Koutsky v. Park Nat. Bank

1934 OK 99, 29 P.2d 962, 167 Okla. 373, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 20, 1934
Docket21883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1934 OK 99 (Koutsky v. Park Nat. Bank) 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
Koutsky v. Park Nat. Bank, 1934 OK 99, 29 P.2d 962, 167 Okla. 373, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 523 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff in error was plaintiff and defendants in error (except L. Wade, who was only a nominal party and who filed disclaimer) were defendants in the court below, and they will hereafter be referred to as they appeared in that court.

On the 10th day of August, 1929, tho defendant L. Wade was trying to promote a drilling deal on certain town lots in Asher, Okla., which were owned by the defendants in error. On that date, defendants executed a lease or drilling contract with him (L. Wade) on tho ordinary producers’ SS form, and providing that:

“If no well be commenced on said land on or before the 15th day of September, 1929, this lease shall terminate as to both parties. * * * Actual drilling to begin on lots 18 or 19, block 37, Asher, Okla., on or before October 1, 1929, and to continue drilling with all due diligence and said well shall be completed and producing in pipe line on or before November 20, 1929.”

At the same time and place, and as part of the same transaction, Wade assigned said lease or drilling- contract (except 5/64 interest retained by him) to tho plaintiff, John W. Koutsky; and the defendants and Wade and Koutsky entered into a separato escrow agreement providing that defendants were to “furnish to the party of the second part, and his assigns, a good abstract title to said property to be passed upon, examined, and approved by tho attorneys of the second party and his assigns. Said abstracts to be examined and returned on or before 20 days from this date and tho party of the second part to have 20 days from the return of said abstracts to meet all requirements, if any. made by the attorneys of the parties of the first part and his assigns.”

At the same time (August 10, 1929), Koutsky put up in escrow in the defendant *374 bank and with the escrow agreement referred 10, the sum oi! $2,0U0 for the perrormance of the contract and the drilling of the well, and with an additional $1,000 to be put up by him on September 15, 1029,

“•Said monies to be subject to the order of Josephine Cotton, Henry Cotton. Clyde Walker, Prank Walker and Sarah Walker, in the event that said parties of the second part, L» Wade, shall fail to carry out his part of this contract * * * that actual drilling shall begin on or before October 1, 1929, or to complete said oil or gas well on or before November 20, 1929.”

The last $1,000 wjis never put up by Koutsky, as the contract had failed from the standpoint of both parties before September 15, 1929, and both parties were at that time claiming the first $2,000.

Although the lease was dated the 10th day of August, 1929, it was not acknowledged by Prank Walker and Sarah Walker until the 15th day of August, 1929, and it was thereupon delivered to plaintiff, and on the next day put to record, and plaintiff submitted his title to his attorney (Mr. Wells of Shawnee) for examination.

Prank Walker and Josephine Cotton were the owners of the larger part of the lots embraced in the leases to Wade, and they had, on the 19th day of July, 1929. entered into a contract for lease on their same lots with Geo. B. Orr; and, after the defendants had made the Wade lease and the escrow agreement going therewith, Orr (on the 20th day of August, 1929) put his contract to record, together with his affidavit that:

“Said affiant hereby gives notice to the public that he claims said oil and gas lease, and all parties are hereby warned not to purchase or attempt to acquire any interest therein, as said oil and gas lease is of right, under the terms of this contract, the property of said Orr, he standing ready at this time and has been at all times ready and willing and able to comply with the terms of said contract.”

The attorney to whom the abstract was submitted gave his written opinion calling attention to this Orr contract and affidavit, but the testimony shows that the written opinion has been lost and its exact statements do not appear i-n the record. However, it does appear from the testimony on both sides that immediately after the recording of this Orr contract and affidavit came to the knowledge of Koutsky, he and Wade took it up with the defendants. Henry Cotton seems to have been the principal acting party on the part of the defendants, and his testimony about plaintiff’s complaint and what transpired thereafter is as follows:

“Q. Hid he say anything about this Orr contract? A. Yes. Q. What did he say about that? A. Well, he said that Mr. Orr had filed a contract of record up there after he put his of record. When he put his of i ecord his title was clear and there was nothing against it, but five or six days after he had filed his, then comes Mr. Orr and filed his stuff.* * * Q. Do you remember, Mr. Cotton, of the time when you had two of the Walkers to ask Mr. Koutsky to come to Sulphur with the idea of taking down this $2,000 deposit and getting this matter cleared up? A. Yes, sir. Q. How soon did that happen after the 10th. if you remember? A. Well, it must have been two or three weeks or something of that kind or probably longer. I could not say exactly about the date, but it was quite a bit. I got notice of this, and I went up there to see him. I says, ‘Now, if you will release me and turn back my abstract, clear that all from the record, take all this stuff oC that you have caused to be put on there and clear me up and give me a release, I will sign the release, and all the rest of them will, and we will get it where we can gets action.’ I did not want that money, but only a producing well; I would rather have the well than the $2,000.”

When the defendant Frank Walker was on the stand, ho made a categorical denial of nearly everything by way of either knowledge of complaint on account of the Orr contract or of Koutsky’s demanding his money down from the bank, but his brother, Clyde Walker (one of the defendants and one of the signers of the lease and escrow agreement), when called as a witness on behalf of the defendants, testified as follows:

“Q. I mean after — when this deal blew, did you know that Dr. Koutsky was trying to draw down his money? A. Dr. Koutsky told me so. Q. Did he tell you why he was trying to draw it down? A. He said that there was somebody had filed an affidavit or something, and he talked with my brother about it before me, and my brother told him he did not think there was anyihi-ng to that, and he explained to him why, and offered to make bond to cover it, and wanted him to go ahead and drill. Q. And you board that then some time after this escrow agreement was executed? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know whether that was within the period of 20 days after it was executed or not? A. No, I could not state.”

The plaintiff, Koutsky, did not make written requirements of title of the defendants, but the question of defects or flaws seems to have been handled entirely by parol. In connection with the discussions of the parties about the Orr contract and *375

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 99, 29 P.2d 962, 167 Okla. 373, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koutsky-v-park-nat-bank-okla-1934.