Milam v. Hinton

1926 OK 934, 251 P. 54, 120 Okla. 202, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1926
Docket17313
StatusPublished

This text of 1926 OK 934 (Milam v. Hinton) 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
Milam v. Hinton, 1926 OK 934, 251 P. 54, 120 Okla. 202, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 428 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges plaintiff was a tenant farmer on certain lands adjoining Oklahoma City on the northwest, the lands being owned by Joseph. T. Brown; that about the l'9th day of May, 1925, after plaintiff had planted his crops, defendant, Milam, came to the farm occupied by plaintiff, and told plaintiff, he, defendant, had purchased the land, and was in urgent need -of possession of a portion of the same, as he wanted to lay it out in streets, alleys, lots, and blocks, and as a result of' the conversation, the following agreement was duly executed:

“Oklahoma City, Okla.
“Contract Agreement.
“Made this 19th day of May, 1925, for $1,000 One $100 cash in hand paid, the bal., $900, to be paid when E. C. Hinton has moved off the Brown farm near Bellé-Isle and surrendered the place, Mr. Ilinton to vacate by June 5, 1925.
“Gatton Miller.
“E. C. Hinton.
“Thos. M. Milam.
“Witnesses:
“George P. Wagner,
“W. M. Ingle.”

*203 Defendant thereupon gave plaintiff §100 and delivered to him a post-dated check as follows :

“Oklahoma City, Okla.
“June 1, 1925.
“No.-
“The American National Bank
“Pay to the order of E. C. Hinton $900-
“Nine Hundred _/100 Dollars.
“T. M. Milam.”

On back' of the check was the following: “To be paid .as per contract as to moving.”

Plaintiff then alleges demand on June 1st, and at subsequent dates, and default, and prays judgment. Defendant admits the contract and check, and grounds his defense principally upon the failure of plaintiff to deliver possession of all the land on June 5, 1925, and for cross-petition alleges he has been damaged in the sum of $2,460, for which he -prays judgment.

The cause was tried to the court, and judgment rendered for plaintiff, and defendant appeals, and this cause is now before this court for review upon "petition in error and case-made.

Defendant’s theory of this appeal is that:

“This was purely an action at law, based upon a written contract, and the court permitted the defendant in error to introduce evidence to contradict and vary the written contract, and in fact treated the whole contract-as sounding in equity, and thereby made a new contract,” etc.
“That the court committed error in permitting plaintiff to offer evidence tending to show that the original written contract has been abrogated by a subsequent oral agreement.”

Defendant contends further that as plaintiff did not surrender all the premises, he was under no obligation to pay the check.

As a rule, when attorneys, as able as we know the attorneys in this ease to be, know they have no legal leg to stand upon, this court is not burdened with extensive briefs and this case is no exception to the rule.

What the incompetent evidence admitted on behalf of plaintiff, or the rejected competent evidence offered on behalf of the defendant was, is not set out in the brief, but sometimes we are actuated by uncontrollable emotions to look closely into things it is not our strict duty to examine, just perhaps "to gratify a curiosity to see what it is all about. The evidence in this case discloses that defendant, a well-known and astute real estate dealer, wanted to put on another subdivision. He approached Brown. the owner, and .offered $32,000 for this land and paid Brown $1,000. He then wanted to get the tenant off the land, or get partial possession, and so offered plaintiff $1,000 for his crop and partial possession, and paid plaintiff $100. Within ,a very few hours after plaintiff signed the agreement, defendant had men, teams, wagons and scrapers on the land, /ind almost before the sun went down he had' a street one-half mile long cut through plaintiff’s fields of cotton. He laid out streets, avenues, and alleys; laid off lots .and blocks; and had stakes driven and flags flying, and bid fair to rival “Gump’s Parajdise Vi-sta.” All this was perfectly legitimate. Such men as defendant can make two cities grow overnight, where one grew before. He then very graciously gave to one Gatton Miller any cotton which he might find matured before the place was completely built up. Inside of ten days after getting .plaintiff to sign the contract, something “cracked,” and defendant had insufficient funds in bank to pay a $900 check. There is evidence tending to prove that defendant asked for as much as three days on several occasions in which to take up the check, and plaintiff testifies defendant asked for forbearance or an extension of time, and told plaintiff to stay in the house until the money was paid. Gatton Miller testified he was in defendant’s office several times when defendant asked plaintiff for extensions of time .and told plaintiff to stay on in the house until he got his money.

Plaintiff’s .attorney, whose honor is above reproach, testified defendant told him practically the same thing. Evidence was introduced to prove defendant had said when asked for the money that he was about $50,000 in debt—

“That he was like a man at sea in an open boat full of holes, some large and some small, and he had to plug the large ones first.”

Despite all this, defendant insists his only reason for not paying the cheek was that plaintiff did not deliver the house on June 5th. The house .and barn occupied less than one acre of ground, and defendant had the balance. The farmer was without crops or money to .plant more, and under the evidence, if the trial court could have reached any other conclusion, it would have been one of the wonders of the legal world.

“Where a case is tried to the court without a jury, a general finding in favor of one of the parties will be given the same weight as a verdict of a jury, and if there is any competent evidence reasonably tending to support the- same, it will -not be dis *204 turbed upon appeal.” J. B. Edgar Grain Co. v. Kolp, 48 Okla. 92, 149 Pac. 1096; Beard v. Herndon, 84 Okla. 142, 203 Pac. 226; Anicker v. Doyle, 84 Okla. 62, 202 Pac. 281; Gayer v. Pearce, 86 Okla. 102, 206 Pac. 822; Billings v. News Pub. Co., 96 Okla. 167, 221 Pac. 12; Cooper v. Long, 93 Okla. 239, 220 Pac. 610.

Defendant next contends that, admitting a written contract may be abrogated by an executed oral agreement, and further .admitting that there was evidence tending to show that there was an executed oral agreement by which plaintiff claimed a right to hold possession of the house until the check was paid, still, there was no consideration for such an agreement if it was in fact made. We can find no merit in this contention. We think the extension of time within which to-pay the $900 was a sufficient consideration for the privilege of locqupying this farm house for a few extra days or weeks.

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Related

Smith v. Jos. W. Moon Buggy Co.
1917 OK 608 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1917)
Billings v. News Publishing Co. of Enid
1923 OK 1062 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Finola Mfg. Co. v. Paulsen
1915 OK 584 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
J. B. Edgar Grain Co. v. Kolp
1915 OK 448 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
Anicker v. Doyle
1921 OK 408 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1921)
Beard v. Herndon
1921 OK 443 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1921)
Gayer v. Pearce
1922 OK 153 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1922)
Cooper v. Long
1923 OK 519 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Kauffman v. Raeder
108 F. 171 (Eighth Circuit, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 934, 251 P. 54, 120 Okla. 202, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milam-v-hinton-okla-1926.