Hamel v. Toronto Inv. Co.

1950 OK 72, 216 P.2d 319, 202 Okla. 553, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 21, 1950
Docket33400
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1950 OK 72 (Hamel v. Toronto Inv. Co.) 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
Hamel v. Toronto Inv. Co., 1950 OK 72, 216 P.2d 319, 202 Okla. 553, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 410 (Okla. 1950).

Opinion

ARNOLD, V. C. J.

This is a suit in equity to enforce specific performance of an option to purchase agreement contained in a 99-year lease executed by the defendants and plaintiffs on the 12th day of August, 1936, covering part of lot 7 in block 88, in the city of Tulsa as shown by the original plat thereof.

The facts and circumstances out of which this litigation arose had their beginning in 1928, at which time the Quaker Investment Company, a corporation owned by A. J. Hamel, C. L. Waite, and Fannie C. Waite, held title to the real estate here involved in undivided interests, A. J. Hamel owning 62% per cent and C. L. Waite and Fannie C. Waite owning 37% per cent. C. W. Bliss, an experienced hotel man, desired to construct a building for hotel purposes theron, and negotiations between these parties with this object in view resulted in C. W. Bliss and his mother, Mrs. T. B. Bliss, organizing two corporations, one a building corporation called the Toronto Investment Company and the other an operating corporation known as the Bliss Hotel Company. On the 6th day of June, 1928, the Quaker Investment Company executed a 99-year lease to the Toronto Investment Company for the purpose of erecting a 10-story hotel building on the lot to be operated and conducted by the Bliss Hotel Company. C. W. Bliss was president of both of these corporations and subsequently became manager of the Bliss Hotel.

After these preliminary matters had been worked out by the parties, Mr. Bliss and his mother put in approximately $150,000 into the construction fund and the two corporations headed by Mr. Bliss procured a loan of $300,-000 from the Exchange National Company of Tulsa and $50,000 from the Exchange Trust Company of said city, these loans being secured by first and second mortgages upon the hotel property. The ground owners joined in the execution of these mortgages but were not required to and did not sign the notes evidencing the indebtedness. The hotel was completed in 1929 and began operations.

Owing to economic conditions accompanying the depression in the early years of the hotel’s operation, the hotel company became financially embarrassed and was unable to meet its maturing obligations, with the result that it was placed in receivership and foreclosure judgments sought in the district court on mortgages covering the property in amounts totaling approximately $400,000. The hotel company had defaulted in payments of ground rentals under its 99-year lease until these delinquent rentals amounted to $30,000 and there were numerous small claims totaling in excess of $2,000 which were unsecured. The owners of the ground under the hotel building had *554 joined in the execution of the mortgages which were in process of foreclosure in the district court so that both the landowners and the hotel company were about to lose their respective total investments.

By the joint efforts of plaintiffs and defendants, a loan of $200,000 was secured from the R. F. C. Mortgage Company after lengthy negotiations, and this, together with funds accumulated in the hands of the receiver, enabled the parties to liquidate all of these items of indebtedness against the hotel property except a small balance of approximately $165 which was paid from private funds of one of the parties. In procuring this loan from the R. F. C. Mortgage Company, it became necessary to modify the 99-year lease as to some of its terms and conditions, and after a new 99-year lease was agreed upon and made satisfactory to the R. F. C. Mortgage Company, the original 99-year lease was canceled of record and the new lease executed on the 12th day of August, 1936. It is the option to purchase clause in this later lease which is the basis of plaintiffs’ action while defendants contend that the option to purchase clause in this new lease was not voluntarily agreed to by them but was induced and procured through the fraud and false representations of the plaintiffs as to certain requirements of the R. F. C. Mortgage Company in the modification of the old lease, which fraud and false representations were not discovered or known to defendants until after the commencement of the present action. There are two grounds of fraud and false representation alleged by defendants as follows:

“First, that the rescission of the original 99-year lease and the execution of the new 99-year lease had been procured by the fraud of the plaintiffs, acting by and through their agents; and
“Second, in the alternative that if the evidence be insufficient to establish actual fraud, that the plaintiffs in procuring the second 99-year lease had been guilty of inequitable, unjust and overreaching conduct toward the defendants and had taken advantage of the duress imposed by the economic situation created by the depression to drive a harsh and inequitable bargain with these defendants.”

Defendants also asked by cross-petition for the cancellation of the 99-year lease here involved and the reinstatement of the 99-year lease executed in 1928.

Plaintiffs by their reply deny generally all of the alternative allegations of the answer and cross-petition.

At the opening of the trial defendants requested of the court that they be permitted to assume the burden of proof and to open and close the case. This request was granted by the court and the trial proceeded. Judgment of the trial court was for plaintiffs decreeing specific performance of the purchase agreement contained in the new lease and denying any relief to defendants under their cross-petition.

For reversal of the judgment defendants present their argument under two propositions thus stated in their brief:

“(1) The trial court erred in refusing to enter judgment for the defendants on their cross-petition, cancelling the new 99-year lease and reinstating the original 99-year lease.
“(2) The trial court erred in decreeing specific performance in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants.”

Under these propositions the sole contention of defendants is that they were induced to execute the new 99-year lease by the fraud and false representations of the plaintiffs acting through their president and agent C. W. Bliss. The alleged fraud and false representations are said to have been committed and made by Mr. Bliss in reference to four requirements asserted by Bliss to have been made by the R. F. C. Mortgage Company as conditions to the closing of the loan of $200,000 finally granted to the plaintiffs. It is contended that there were false representations fraudulently made to the effect that a new ground lease for 99 years be executed *555 containing other and different conditions than those in the original lease; that it was falsely and fraudulently represented that the R. F. C. Mortgage Company required the cancellation of the delinquent ground rentals accrued under the original 99-year lease in the sum of $34,000; that it was also falsely and fraudulently represented that the new lease to be executed must contain a provision fixing the annual ground rental at $4,200; that it was also falsely and fraudulently represented that the new lease should contain an option to purchase clause to be exercised within a 15-year period for the price of $65,-000 instead of the price fixed in the original lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1950 OK 72, 216 P.2d 319, 202 Okla. 553, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamel-v-toronto-inv-co-okla-1950.