McClung v. Knapp

1960 OK 112, 353 P.2d 831, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 3, 1960
Docket38726
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1960 OK 112 (McClung v. Knapp) 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
McClung v. Knapp, 1960 OK 112, 353 P.2d 831, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 411 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This action was instituted by Lyman Knapp, one of the sons of W. E. Knapp, deceased, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, against Mrs. Elsie McClung, plaintiff’s sister, hereinafter referred to as defendant, to enforce an alleged partially performed oral contract between the parties. According to said plaintiff’s petition, the contract was entered into on November 22, 1956, and was related to two 160-acre farms that the decedent possessed during his lifetime.

The farm directly involved herein was homesteaded by decedent, and, to distinguish it from the other farm, is referred to as the “homestead”. The farm, less directly involved, belonged to the State, but was occupied by W. E. Knapp previous to statehood and held by him thereafter under a preference right lease from the Commissioners of the Land Office. It is referred to by the parties as the “school land”.

In March, 1942, the Commissioners, or School Land Commission, often referred to herein merely as the “Commission”, ordered forfeiture of Knapp’s preference right to re-lease the premises. During the pendency of said lessee’s appeal to this court from a district court judgment sustaining the Commission’s action (see Knapp v. State, 196 Old. 513, 166 P.2d 86) W. E. Knapp, in accord with his desire to distribute most of his property by deed to his two sons and two daughters in equitable, or equal, shares, executed a quitclaim deed in 1945, transferring to plaintiff, who had helped him farm and improve the school land (and, after his marriage, made his home on it, beginning in January, 1942), all of his rights under the school land lease *833 and his title to the improvements thereon. This deed, along with another one conveying an undivided ⅛⅛ interest in the homestead farm to each of his children (and others conveying them other farms, with homes on them), was given to the oldest son, Elliott, and placed in his safety deposit hox, to be recorded after the grantor’s death.

In 1946, as more fully appears from Knapp v. State, 206 Old. 363, 243 P.2d 660, the Commission instituted proceedings for the sale of the school land, and, in the process, had it and its improvements appraised. On appeal to the district court, the value of the latter was fixed at $7,500, and, during the pendency of an appeal to this court from said court’s judgment, W. E. Knapp died, in October, 1951.

During the summer before Knapp’s death, while plaintiff and his brother Elliott were farming the school land for him under an arrangement referred to as “custom working”, it appeared probable that, because of the prospect of the Commission’s winning back possession of the school land by court action, W. E. Knapp’s plan for the equitable distribution of his estate after his death by delivery of the aforementioned deeds, would probably be upset, or rendered unequal or inequitable, at least in so far as plaintiff was concerned. Accordingly, the father- gave plaintiff his personal check for $2,000 to be used in further defending the Knapp interests and property on said premises, and/or if such course proved impractical or unsuccessful, to recompense him for the improvements he had placed on the land during his and his brother’s farming operations.

After W. E. Knapp’s death, the eldest son, Elliott, made delivery of the aforementioned deeds to the school land premises and homestead farm, and he and plaintiff remained in possession of the former and planted a wheat crop late in 1951. During the winter of 1951, after Elliott had been appointed administrator of the W. E. Knapp Estate, the Commission ousted plaintiff from the school land premises and the next spring, or summer (1952) procured a neighboring farmer, Mr. Schatz, to harvest for it, the wheat crop, previously planted, as aforesaid, by the Knapp brothers. The harvested crop was sold for $7,044, and expenses incurred in connection therewith were $761.32.

The same summer (in June, 1952) the Commission, as plaintiff, commenced Cause No. 22,430 of Kay County’s District Court, against the Knapp Estate’s administrator, Elliott Knapp. The sum said plaintiff sought to recover therein approximated $13,000 and was alleged to be the disallowed balance of a claim of more than $15,000, which said plaintiff had presented to the defendant administrator as representing the reasonable rental value of W. E. Knapp’s unauthorized occupancy of the school land, without a lease, for the approximate ten years, beginning in 1942.

In the same month (June, 1952) and before this case was ready for trial, its plaintiff transmitted to its defendant, through the latter’s Oklahoma City attorney, Mr. Garnett, an offer to settle, and dismiss, the case, in consideration for payment to said plaintiff of a fund of $1,076.22 (which the elder Knapp had tendered the Commission as rental during a four-year period beginning in 1942, and had since been held in escrow), and delivery of a so-called “Special Deed” from the defendant and the W. E. Knapp heirs, transferring to the Commission all of their rights, title and interest to the improvements on the school land premises. In addition to dropping its claims against the Estate for the decedent’s claimed unauthorized occupancy of the land, the Commission’s proposal included its paying two-thirds of the aforementioned crop proceeds, less the cost of harvesting it ($4,-696 less $761.32, or $3,934.68) to the defendant administrator. At family conferences thereafter held, the four Knapp heirs attempted to determine among themselves, and with the advice of Mr. Garnett, whether or not they should accept the Commission’s proposal to settle Cause No. 22,-430.

Düfing the conferences, Elliott recommended acceptance of the proposal; and pro *834 posed that Lyman (who had appeared before the Commission and “blocked” settlement of earlier litigation, and would be most affected by the then proposed one) be deeded the other heirs’ undivided three-fourths interest in the homestead to compensate for his loss, by the settlement, of his claimed interest in the school land premises and/or its improvements. Finally, at one of these conferences held at the defendant’s home, on Wednesday evening, November 19, 1952, the four brothers and sisters decided to accept the Commission’s offer, and agreed to, and did, meet the following Saturday, November 22nd, and execute the aforementioned Special Deed submitted to them by the School Land Commission. Upon said deed’s delivery, the Commission forwarded its check made payable to Elliott, the defendant administrator, for the above-mentioned wheat crop’s net proceeds in the amount of $3,934.68. Thereafter, Elliott, as administrator of the W. E. Knapp Estate, obtained an order of the probate court authorizing him to pay the proceeds of the check to himself and Lyman, the plaintiff herein.

The alleged oral agreement, which plaintiff, in the present action, sought to enforce, and which he claimed the defendant, like her brother, Elliott, and sister, Eleanor Reser, entered into, to convey him the homestead farm, was alleged to have arisen out, and to have been a part of the agreement to accept the School Land Commission’s afore-described proposal to settle Cause No. 22,-430, supra.

The testimony with reference to the decisive issues at the trial was conflicting.

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 112, 353 P.2d 831, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclung-v-knapp-okla-1960.