Ford v. Dancer

1925 OK 105, 233 P. 465, 106 Okla. 148, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 10, 1925
Docket13389
StatusPublished

This text of 1925 OK 105 (Ford v. Dancer) 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
Ford v. Dancer, 1925 OK 105, 233 P. 465, 106 Okla. 148, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 45 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

In this case, the defendants in error, D. H. Dancer and Bertha Dancer, instituted an action in the district court of Choctaw county, against W. F. Ford, and Maudia Ford, husband and wife, W. H. Dancer, J. D. Parsons, and the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company, a cor- *149 poraticm. to enforce tlie specific performance of an oral contract for the sale of 100 acre's of land.

Some time previous to the trial, the'Dancers dismissed their action as to the Fords. Answers were filed hy W. H. Dancer, J. D. Parsons and thd Equitable Farm Mortgage Company. A cross-petition to the answer of the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company was filed by the Fords.

Judgment was rendered in favor of thej Dancers against the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company and in favor of the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company against the Fords denying them any relief under their cross-petition.

No appeal is prosecuted by the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company from the judgment rendered against it in favor of thej Dancers and the judgment became final as to all parties except the Fords, Who appeal to reverse the judgment obtained by the Dancers against the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company and the judgment in favor of the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company denying them any relief under their cross-petition. The Dancers will be hereinafter referred to as the plaintiffs and the Fords as defendants.

The record discloses that an agreement had- been made orally between thej plaintiffs and the defendants whereby the defendants agreed to purchase 100 acres of land from the plaintiffs for a consideration of $75 per acre.

It appears that the defendants already owned 160 acres of land in the vicinity of the 100 acres which, they proposed to purchase, which was incumbered by a mortgage of $1,000 in favor of W. H. Dancer and another mortgage of about $500 in favor of J. D. Parsons, and it was agreed that the Fords should obtain a loan from the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company for $4,500 and secure the same by mortgage upon both tracts; that the! proceeds of this loan should be applied in discharging the two mortgages held by Dancer and Parsons on defendant’s land and the balance should be paid in cash to the plaintiffs to apply on the purchase) price of $7,500.

A second mortgage was to be executed by the defendants to secure the balance of the| purchase price. It was the claim oi the plaintiffs that the Equitable Farm Mortgage Company was a party to this arrangement to the extent that it should pay the proceeds of the loan, which defendants agreed to obtain from it, not to the defendants, but to thq plaintiffs upon approval by it of the title and that under this arrangement, the plaintiffs fulfilled each and every requirement made by the loan company in connection with the title to both tracts.

They further claimed in their amended petition that they entirely executed the contract on their part by placing the defendants in possession of the land and by causing the mortgages held by Dancer and Parsons to be released of record; that -they had executed their deed to .the defendants and left the same with the court; that the defendants had executed their mortgage to -th^ loan company for $4,500 as contemplated by the contract; had executed and delivered their second mortgage to the plaintiffs and had wholly performed the contract on their part; that the mortgage company had approved the loan and the title by which it was to be secured and refused to pay the proceeds of the loan, only because the Fords wrongfully protested against the payment thereof by thej mortgage company to them.

It was evidently the theory of the plaintiffs in their amended petition in view of their action subsequently in dismissing the action as to the defendants that the contract had been wholly performed by all parties except the mortgage company and •that since the mortgage company was a party to the contract and had agreed to pay the] proceeds of the loan to the plaintiffs, the only relief to which the plaintiffs were entitled in this situation was a judgment against the mortgage company for the proceeds of thej loan.

It does not appear from che cross-petition of the defendants to the answer of the mortgage company that they rejsted their claim of right to a cancellation of the mortgages executed by them to the mortgage company and bj it recorded, upon any defect in- the title of the Dancers to the 100 acres, but they sought a cancellation upon the ground of delay by the mortgage company in paying out proceeds of the loan.

Evidence was introduced by the plaintiffs in support of their amended petition tending to show that the defendants had appointed the mortgagcj company as their agent to pass upon the title for them, and that plaintiffs had met every requirement of the mortgage company in connection with its examination of thqj title.

This evidence was not controverted by the mortgage company in any manner at the trial, and the judgment should not be disturbed unless it can bej said that by conduct of the mortgage company in standing *150 mute at the trial and offering no testimorv to controvert the showing of title made by the plaintiffs, the defendants thereby had a title forced upon them which was not merchantable, without any opportunity afforded them to establish its invalidity.

It is not contended by the defendants in their brief that they were prevented in any manner from controverting thd evidence of the title offered by the plaintiffs by reason of the dismissal of the action against them, but it is admitted that they had an interest in preventing a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against the mortgage company and were 'permitted to interpose objections to the evidence offered by the plaintiffs to establish an approval of their title.

It is obvious that the court could not render judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against the mortgage company for the proceeds of the loan and at the same time enter judgment cancelling the mortgage and the trial court and all parties interested, recognizing this fact, permitted the defendants to controvert the title relied upon by the plaintiffs, although the defendants had not incorporated in their cross-petition against the mortgage company any claim of right to relief on any defect therein.

The record shows very clearly, we think, that the evidence offered by the defendants to establish the non-merchantibility of the title of the plaintiffs was not eluded by the court on the ground that it was not within the allegations of their cross-petition, but upon the ground that a defect of title could not be established in the manner attempted.

There were no exceptions taken by the defendants to the] action of the court in dismissing the action of the plaintiffs against them nor any allegation anywhere in any pleading filed by them, of an agreement by thej plaintiffs to convey a better title than had been approved by the mortgage company as their agent nor any offer to rescind and redeliver the possession of th<J farm to the plaintiffs and if the title actually conveyed should prove to be defective or unmer-chantable, the defendants have their remedy upon thd covenants of title contained in their deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 105, 233 P. 465, 106 Okla. 148, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-dancer-okla-1925.