Lincoln v. Wells

1960 OK 42, 350 P.2d 589, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1960
Docket38596
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1960 OK 42 (Lincoln v. Wells) 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
Lincoln v. Wells, 1960 OK 42, 350 P.2d 589, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 324 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This case involves the purchase by Emmett Lincoln, plaintiff in error, and his Aunt Susie Freeman, now deceased, of an undivided one-half interest in a 40-acre tract of land situated in the vicinity of 81st and East Harvard Streets of the City of Tulsa. Long after the purchase, a controversy arose as to whether they had purchased the interest as tenants in common, or as joint tenants with right of survivorship.

The instrument of conveyance used in their acquisition of title to the reality, pursuant to purchase from one Ruth Kramps, a Colorado resident, was drafted on an ordinary warranty deed form, naming both Lincoln and Mrs. Freeman as grantees, and bearing no writing, or indication whatsoever, that, in the event of the death of either of said grantees, the one who survived was to own the entire interest. The deed was executed on September 15, 1942; and, having rented from the Kramps woman before the purchase, Susie Freeman (a widow) resided on the tract afterward, and until shortly before her death intestate in February, 1954, without surviving children.

After Mrs. Freeman’s death, Lincoln locked the house, in which she had resided on the tract, and it remained unoccupied for many months. Thereafter, a real estate dealer evidenced interest in negotiating a sale of the property. Then followed the present controversy between Lincoln and the decedent’s brothers and sisters, defendants in error herein, over its ownership.

Upon a petition therefor filed in the county court on November 30, 1955, Para-lee Wells Waterfield, plaintiff’s mother, a sister of the deceased, was appointed ad-ministratrix of Mrs. Freeman’s estate; and, thereafter she, acting through Walter Wells, a brother, rented the decedent’s home to one Frederick.

On March 26, 1956, Lincoln, as plaintiff, instituted the present district court action against the defendants in error herein, as defendants, alleging, in substance, that, according to an oral agreement between him and Susie Freeman for the purchase of the undivided one-half interest in the subject tract, they were to acquire title to it in such a way that, upon the death of either of them, the one who survived would own the entire undivided one-half interest. The relief prayed for in plaintiff’s said petition was that the deed in question be reformed in accord with said agreement, and that his title be quieted to the entire interest. Before the answer date in this district court action, the county court, on April 19, 1957, entered its final decree in the matter of Susie Freeman’s Estate, describing the residue of said estate as an undivided one-fourth interest in said realty, and distributing said interest in undivided one-fifth parts to the defendants in error herein, as her heirs, notwithstanding plaintiff’s attorney’s appearance before said county judge the same day, informing him of plaintiff’s claim to said interest.

Thereafter, upon trial of the present district court action, and, after the filing of pleadings on behalf of the decedent’s aforementioned heirs, relying on the above described deed, as drawn, and denying that *591 the deceased had any agreement with Lincoln (as alleged in his petition) for the acquisition of the property by any different form of deed, the court, at the close of the evidence, allowed the parties to submit briefs in support of their respective positions; and, thereafter rendered a judgment, in general terms, for the defendants. After unsuccessful efforts to obtain a new trial, Lincoln perfected the present appeal. Our continued reference to him and to the decedent’s brothers and sisters will be by their trial court designations, of “plaintiff” and “defendants”, respectively.

In urging reversal of the trial court’s judgment, plaintiff’s position, generally and in substance, is that said judgment is clearly against the weight of the evidence. He seems to recognize, in his statement of, and argument under, his Proposition I, the character of the burden necessarily assumed by the plaintiff in any action to reform a deed on the ground of mutual mistake, by characterizing it as one of supporting his cause of action by evidence that is “clear, unequivocal, convincing, full, unmistakable and satisfactory, and establishes the facts and mistake to a moral certainty which takes the case out of the range of reasonable controversy * * * ”, citing Bombarger v. Bloss, 196 Okl. 153, 163 P.2d 551, and other cases. He erroneously assumes, however, that, because his evidence was uncontradicted in certain particulars, he discharged this formidable burden so thoroughly that the trial court’s judgment must be reversed as being against the clear weight of the evidence.

While we must agree that there is in the record no testimony directly or categorically contradicting that which plaintiff adduced by various witnesses about statements made to them, or in their presence, by him and Susie Freeman, during her lifetime, to the effect that, as between the two, the one who survived the other was to have the entire interest they had purchased, none of such testimony unequivocally establishes the basis of such an arrangement in any oral agreement entered into by said parties before execution of the deed, except that of the plaintiff, himself, and Ruth Kramps.

For reasons hereinafter indicated, the testimony last referred to cannot be held to warrant reversal of the trial court’s judgment. As far as appears from other testimony, Mrs. Freeman and plaintiff may have entered into some kind of an understanding, or loose arrangement, at some time after delivery of the deed, to the effect that (despite the fact that the 20-acre interest they had acquired was only an undivided one) a certain 10 acres was to be regarded as hers, and another 10 acres would be regarded as his. Such evidence of an understanding, or agreement, made after the deed was executed and delivered is of little, if any, significance in discharging plaintiff’s burden of proof, and obtaining the relief he seeks, on the basis of negotiations or agreements had before that time, under the rule that all such agreements had before delivery of the deed are merged in it. See Bell v. Little, Okl., 346 P.2d 729.

With reference to some of the facts leading up to the transaction, there can be no doubt or speculation. Ruth Kramps seems to have taken the initiative in effecting the sale. On, or immediately before, September 14, 1942, she drove to the place where Mrs. Freeman and Lincoln were living on North Madison Avenue, in Tulsa, and negotiated the sale with them. There can be no question but that, on that date, a purchase price of $700 for the property was agreed upon, a down payment was made on it, and it was agreed that the three parties would meet the next day, or September 15, 1942, in the office of one F. W. Newman, a Notary Public and real estate dealer, for the closing of the transaction. When this meeting occurred Newman drafted, on a regular printed warranty form, the deed in question, and also two promissory notes in the amount of $200 each, maturing in one and two years, respectively, as well as a real estate mortgage on the property securing payment of the notes. When this was done, both Lincoln and Mrs. Freeman signed the notes and the *592 mortgage, Ruth Kramps signed the deed, and Newman, as a Notary, executed the acknowledgments on both the deed and the mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 42, 350 P.2d 589, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-v-wells-okla-1960.