Moore v. Kelly

1916 OK 454, 157 P. 81, 57 Okla. 348, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 18, 1916
Docket6179
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1916 OK 454 (Moore v. Kelly) 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
Moore v. Kelly, 1916 OK 454, 157 P. 81, 57 Okla. 348, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 523 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

MATHEWS, C.

(after stating the facts as above). The first ruling of the court complained of is the refusal of a jury trial to defendants. The defendants based their right to a jury trial upon the fact that in his petition *353 plaintiff asked judgment for the possession of the real property in controversy. Ordinarily actions for the -recovery of specific real property should be tried to a jury when demanded, but this action was in-the main one for rescission and cancellation of a contract, one solely of equitable cognizance, wherein the litigants are not entitled to a jury trial as a matter of right.- That portion of the petition praying for possession was a mere incident to the' action, and followed, as a matter of course, a judgment rescinding and canceling the contract under which the party obtained possession of the property. The right to the possession óf the property was' not the issue up for. trial, but the entire controversy turned upon whether or not the contract should be' rescinded. Upon reaching a conclusion that plaintiff was entitled to a rescission of the contract, nothing further was necessary to be done but to enter an order for possession of the property obtained under the contract.

The defendants next present the proposition that the court erred in admitting over their objection the various deeds introduced by plaintiff to prove his chain of title; the defendants claiming that these deeds were void because made at a time when the grantors were out of possession of the property and had not taken the rents and profits thereof for the space of one year before such conveyance.

It appears that, while the title to the real property in controversy was still in the original Indian allottee, a third party had erected a house thereon, and that the defendant had rented this house and had been living in the same with his family some two or three years before entering into the contract in controversy, and on the 7th day of August, 1906, the said third party, for the expressed consideration *354 of $250, made a deed to defendant for the said house “together with whatever right, title, and interest said parties of the first part may have in and, upon the land upon-which said houses are located.”

The evidence does not disclose what claim this third party was setting up to the lots in controversy, or whether he was making an adverse claim of any kind. As defendant executed a contract on the 10th day of November, 1908, to pay plaintiff $1,000 for the lots, it is difficult to reconcile such conduct with an adverse claim to the property. He was already in possession of the property, and had obtained a deed of some nature from his former landlord, and, being thus secure in what he now claims to have been a title to the lots in controversy, he voluntarily entered into a written agreement to pay plaintiff for the same. As long as he had never at any time repudiated plaintiff’s title, or shown any hostile acts toward it, he certainly cannot claim to have held adverse possession of the property. As far as the evidence discloses, the defendants never claimed any adverse holding to plaintiff until the institution of this action. In the case of Jennings v. Brown, 20 Okla. 294, 94 Pac. 557, the exact question here presented was passed upon and decided adversely to defendants’ contention, the court in that case quoting with approval 1 Cyc. 1044, as follows:

“The possession of a vendee holding under a parol executory contract of purchase is not adverse to that of his vendor until he has performed the conditions therein or repudiated the latter’s title.”

The proposition that next confronts us is that defendant Mrs. Ella Moore, wife of defendant M. J. Moore, at the time of the execution of the contract for a deed sued on *355 was living- with her husband and family upon the lots in controversy and occupying the same as a home, and, as she did not join in the contract nor sign the same, she was not precluded thereby from her homestead rights. This would be a correct statement of the law if the facts here sustained that contention. The evidence shows that the title to the property in controversy was at all times in the plaintiff or his predecessors. The defendants were never vested with the actual title, and the evidence does not disclose that either of them ever claimed to occupy the premises under color of title even. It is true on the 7th day of August, 1906, defendant M. J. Moore obtained a deed from H. B. McGee and wife to the property in controversy, but the evidence does not disclose that the said H. B. McGee and wife had a title of any nature to the property, and after this deed was obtained neither of the defendants set up any adverse claim to the plaintiff’s title, but defendant M. J. Moore in a short while after-wards executed the contract for the deed in controversy, which was an endeavor to obtain the real title to the property. Defendant Ella Moore’s occupancy and tenure of the property was not such that she could legally set up any claim to a homestead interest in the property before obtaining title to the same.

We do not think the court erred in admitting in evidence the deeds from the guardian of the original allottee, nor the successive deeds in the chain of title to plaintiff. Nor do we find any merit in defendants’ claim that the statutes of limitation had run in favor of defendants.

The defendants next complain that the plaintiff, neither in his petition nor in his proof, offered to return the $1,000 note executed to him by defendant M. J. Moore *356 at the time the contract for deed was entered into.

In 18 Ency. Pleading & Practice, 829, we find the following:

“In suits for the rescission and .cancellation of contracts the court applies the familiar maxim of equity, of almost universal application, that he who seeks equity must do equity. The plaintiff will not be permitted to repudiate his contract and still retain the benefits which he has derived from it, and his desire and willingness to restore what he has received must appear in the bfil or complaint; otherwise he will have no standing in a court of equity.”

Section 986, Rev. Laws 1910, provides that in order to rescind a contract the party claiming a rescission must restore or offer to restore everything of value which he has received from the other party. It seems to us elementary that the plaintiff should have tendered the note both in his pleadings and proof. • It would be inequitable and unfair to say that he may still retain the note and yet oust the defendants from the property for which the note was given in payment.

It will be noted that the contract for deed was to be performed on the 10th day of November, 1909, by payment upon the part of the defendants to the plaintiff of the $1,000 note, and plaintiff was then to execute a deed to the lots in controversy, and this clause appears in the said contract:

“It is further agreed that time is the essence of this contract, and, unless said installments shall be paid as herein provided, this contract shall be void, at the option of the party of the first part; otherwise to be and remain in full force-and effect.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 454, 157 P. 81, 57 Okla. 348, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-kelly-okla-1916.