Hudson v. Elliott

1951 OK 20, 252 P.2d 482, 207 Okla. 676, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 771
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket33836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1951 OK 20 (Hudson 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
Hudson v. Elliott, 1951 OK 20, 252 P.2d 482, 207 Okla. 676, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 771 (Okla. 1951).

Opinion

CORN, J.

Plaintiff brought suit individually and as guardian of her husband, Ralph G. Hudson, an incompetent, to rescind a contract and recover earnest money paid thereunder. Subsequent to bringing the action, the husband died, and the suit was continued by plaintiff as his administratrix.

About September 2, 1946, plaintiff and her husband, residents of California, stopped at a tourist court in Vinita, Oklahoma, owned by defendants, El-liotts, and McCandlesses, but encumbered by a mortgage in favor of the defendant bank. Learning the property was "for sale Hudson expressed interest in purchasing the property, and examined it with this in mind. While there plaintiff advised Mrs. McCandless that Hudson was about to suffer a nervous breakdown. The following day the Hud-sons met the Elliotts in Tulsa and after some discussion a price of $20,000 was put upon the property. Hudson declared he was ready to close the deal and gave Mr. Elliott a check for $2,500, as earnest money to be applied on the purchase price. This check was drawn upon plaintiffs’ joint account in a California bank.

The next day the parties returned to Vinita, and, in company with the Mc-Candlesses, called on a lawyer in that town who had handled other transactions on the same property for defendants. The details were explained and he drew up a contract for sale and purchase of the property, secured the abstract from the bank and examined and approved the title. The abstract, a copy of the contract and a warranty deed executed by defendants were deposited in the bank. The contract provided for forfeiture of the earnest money as liquidated damages in the event of the vendees’ failure to carry out the terms and complete the purchase according to the contract by November 1, 1946.

Upon completion of the transaction plaintiffs immediately began their return to California. During. the return trip Hudson’s mental and nervous condition seemed to grow worse. After their arrival home his mental condition seemed to deteriorate more rapidly. Plaintiff notified defendants by mail of his condition, that he had been placed in a sanatarium, and that because of this it would be impossible for them to complete the transaction. Plaintiff inquired whether defendants would retain an amount out of the earnest money to reimburse them for their trouble, and then return the balance and release plaintiffs from the contract. Defendants consulted the attorney who prepared the contract, and he then wrote plaintiff a letter offering to rescind the contract and return the earnest money, less expenses, provided defendants were able to find another purchaser by November 1, 1946. The letter also asked that plaintiff request the defendant bank to release the deed executed by defendants, so they might negotiate a sale to someone else. This plaintiff refused to do, and thereafter she *678 brought this action to rescind the contract and recover the earnest money.

Plaintiff’s petition first alleged the defendant bank held the earnest money in escrow only as a stakeholder, and asked that the bank be enjoined from paying such funds over to the other defendants.

The petition alleged that at the time the contract was made Hudson was mentally ill and without understanding, and that plaintiff was in a state of fear and under duress so that she was incapable of binding herself, neither of them being capable of free or voluntary action; that defendants learned plaintiffs had $2,500 cash and conceived the design of obtaining same from plaintiffs; in furtherance of such design plaintiffs were taken to a lawyer who previously had represented defendants, and being lacking in understanding and business experience, they did not understand that the earnest money paid was to be forfeited if the transaction was not completed; that plaintiffs were further overreached and misled because the price was exorbitant and the contract unconscionable, title to the property being unmerchantable; that within ten days after the contract was signed plaintiffs sought to rescind. Plaintiffs asked judgment against the bank for return of the money, and sought cancellation of the contract as to the other defendants. Plaintiffs also set out a second cause of action for recovery of exemplary and compensatory damages.

The defendant bank, by separate answer, denied any knowledge of the controversy, or that any money or escrow agreement had been placed with the bank by the parties, although admitting that the contract and deed had been left at the bank for safekeeping. Further, that other defendants had presented plaintiffs check for payment, and the bank had cashed same and credited their account; and that defendant bank held a mortgage on the property for $6,000 reduced to $5,200 by payments. No further proceedings were taken against the bank.

By answer the principal defendants admitted the allegations concerning the negotiations leading up to the execution of the contract and receipt of the down payment. However, they denied Hudson’s mental illness, or that plaintiff was in a state of fear or duress. Further, that plaintiffs were advised of the necessity - for having the abstract brought down to date and title examined, and plaintiff’s employed the lawyer in question; that after execution of the contract it was agreed orally that everything be placed in escrow in the bank, the instructions being that the escrow was to be delivered upon plaintiff’s completion of the transaction according to terms of the contract. Defendants admitted receipt of plaintiff’s letters advising of her husband’s condition and their inability to complete the contract, and that they advised her they would rescind provided another purchaser could be found; that plaintiffs were requested to release the escrow, which they refused to do; that prior and subsequent to execution of the contract defendants received offers of $20,000 for the property, and defendants at all times were able to convey merchantable title.

Before trial defendants filed a supplemental answer showing they had secured a release of the escrow papers. Therein it was further alleged that, prior to the time the escrow was released, defendants had been unable to sell the property to any other per-chaser and during such period the market value of their property decreased to $16,000, defendants thereby being damaged in amount of $4,000.

When the case was tried, the plaintiff, in effect, abandoned the allegations of the petition other than the claim that the value of the property in question was $20,000, and, therefore, defendants were not entitled to claim the earnest money as liquidated damages under the terms of the contract. The case was tried as an equity proceeding, although the court impaneled a jury for the purpose of fixing actual damages, in the event the court should *679 find that the provision for liquidated damages was invalid.

An extended narrative of the evidence herein is unnecessary. The record, the correctness of which is not certified by a court reporter, contains evidence in plaintiffs behalf in the form of depositions read at the trial, as well as other evidence in narrative form supplied from the testimony of witnesses given by deposition in the State of California. The record does not contain any of the evidence offered by defendants at the trial. The record does contain sufficient evidence to establish Hudson’s lack of mental capacity during the negotiations leading up to the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
1951 OK 20, 252 P.2d 482, 207 Okla. 676, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-elliott-okla-1951.