Murphey v. Harlow

1952 OK 243, 248 P.2d 620, 207 Okla. 164, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 732
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1952
DocketNo. 35130
StatusPublished

This text of 1952 OK 243 (Murphey v. Harlow) 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
Murphey v. Harlow, 1952 OK 243, 248 P.2d 620, 207 Okla. 164, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 732 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

O’NEAL, J.

John H. Harlow, on May 4, 1949, filed his petition in which he alleged that W. V. Murphey and Kenneth Hayes, copartners, d/b/a Mur-phey & Hayes Implement Company, were indebted to him in the sum of $150 per month from February 1, 1949. Claiming further that Harlow has a legal and equitable estate in the lot and building described, he seeks possession thereof and damages in the sum of $5,000 for the alleged unlawful withholding thereof by the said defendants. Harlow’s right to the possession of the lot and building is based on a lease contract executed by the owner, Lula Yell, under date of July 1, 1947, with right to possession from October 1, 1947, to September 30, 1950.

Murphey & Hayes, by amended answer, deny that the defendant, Lula Yell, the owner of the lot and building, executed the lease contract plead by plaintiff, but states that plaintiff was a tenant from month to month only. They state that on November 15, 1948, they entered into a contract with the plaintiff for the purchase of a stock of farm implements located in said building, and that the parties signed a memorandum covering the terms of the sale, and which memorandum reflected an agreement to pay plaintiff the sum of $150 monthly as rentals for said premises and building, but allege that plaintiff obtained said agreement on the false and fraudulent representation that he was obligated to pay a third person the sum of $75 monthly to keep temporary possession of said premises. By order of the court on his own motion, Lula Yell was made a party defendant to the suit, but she is not involved in this appeal.

The defendant, Lula Yell, filed an answer admitting ownership of the lot and building in question, and admitted that plaintiff had been in possession thereof since July, 1947, and prior thereto. She denied that she executed the lease contract of July 1, 1947, with the plaintiff, Harlow, but that she rented the premises to plaintiff on a month to month basis only. At great length she pleads her mental and physical condition, and that during the past years she was unable to look after her business affairs and, that either her son or a Mr. Horton attended to all of her business transactions. That if her son, or Mr. Horton, entered into any written contract with the plaintiff covering said premises she had no knowledge thereof, nor did she have knowledge that the plaintiff deposited monthly rental payments in a local [165]*165bank to her credit. Her prayer asked that the plaintiff be denied any relief and that the lease contract, if found to be executed by her, be cancelled, and that her codefendants, Murphey & Hayes, be declared to be her present tenants on a monthly basis.

Upon submission of the case the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, Mur-phey & Hayes, as for rent due the sum of $2,250, and for immediate possession of the premises.

A separate verdict was returned finding the issues in favor of the defendant, Lula Yell, and against the plaintiff, Harlow, canceling the lease contract of July 1, 1947.

Subsequent to the return of the verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,250, the court, on his own motion, reduced the amount to the sum of $450 and rendered judgment therefor in plaintiffs favor against the defendants, Murphey & Hayes.

The judgment further provides that the plaintiff have and recover from the defendants, Murphey & Hayes, possession of the lot described as the east half of lot 2, block 372 in Ardmore, Oklahoma, together with the building thereon.

As to the defendant, Lula Yell, the judgment cancelled the lease dated July 1, 1947, entered into between the plaintiff, Harlow, and the defendant Yell, and gave Mrs. Yell possession of the premises.

Although numerous grounds are set forth in the respective motions for directed verdicts, and more elaborately stated by motions for a new trial, they may be summarized by the statement that the verdicts are not supported by competent evidence and that the judgments rendered thereon are contrary to the law.

The facts, without substantial dispute, disclose that the plaintiff, Harlow, first rented the lot and building owned by Mrs. Yell in the year 1944. He conducted an implement business on the premises. That lease expired on October 1, 1947, and on July 1, 1947, Mrs. Yell executed a renewal lease to Harlow for a term commencing October 1, 1947, and expiring September 30, 1950.

The latter lease, introduced as an exhibit, discloses it was signed by Harlow and Mrs. Yell, and the execution of the lease was acknowledged before a notary public. This lease provided for the payment of monthly rentals at the rate of $75 per month. Harlow had obtained an agency of the John Deere Plow ■ Company and occupied the premises in carrying on his farm implement business. In November, 1948, Murphey & Hayes purchased his implement stock and the occupancy and possession of the building was turned over to them. A memorandum of the terms of the sale was introduced in evidence. This memorandum signed by both plaintiff and defendants, Murphey & Hayes, discloses that they agree to pay plaintiff rentals on a basis of $150 per month. Defendants paid these monthly rentals for several months, then discontinued their payment, claiming that the plaintiff falsely represented to them that plaintiff was compelled to pay a third party the sum of $75 monthly until such time as they could contact Mrs. Yell and adjust the rental payments on a basis of $75 per month, as provided in the lease of July 1, 1947. Defendants, Murphey & Hayes, at no time had any communications or transactions with Mrs. Yell concerning the subleasing of the premises prior to the execution of the memorandum of sale referred to.

Although Mrs. Yell 'denied knowledge of the lease of July 1, 1947, she admitted it contained her signature, and also admitted that all monthly rentals were either paid by Mr. Harlow to her directly, or were deposited to her credit in an Ardmore bank, and that she drew on the account from time to time. She said that she knew the plaintiff was in possession of. her building at [166]*166all times since 1944, and that she had never objected to his occupancy.

The evidence of the plaintiff and the defendants, Murphey & Hayes, is in sharp conflict on the question as to rentals under the memorandum contract referred to. Plaintiff contended that defendants, Murphey & Hayes, agreed to pay him during the unexpired term of the lease contract of July 1, the sum of $150 per month, and the defendants, Murphey & Hayes, contended that they were deceived in agreeing to the rental terms, as evidenced by the memorandum, and were deceived in believing that the plaintiff had a valid lease contract with Mrs. Yell, and asserted that it was their understanding of the agreement that they were only to pay the sum of $150 monthly rentals until Mrs. Yell’s physical condition would warrant contacting her and perfecting an arrangement for a rental of $75 per month.

The judgment for the sum of $450 evidently covers rentals on a basis of $150 per month for the months of February, March and April, 1949, based on the theory that the memorandum agreement obligated the defendants to pay rent at the rate of $150 per month, and under this assumption the trial court must have concluded that the defendant, Mrs.

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1951 OK 152 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 243, 248 P.2d 620, 207 Okla. 164, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphey-v-harlow-okla-1952.