Harrison v. Elliott

1924 OK 1147, 232 P. 23, 105 Okla. 163, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 502
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1924
Docket15009
StatusPublished

This text of 1924 OK 1147 (Harrison v. Elliott) 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
Harrison v. Elliott, 1924 OK 1147, 232 P. 23, 105 Okla. 163, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 502 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This action *164 was commenced in the district court of Pon-totoc county 'by W. M. Elliott, defendant in error, plaintiff beílow, againist Thad Harrison, plaintiff in .error, defendant below, and John H. Gray, plaintiff in error, in-terpleader below, for the recovery of the sum of $575, claimed by the defendant in error for rent under a contract of tenancy. The parties will be referred to as plaintiff, defendant and interpleader as they appeared in the lower court.

The petition was the ordinary complaint by a landlord against his tenant for the recovery of rent and claim of landlord’s lien and attachment to enforce said lien. From the pleadings it appears that the plaintiff had rented the allotment of Alfred Bruner, a minor Chickasaw freedman, from him and his father and mother, and had occupied it, either in person or through his tenant, Thad Harrison, for several years, and that he had rented it for the crop season of 1919 and paid the rents thereon: that sometime afterwards, in the month of April or the first of May, Alfred Bruner arrived at his majority and sold the lands to W. A. Parrett and Louis Cannon, executing the deed in the name of Barrett; that the interpleader, John H. Gray, had entered into a written contract with the plaintiff, W. M. Elliott, who hiad a contract with Bruner to buy the land and who was to purchase the land from Bruner and sell the san® to said Gray, Gray paying at the time on said contract the sum of $500, and the written contract provided that, in the event that plaintiff Elliott did not secure a merchantable title from| Bruner on his arriving at big majority and could not carry out the contract of sale to Gray, Elliott was to return the $500 and interest and Gray was to surrender the possession of the property and attorn to Elliott for the rents on the lands for the year 1919; that this contract was not carried out for the reason that Bruner sold the lands to Barrett and Cannon and Elliott returned the $500 and interest to Gray. Afterwards John H, Gray purchased the lands from Barrett and Cannon and when the crops matured Gray made a demand on Thad Harrison for the rents and the plaintiff Elliott claimed the rents and the defendant Thad Harrison offered in his answer to pay the rents to either of them for the year 1919, that the court determined was entitled thereto, and asked that John H. Gray be made a party to the action, and he was made a party by his filing his petition in intervention, in which he claimed that he had bought the property in May, 1919, and was entitled to the rents; that there was no reservation of the crops and that the claim of the plaintiff to the crops was unlawful and under a void contract.

Upon these issues the cause was traed to a jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, Elliott, in the sum of $450.

Motion for new tria.1 was filed, heard and overruled ; exceptions reserved and the court pronounced judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, Thad Harrison, and the interpleader, John H. Gray, in the sum of $450, interest and costs, and the cause comes regularly on appeal by Thad Harrison, defendant, and John H. Gray, interpleader, to this court for review.

While there are several specifications of error, the attorneys for the defendant and interpleader content themselves in presenting their argument to this court under two general heads, which are as follows:

“As to whether or not the contract entered into between E'lliott and Gray sued on herein was binding upon plaintiff in error, and if the court erred in refusing to peremptorily instruct the jury to find a verdict for the interpleader, John H. Gray.’’
“That the court erred in admitting incompetent evidence, overruling demurrer of interpleader to the evidence of plaintiff and giving instructions Nos. 3, 4 and 5.”

The attorneys for defendant and inter-pleader filed demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence at the close of testimony on part of plaintiff, which was overruled and exception reserved, and both parties, at the close of all the testimony in the case, requested peremptory instructions in their favor, which requests were denied, and exceptions reserved.

Briefly the testimony shows that the plaintiff had rented the lands for several years from the minor and his father and mother, and had always paid the rents and that he had always had a contract or understanding of some kind that when' the minor arrived at the age of 21 he would purchase the title to the land; that he had subrented to the defendant, Thad Harrison, who had paid rents to the plaintiff for a period of years, and that the plaintiff had entered into a contract with the interpleader, which contract was reduced to writing and introduced in evidence, to procure a merchantable title from the minor and sell the same to the interpleader, which failed because of the fact that the minor on arriving at his majority sold the land to Barrett and Cannon and the contract, heretofore mentioned, provided that, if plaintiff failed to secure title and convey it to the interpleader, he was to return the $500 paid to him. A few days *165 after Bruner, the minor, sold the land to Barrett and Canhon, the plaintiff returned the $500 and interest, mentioned in the contract, to the interpleader. The interpleader then purchased the land from Barrett and Cannon and made no claim for the rents until the crops had matured and were being harvested.

The evidence further discloses that, at the time Bruner, the minor, came of age and sold the land to Barrett and Cannon, he advised them that the rents belonged to Elliott, and that he had rented the land to Elliott and that Elliott had paid him for the rents for 1919, and that there was due the plaintiff the sum of $300, which he directed Barrett to pay the plaintiff and which was paid by Barrett out of the consideration paid by Barrett for the deed; that wben Barrett and Cannon transferred the title to the interpleader, Gray, Barrett info-med the interpleader, in the presence of Cannon, that the rents wient to the plaintiff, as he had already paid the rent for the year 1919. This last statement was disputed by the interpleader and there was contradictory evidence upon this proposition. The above statement of fact is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion.

It is the unquestioned rule, established by a long line of decisions of this court, that where the evidence is conflicting it is within the province of the jury to determine what evidence it will or will not believe, and to reconcile the conflicts, if possible, and by its verdict in this case the jury evidently believed the testimony of Cannon and Bruner upon the proposition that the rents were reserved and rental contract of Bruner with plaintiff was ratified by him after he arrived at his majority, and he so informed his grantees, at the time he sold the lands to them, who, in turn, notified the in-terpleader, and this court will not weigh the testimony nor invade the province of the jury upon this proposition.

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1916 OK 833 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1147, 232 P. 23, 105 Okla. 163, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-elliott-okla-1924.