Moree v. Moree

1962 OK 95, 371 P.2d 719, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 17, 1962
Docket39570
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1962 OK 95 (Moree v. Moree) 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
Moree v. Moree, 1962 OK 95, 371 P.2d 719, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 376 (Okla. 1962).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

This appeal, lodged here by Frank R. Moree, plaintiff below, presents for our consideration the correctness of the trial court’s decree denying him relief in a suit against John O. Moree (defendant below) for specific performance of an alleged oral agreement to convey some 167 acres of defendant’s land in Rogers County, Oklahoma. The land is situated about 4 miles North and nearly a mile West of Will Rogers Memorial. Our continued reference to the litigants will be by their Christian names or by designation in the lower court.

The parties hereto are brothers. Both have grown to manhood in the immediate vicinity of the land in controversy. Frank, who is a farmer, has since 1932 owned and occupied a 170 acre tract which adjoins the land in litigation. John left Rogers County in 1917, at the age of 20. About 1923, John became employed by an oil company for whom he has ever since been engaged in various parts of this State as a pumper. In the latter part of 1940, John learned that the land here in question would be offered for sale by the Commissioners of the Land Office. He became interested in its acquisition for a home site, “intending to build on it someday.” Under the rules of the Commissioners of the Land Office vendees must use and occupy purchased land for a period of not less than five consecutive years. Since John could not meet this requirement, the brothers agreed that Frank would submit a bid in his own name, acquire and occupy the property, and then transfer it to John after the lapse of five years. Pursuant to this understanding, Frank bought the land in 1941 with money furnished by John. An “amortized Certificate of Purchase” was issued to Frank on October 9, 1941. The initial payment, made at the time of this sale, consisted of $198.13; and the balance of the purchase price, evidenced by a note bearing 3% interest and secured by a mortgage, was divided into equal annual installments, each of like amount as the down-payment. The ad valorem tax then assessed against this property was slightly less than $50.00 (per year). In pursuance of an oral understanding between the brothers, Frank took possession of the land and cultivated it in part, paying as rent the annual installments *721 due to the Commissioners of the Land Office, as well as ad valorem taxes. As previously agreed, five years after the purchase Frank assigned to John all of his interest in the property. The assignment, executed by Frank on November 23, 1946, was approved by the Commissioners of the Land Office. On October 28, 1947, a “Certificate of Purchase pursuant to Assignment” was issued to John. This certificate was filed of record (by the County Clerk of Rogers County) on March 3, 1951. After the transfer to John, Frank continued to occupy and cultivate the land and was in possession thereof when he commenced the present suit on October 27, 1957.

The facts, as outlined thus far, are undisputed. The controversy which occasioned the present litigation concerns events and transactions occurring after Frank’s assignment of the land to John. As revealed by Frank’s testimony, John orally agreed to sell him the land in question while visiting the farm in September 1948. Under the terms of their agreement, Frank was to pay $3,000.00 for John’s equity, and was to assume the outstanding indebtedness to the Commissioners of the Land Office. The principal balance on this liability amounted then to approximately $2,923.09. Frank maintained that he had paid John $2,000.00 by check dated September 14, 1948, and that he still owed $1,000.00 “on the deal.” According to Frank’s version, “I didn’t have but two thousand at the time” and “I was to give him (John) the balance of it, when I got the money.” In 1948 and 1949, Frank made two payments on the loan to the Commissioners of the Land Office, each in the sum of $500.00. The purpose of these large payments was “to get the place paid out a little bit quicker.” At the time of his oral agreement with John, Frank was having marital difficulties. As he anticipated a divorce suit, he preferred that the land remain in John’s name. Frank and his wife became later reconciled and their difficulties ended in 1953 or 1954. In 1950, Frank ceased paying ad valorem taxes on the land as well as the loan installments to the Commissioners of the Land Office. Between 1950 and the time of trial (November 1960), all these payments were made by John. Frank knew that John was making all these payments “with his own money.” Sometime in the spring and fall of 1957, Frank visited at John’s home in Cox City, Oklahoma, and demanded a conveyance to the land. When John refused, Frank instituted the present action in October 1957, praying for an “accounting” and seeking to compel specific performance of his alleged oral agreement with John.

As revealed by John’s version of the events, Frank “was having trouble with his wife, and he wanted to get the three thousand dollars out of his name.” It was Frank’s own idea to lend John $3,000.00, give him a check for $2,000.00, and make two $500.00 payments to the Commissioners of the Land Office with the remainder. At about the same time Frank (admittedly) also gave John a note and chattel mortgage for $20,000.00. The latter transaction was a pure sham designed to deceive Frank’s wife. John denied making an oral agreement to sell Frank the land in question, and maintained that Frank was in possession as his tenant from year to year. According to John, the brothers had agreed on a rental of $250.00 per year; Frank was to pay taxes of slightly less than $50.00 and the loan installments of $198.13, and he was to remit to John the difference between the sum of these two payments and the rental of $250.00. This arrangement, John related, remained in effect between 1942 and 1949. By oral agreement between the brothers, the rentals were increased in 1950 to $400.00 per year. Aside from the $3,~ 000.00, John also owed Frank $175.00, or a total of $3,175.00. Each year since he borrowed the money in 1948, John had been deducting the rental charges due him on the property from the aggregate amount owing by him to Frank.

The trial judge found that Frank was “entitled to no relief * * * under his petition.” He entered a judgment quieting title to the land in John (under his cross- *722 petition), and declaring that Frank had “no interest in the property” in question, except as John’s tenant from year to year. Frank asserts error in the judgment so rendered, urging that the evidence discloses “every indicia necessary to the making, execution and performance of an oral agreement” to convey land, and that the lower court did, in effect, so “find.” Our attention is called to the trial judge’s comments at the close of the evidence, which so far as pertinent, are:

“ * * * Notwithstanding the fact that there was marital trouble, that there was a contract made, which there probably might very well have been, it should have been pursued in 1950 and most certainly not later than 1953. Therefore, it would be my opinion that Plaintiff would be guilty of laches * * t-»

In the case of In re Warwick’s Estate, Okl., 291 P.2d 346, we held:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mahmoodjanloo v. Mahmoodjanloo
2007 OK 32 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2007)
State v. Torres
2004 OK 12 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2004)
Hedges v. Hedges
2002 OK 92 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2002)
Baytide Petroleum, Inc v. Whitmar Exploration Co.
2000 OK 120 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2000)
State Ex Rel. Crawford v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America
1997 OK 10 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)
Tenneco Oil Co. v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.
687 P.2d 1049 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1984)
Bartlett v. American National Bank & Trust Co. of Sapulpa
680 P.2d 369 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1984)
Carpenter v. Carpenter
1982 OK 38 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1982)
Hubbard v. Hubbard
1979 OK 154 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad v. Hayes Ex Rel. Hayes
1968 OK 106 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
McLaughlin v. Laffoon Oil Company
1968 OK 69 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
Irwin v. Irwin
1966 OK 146 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)
Reed v. Lock
1965 OK 2 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1965)
Prince v. Altizer
1964 OK 142 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Horany v. State ex rel. Commissioners of the Land Office
1962 OK 169 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1962 OK 95, 371 P.2d 719, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moree-v-moree-okla-1962.