Lynch v. Perryman

1911 OK 406, 119 P. 229, 29 Okla. 615, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1911
Docket862
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1911 OK 406 (Lynch v. Perryman) 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
Lynch v. Perryman, 1911 OK 406, 119 P. 229, 29 Okla. 615, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 349 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

DUNN, J.

This case presents .error from the district court of Kay county. It was instituted' on the ll'th day of January, 1906, by plaintiff in error as plaintiff, for the purpose of recovering rent due on a certain lease contract entered into by the defendant with the Ponca City Land & Improvement Company. No counter abstract is made or exceptions taken to the statement of facts as they appear in the brief of plaintiff in error, from which we glean the following to have been established by the pleadings and the evidence:

The defendant, under the lease made to tjjim by plaintiff’s-assignor, the Ponca City Land & Improvement Company, paid', rent thereon from January 1, 1903, the date thereof, to September 1, 1904. The lease in question contained the following provision, among others:

“And it is further agreed by said lessee that he will not, by or under this lease, or through the possession of said property, ever claim or contest the rights of the lessor, and in case of sale give possession in thirty da)'s.”

To the petition the defendant filed his amended answer, on July 3, 1908, alleging that the'above company had no interest or title to the property, and had no power or capacity to hold, convey, or lease real property in Oklahoma, on account of its-incorporation under the laws of the state of Kansas, for the purpose of transacting business in the territory of Oklahoma, and that the incorporation under, the laws of Kansas was fraud-J ulently done for the purpose of defeating the laws of the terri- ■' tory of Oklahoma. Also, that the plaintiff made false representations to the defendant as to the ownership of said lots by said company, and that the plaintiff had no title to the same, and that the fact that this company could not hold title to any property in Oklahoma was well known to the plaintiff and its officers. That the defendant relied upon these statements, and, believing *617 them to be true, executed and delivered his deed to the above real estate, without any consideration, and that the company executed and delivered back to him a deed for an undivided one-half interest, and that the defendant did not enter the property under and by virtue of the lease.

To this answer the plaintiff filed his reply, denying all ■of the allegations of the answer, and alleging that on the 15th day of August, 1902, the defendant executed and delivered to this company a deed conveying all his interest in this property. That the company on the same day, as a part of the same transaction, deeded to the defendant an undivided one-half interest in the property; that no false representations were made as to the interest of the company in this property and its right to hold title thereto; and the further defense that this transaction occurred on the 15th day of August, 1902, and that the same was barred by the two-years’ statute of limitations.

Upon the issues thus joined, a trial was had. The defendant, In his pleadings and in his evidence, admitted the execution of the lease, and claimed that Lynch, the plaintiff, was to furnish him money to go into the livery business upon the lots above described; that he did furnish him some money between August, 1902, and January 1, 1903, at which time they attempted to have a settlement, and did adjust matters, and Perryman agreed to pay to the company, or to Lynch, twenty dollars a month for the use of the undivided one-half interest in this property under the lease sued upon. It is also shown that the plaintiff herein was the owner by purchase of the entire issue of capital stock of the so-called coxporation and all the interest of those who had invested in the concern. At the close of the testimony, the court directed a verdict in favor of defendant, dismissing plaintiff's case, on the theory that the concern with which defendant had contracted had no existence either in law or in fact, under the decisions of the territorial Supreme Court, by reason of the fact that the company was organized in the state of Kansas for the purpose of doing business in the state of Oklahoma, and was without authority of law to do anything in Oklahoma. Excep *618 tions were saved to this action, and the case has been duly lodged in this ce'irt for review.

The Ponca City Land & Improvement Company has had a rather stormy legal career, evidencees of which appear in the reports of the territorial Supreme Court. Barnes et al. v. Lynch et al., 9 Okla. 11; Barnes et al. v. Lynch et al., 9 Okla. 156; Myatt v. Ponca City Land & Imp. Co., 14 Okla. 189; Lafferty v. Evans, 17 Okla. 217. It is conceded in this case that the company named in the foregoing cases is the same concern involved in the case at bar, and this case was tried in the light of the foregoing authorities.

The conclusion which we have reached in this case, as announced in the syllabus, we believe to be supported in every particular by the plainest dictates of justice and equity; and, while the doctrines and legal rules announced herein supporting them find ample support in the authorities, it will not be said that the line is either unbroken or without dissent. There are circumstances and conditions under which the general rule that a tenant cannot be heard to question his landlord’s title does not obtain, and the exceptions are as well supported as the rule itself, and there are authorities which hold that this doctrine does not obtain where the tenant was in possession at the time of the making of the lease; and, while there is strong reason and authority for the assertion that where one has dealt with a corporation in its corporate name or even a body acting as a corporation which the party recognized as a corporation, where he has received and' retained the benefits of his contract, he will, when proceeded against thereon, be estopped to deny the legality of the corporate existence or its power to contract, there are some authorities which hold that he is not so estopped in such a case if there /vas no law or an unconstitutional law under which the allegeci corporation could exist. An inspection of a large number of authorities,. however, discloses that in virtually every instance where estoppel has not been allowed, as in thé case of Lafferty v. Evans, suprarthe peculiar facts of the case itself rendered it unjust to allow it and controlled the decision.

*619 Another instance of such a .case is that of Krutz v. Paola Town Co., 20 Kan. 397. In that case the Paola Town Company had ceased to exist as a corporation, but was seeking to maintain what was denominated by the court an inequitable action against the plaintiff in error. To defeat the same, he had denied the corporate existence of plaintiff and its want of capacity to sue. This defense on his part was allowed by the court, which, in the discussion thereof, took note of the principles which we here invoke, and said:

“The only remedy of the defendant to defeat this inequitable action is to show the fact that the town company as a corporation no longer exists. But if he can be prevented from showing this fact by the interposition of what is supposed to be an equitable estoppel, then an equitable estoppel may be invoked against equity, and to defeat equity. This would be a new use of equitable estoppel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 406, 119 P. 229, 29 Okla. 615, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-perryman-okla-1911.