Hobbs v. Watkins

1971 OK 19, 481 P.2d 746, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1971
Docket42265
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1971 OK 19 (Hobbs v. Watkins) 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
Hobbs v. Watkins, 1971 OK 19, 481 P.2d 746, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 230 (Okla. 1971).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice:

The principal question posed for our determination by the present appeal is whether there was ample evidence to warrant submitting to the jury the question of whether defendants conspired to cause plaintiff’s death in order to collect the $100,000.00 proceeds of a $50,000.00 double indemnity insurance policy on her life and injured her in attempting to carry out the plan. We hold there was. Pryor v. Harvey, 121 Okl. 288, 249 P. 905 (1926); Oller v. Hicks, Okl., 441 P.2d 356 (1968).

Defendant in error Watkins as plaintiff in the trial court sued defendant Hobbs and his daughter, Mrs. Campbell, and Hobbs’ nephew, one Tidwell, alleging that defendants, acting in concert, conspired to willfully and deliberately murder her for the purpose of collecting the $100,000.00 proceeds of a $50,000.00 double indemnity insurance policy which they had fraudulently caused her to take out on her own life as arranged for by them with Mrs. Campbell as beneficiary. Plaintiff did not procure service of summons on defendant Tidwell. The remaining defendants filed an answer denying plaintiff’s claims.

The proof offered on behalf of plaintiff tended to show that Mrs. Campbell owned an undivided half interest in the minerals in and under a farm which Hobbs and his deceased wife, prior to Mrs. Hobbs’ death, had given to the daughter by deed; that Mrs. Watkins had been in the custom interior decorating business for herself in Oklahoma City but had gone to work for a publishing house out of Chicago; that her job required her to travel and assist local women’s groups with fund-raising projects; that she met Hobbs on one of her business trips and soon was meeting him often and would drink some with him.

Plaintiff testified that on an occasion when they were driving around together, Hobbs showed her a rural property and stated it was his place and that some machinery setting there was his but that he told her he couldn’t show her inside the home.

Plaintiff testified that Hobbs told her he wanted to get the mineral rights which he and his now-deceased wife had deeded to *749 Mrs. Campbell, back in his own name; that he would like for Mrs. Watkins, to buy them.

Mrs. Watkins did purportedly buy the minerals for $100,000.00 and executed an installment note in the amount of One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00) payable $100.00 per month and $4,000.00 in the month of May of each year thereafter. Defendant Campbell deeded the minerals to plaintiff and plaintiff gave Mrs. Campbell a mortgage covering the minerals, securing the $100,000.00 note. The interest rate on unpaid principal provided for in the note was one per cent (1%) per annum.

Mrs. Watkins testified Hobbs led her to believe he intended to marry her and that he assured her that he would see she would not be out any money in paying the note given for the minerals.

Mrs. Watkins bought a $50,000.00 double indemnity insurance policy with Mrs. Campbell designated as the beneficiary thereof the same day she received the mineral deed and executed and delivered the note and mortgage. She paid the premium for the first year on the insurance policy with her own check in the amount of $459.59. The check was cashed and cleared. In exchange for the check, plaintiff received a conditional receipt (binder) from the company’s soliciting agent.

Mrs. Watkins said she later had a mineral deed prepared to give the mineral interest back to Mrs. Campbell but kept it a while and later destroyed it.

Mr. Hobbs, called as a witness for plaintiff admitted that back in 1960 when his wife and he bought one half the minerals under their farm (the same amount Mrs. Campbell purportedly sold to plaintiff for $100,000.00) his wife and he paid therefor the amount of consideration recited in the mineral deed they took, to-wit: $250.00.

Later, on cross-examination he testified that he didn’t think a person “would be stupid to pay anywhere in the neighborhood of $100,000 for that mineral interest out there” but that he really was not qualified to answer as to what a fair price for the property would be. He admitted having heard Mrs. Campbell testify she had received five or six checks in the past 8 or 10 months for from $22.00 down to $2.00 in royalty payments.

Plaintiff testified that on the day the alleged attempt to murder her occurred, being a Sunday, she saw defendant Hobbs and his nephew on Highway 33 near Bris-tow and arranged to meet him at the Chandler gate on the (Turner) Turnpike between 4:00 and 4:30 P.M.; that on later meeting him Hobbs got into her Rambler station wagon and drove it and the nephew drove Hobbs’ blue Dodge automobile; that she had understood they were going to Oklahoma City but that they turned toward Tulsa; that Hobbs explained that he had to meet a man who was going to pay Hobbs Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000.00) cash for some cutters sold to the man from off Hobbs’ bulldozer.

Plaintiff testified that they drove through Tulsa and on east and turned on a county gravel road and came to a place where Hobbs backed her car into a little path beside the road that it appeared cars had been driven into and stopped and" waited. She said Hobbs had brought a fifth of whiskey and that he drank some and she took a couple of drinks with him but that her state of consciousness was not affected thereby.

Plaintiff testified Hobbs’ nephew later came along in Hobbs’ car and stopped near where they were stopped. She said Hobbs asked the nephew to bring his gun to him out of Hobbs’ car, explaining someone might try to rob them. Plaintiff said the nephew brought a gun that looked different from the one Hobbs usually carried in his car and brought a six-pack of beer; that the nephew drank out of the six-pack and that she drank perhaps half a can of beer.

Plaintiff said she was sitting in the front seat of her car with her knees up in the seat and her feet under her, talking with Hobbs who was under the steering wheel and the nephew who was outside the *750 right open front door, stooped down on his heels. Plaintiff said, “The last I remember I was looking at the nephew — and that is all,” that she lost consciousness; that the next thing she knew, she had “started to come to,” that she “had been completely turned around in the seat” and was lying down on the seat with her head toward the steering wheel, that she guessed her feet were in the floor of the car, that she “knew immediately that the car had been moved” and “realized by the incline of the car that it was setting on a railroad track.” She said she raised up and Albert Hobbs and the nephew were standing on the outside of the open door on the right hand side of the car. She said she pushed herself up off the seat and turned around and looked at Albert and said, “why, Albert, why.” She said Hobbs responded that, “Fran, you made me mad” and took her by the shoulder and upper part of her arm and sent the nephew for the other fifth of whiskey out of his car; that the nephew brought it to Hobbs and Hobbs shoved her back down on the seat and Hobbs hit her with the whiskey bottle and she lost consciousness.

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Bluebook (online)
1971 OK 19, 481 P.2d 746, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbs-v-watkins-okla-1971.