love-making. At trial, he conceded that his purpose in making the trip was to threaten Vicki into releasing the lien in return for the embarrassing information. Vicki, who was worried about the effect of the photographs on her career, agreed to meet Dodson in a parking lot in Oklahoma City later that afternoon. Dodson had already arranged for the presence of a notary public. Vicki signed the releases in the notary’s presence and retrieved the photographs and cassette recording.

On September 9, 1982, she filed suit against Dodson. Later amendments limited the lawsuit to two causes of action: the first, to foreclose a lien on proceeds held in escrow from the sale of the house; and the second, for intentional infliction of emotional distress. On May 16, 1983, the jury rendered judgment in her favor on both causes of action.

II

For the sake of clarity the defendant’s arguments will be taken out of the sequence in which made. The defendant’s [79]*79attack on the judgment for plaintiff on her first cause of action is that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. By her first cause of action the plaintiff sought to foreclose the “joint venturer’s lien” which she had filed against the defendant’s property several years earlier. Her purpose in filing the lien was to protect her $5,505 investment which she claims was used as the down payment for the purchase of the home pursuant to the parties’ agreement that she would be eventually repaid from the accumulated equity. At trial, the defendant denied both the existence and the amount of this investment. He further sought to offset the amount claimed through the introduction of an exhibit which detailed the numerous expenditures which he had made on her behalf. It is this testimony which forms the basis of his present contention on appeal. His contention, however, neglects the fact that on cross-examination he repeatedly admitted that the vast majority of the expenditures depicted by the exhibit were not conditioned on the plaintiff’s promise of repayment. He additionally failed to either plead or request that the jury be instructed on the defense of payment and instead defended the action solely by denying the existence of the loan and the parties’ alleged agreement which formed the basis of the plaintiff’s claim to an equitable lien in the property. On the basis of these facts, we cannot say that there is no competent evidence to support the jury’s determination that such an agreement in fact existed. Bredy v. Cantrell, 205 Okl. 9, 234 P.2d 381 (1951). The jury obviously believed the testimony of the plaintiff and disbelieved that of the defendant. The judgment on the verdict in her first cause of action is accordingly affirmed.

Ill

Defendant next contends that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the elements of intentional infliction of emotional distress. The instruction, which corresponds with. Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instruction — Civil, No. 19.1, provided that:

For the plaintiff, Vicki Floyd, to recover from the defendant, Robert L. Dodson, on her claim of emotional distress, pain or anguish, you must find all three of the following have been established:
1. The defendant intentionally injured the plaintiff or realized that the plaintiff was likely to suffer the injuries complained of or acted with willful disregard of injuries that plaintiff might suffer.
2. The defendant’s actions were unreasonable,
3. The plaintiff suffered physical inju: ry as a direct result of the defendant’s conduct. Injuries to the nervous system and mental pain are physical injuries. (Emphasis added.)

The defendant requested an alternative instruction because the instruction permitted the jury to impose liability for conduct which was merely unreasonable as opposed to extreme and outrageous. The trial court refused to revise the instruction because it paralleled that which appears in the Oklahoma Uniform Jury Instructions.

The preface to the uniform instructions requires all trial courts to use the instructions where appropriate “unless the trial court determines that such recommended instruction does not accurately state the law. In the latter event, it shall be the obligation of the trial court to include within the record the court’s reasons for declining to use the recommended instruction.”

Although the language recited in the instruction finds some support in the language of the court of appeal’s decision in Bennett v. City National Bank and Trust Co., 549 P.2d 393, 397 (Okla.Ct.App.1976), the more recent pronouncements of the supreme court have clearly required the actor’s conduct to have been extreme and outrageous and not merely unreasonable:

The torts of intentional infliction of mental distress and invasion of privacy are part of a modern development in the law to afford some redress to plaintiffs who have suffered from certain previously non-actionable forms of anti-social behavior. Inherent in the development of [80]*80these new forms of action is an attempt to strike a medium between some of the merely unpleasant aspects of human interpersonal relationships on the one hand and clearly unacceptable conduct on the other.

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Floyd v. Dodson
692 P.2d 77 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1984)

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692 P.2d 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-dodson-oklacivapp-1984.