Horton v. Foley

1923 OK 1036, 220 P. 967, 94 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 27, 1923
Docket12384
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1923 OK 1036 (Horton v. Foley) 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
Horton v. Foley, 1923 OK 1036, 220 P. 967, 94 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 431 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

Plaintiff in error, John Horton as plaintiff, sued C. E. Foley et al., defendants in error, as defendants, in the district court of Wagoner county. The material parts of his petition follow:

“That on the 23rd day of March, 1918, the plaintiff and defendant, C. E. Foley, entered into a written contract of sale of the said land, whefeby the plaintiff agreed to purchase i-aid land, and the defendant, C. E. Foley, to sell said land; that plaintiff paid to said C. E. Foley the sum of $600 as a part payment on the purchase price; that there were various terms and covenants in said agreement, and that plaintiff had fully performed and execut *10 ed all obligations on his part to be carried out under said contract; that a true and correct copy of said contract, marked “Exhibit A,” is hereto attached and made a part hereof.

“That in said contract, there appears the following reservation of oil, gas and mineral rights, to wit: ‘Oil, gas and mineral rights to be reserved in said deed to grant- or, O. E. Eoley.’ ,

“That said contract was drawn up, signed and the part consideration of $600 paid by plaintiff on said 23rd day of March, 1918, and that nothing was said by the parties thereto about any reservation to O. E. Foley of gas, oil, and mineral rights; and that after said contract had been agreed to, signed and said part consideration paid, the defendant, O. E. Foley took same and had written therein the said reservation, stating to plaintiff that he had left out something and what he had added to said contract pertained to oil and gas rights; that plaintiff told said O. E. Foley that he did not want any oil taken from his land and that he did not want to be bothered with oil workers on his place, and that he wanted to farm; that plaintiff had just come to Oklahoma from Arkansas and from a locality where oil and gas matters are not generally known and understood, and that plaintiff a.t said time was ignorant and uninformed gs to such matters; that plaintiff is illiterate and cannot read or write; that defendant O. E. Foley is a man of large experience, both in general business affairs and in oil and gas matters; that plaintiff made his objections aforesaid and that the defendant, O. E. Foley, assured him that the additional words written in the contract made no difference at all; that plaintiff went onto th'e said land in Wagoner county and consulted a lawyer in said county about said contract with the additional words therein, and was informed of the rights of the said O. B. Foley under said contract and said reservation of oil, gas and mineral rights, and he then learned that the assurance of said C. E. Foley that the said reservation would make no difference was not

the truth.

“That the plaintiff has fully complied with all the terms and conditions of said contract, and that the defendant has executed and delivered to plaintiff a warranty deed to said land, and plaintiff has made notes covering balance of purchase price and interest due, and has given a mortgage on said land to secure the payment thereof.

“That the said warranty deed contains the following reservation: ‘But it is expressly understood and agreed that there is reserved and excepted from and not included in the above deals, conveyance or grant, all or any gas and oil or mineral that may be on, in or under said land with full right and privilege to the grantor, his heirs and assigns to develop and operate the same, including the right of entry thereon for any purpose necessary or convenient for the exercise of this right by the grantor, his Iheirs and assigns’;

“That the plaintiff demanded a warranty deed from said O. E. Foley without said reservation, but said Foley refused to make, execute and deliver to him such a deed; and that plaintiff took the said warranty deed containing said reservation objecting and excepting to said reservation and advising the said O. E. Foley that he would seek relief of the courts; that the said deed is filed of record in the office of the county clerk of Wagoner county, Oklahoma, in Record No. 145, on page 73, and is instrument numbered 19776 among said records; that a copy of said deed, marked ‘Exhibt B’ is hereto attached and made a part hereof.

“That said deed is signed and was executed by said O. E. Foley and the defendants, Rosa L. Foley, the wife of C. E. Foley, and Leo Whitlow and Ralph Whitlow; that said Rosa L. Foley, Leo Whitlow and Ralph Whitlow were claiming some right, title or interest in and to said land, and their signatures to and their execution of said deed were obtained by said C. E. Foley in order to convey .title to plaintiff.

“Plaintiff states that said reservation was placed in said contract and said deed without the consent of this plaintiff; that the said C. E. Foley willfully and intentionally, with the purpose to defraud this plaintiff of his oil, gas and mineral rights in said land; inserted said reservation in said contract and the said reservation in said deed: that the assurance of said C. E. Foley that said reservation would make no difference was false and fraudulent, and was relied on by this plaintiff; that before the plaintiff learned the falseness and fraud of the said O. E. Foley, he had moved onto said land, and had made valuable improvements on same; and that said reservation in said deed wrongfully and fraudulently deprives plaintiff of his oil, gas and mineral rights in said land,' to his material injury.”

The plaintiff prayed that the said reservation in said deed of the oil and gas rights be decreed to be void, and that the title be qitieted in plaintiff against all defendants. Defendant C. E. Foley filed answer on behalf of all defendants. Such answer consisted of general denial, and admitted that the said land was allotted to Whitlow; that the plaintiff was the owner of said land “under the conditions governing the sale and purchase thereof”; and that the contract and deed exhibited were true and correct. Thereupon, defendant Foley filed his motion for judgment on the pleadings, which motion was duly sustained by the court. Judgment was entered quieting the *11 title to the real estate in controversy in the plaintiff against all defendants, except' as to the reservation as to oil, gas and mineral rights therein, which rights said judgment specifically reserved to defendant C. E. Foley and his eodefendants. From said judgment, plaintiff, Horton, prosecutes this appeal. Plaintiff assigns as error the sustaining of motion for judgment on the pleading.

“A motion for judgment upon the pleadings is in the nature of a demurrer. It is in substance both a motion and a demurrer. It is a demurrer for the reason that it attacks the sufficiency of the pleadings; and it is a motion for the reason that it is an application for an order for judgment. Like a demurrer, it admits the truth of all well-pier ded facts in the pleadings of the opposing party.” Deming Inv. Co. v. Reed et ux., 72 Oklahoma, 179 Pac. 35.

It is evident from said petition that plaintiff’s cause of action essentially sounds in fraud based on an alleged false representation, to wit. the statement, ‘‘made no difference at all.” This is the only alleged false statement. When scrutinized it will be observed that the other allegations in relation to such statement, essential to a cause of action for fraud, are but imperfectly pleaded. In White et al. v. Harrigan et al., 77 Okla. 123, 186 Pac. 224, it is held;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 1036, 220 P. 967, 94 Okla. 9, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-foley-okla-1923.