Owens v. El Gato Investment Company

1958 OK 172, 332 P.2d 22, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 461
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 2, 1958
Docket37637
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1958 OK 172 (Owens v. El Gato Investment Company) 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
Owens v. El Gato Investment Company, 1958 OK 172, 332 P.2d 22, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 461 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The real estate around which revolves .the controversy culminating in this action is a vacant lot situated on the Southwest corner of Eighth Street and Boston Avenue, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, described as the North Seventy-five (75) feet of Lot One (1), Block One-hundred cighty-one (181), of said City, purchased in 1928, by one of the defendants in error, El Gato Investment Company, usually referred to simply as “El Gato.” The property which adjoins it on the South and consists of a one-story permanent type of business building on an “inside” site, which includes the South twenty-five feet of the aforesaid Lot One (1), has been owned for many years by C. E. Owens, brother of the plaintiff in error, and will hereinafter be referred to as the “Owens Building.” On its north side, the building has three double doors which open out upon the vacant lot.

On October 4, 1930, Southwestern Stores Corporation obtained a lease for a term of years on El Gato’s lot at a total rental of $60,000, payable in monthly installments of $500 each. On the same day, it *24 obtained a five-year lease on the Owens Building, at a rental of $700 per month. Through the oral negotiations conducted with C. E. Watson, for El Gato, by plaintiff in error, who “handled” the Owens’ Building for his brother, the two leases were made “interlocking” or “dependent”, in that they both referred to each other and provided that if the lessee violated one, the lessors of both might terminate them, and recognized generally a greater value, to both lessors, in the two properties’ joint use, than their separate use. The value of having the lot available for rental in connection with rental of the building was particularly recognized in a provision of the lot lease, referred to in the building lease, as granting subrogation to Owens of the Stores Corporation’s rights under the lot lease. In fact, Owens was given such rights and powers in the lot lease that, under certain specified conditions, he could take possession of the lot without even an assignment of the lease.

On June 16, 1931, the above-mentioned lot lease was superseded by a new lease Nathan Gens and Herbert Barall, who managed and operated Southwestern Stores Corporation, obtained on the lot as co-partners doing business as Barall Food Stores for a period of 18 months, for which they agreed to pay a total rental of $9,000, in equal monthly installments of $500 each on the first of every month beginning July 1, 1938. The lease also authorized said lessee to erect such structures on the lot as might be desired and to operate a food store therein under the name of “Colonial Stores”, but it specifically provided that no permanent improvement should be placed on, or removed from, it without the written consent of the lessor “and O. O. Owens * * * ”. Under another provision, the lessee could not assign said lease, without the written consent of the lessee “and O. O. Owens * * * On the same date, O. O. Owens entered into a written, but unrecorded, “Contract for Sale of Real Estate” with El Gato to purchase the vacant lot in question. According to his testimony, said Owens and his brother, C. E., hoped, upon acquisition of this lot, to use it and the adjoining one as the site for a larger building than the one C. E. Owens then owned.

It is in the alleged breach of this contract by O. O. Owens that the controversy here involved had its inception. According to its terms, he was to pay a total price of $49,359 for said lot, and the beginning of his possession was to coincide with the beginning, on July 1, 1938, of Barall Food Store’s lease term. According to the contract, Owens (sometimes referred to therein as “the party of the second part”) was to pay the aforesaid consideration for the lot, by transmitting to El Gato (sometimes referred to therein as “the party of the first part”), Barall Food Store’s $500 monthly rental payments, which were to be applied by El Gato as follows:

“(1) To the taxes, both ad valorem and paving, assessed against said lot, beginning as of July 1, 1938. For the purpose of interest calculation, taxes are to be prorated and charged against rent credit each month.
“(2) To the interest, payable by O. O. Owens upon the puxxhase money obligation, hereinafter set forth.
“(3) The balance to be credited against the principal of said obligation. Interest on said purchase obligation of Forty-nine Thousand Three Hundred and Fifty Nine Dollars ($49,359.-00) is to be payable at the rate of five percent (5%) per annum upon deferred balances.”

The lease also provided that the entire purchase price should be paid within eighteen months “from July 1, 1938”, and also contained the following provisions, among others:

“In the event the lessor, Barall Food Stores, does not make the monthly payments provided herein in the lease above mentioned, it shall be the obligation of O. O. Owens to make sufficient payments within five days after notice of default from El Gato Investment Company to second party.
* * * * * *
*25 "In the event of any failure on the part of the party of the second part to faithfully heep and perform each and all of the above conditions, covenants and agreements, or to make any of the payments at the time or in the manner above specified, this Contract shall be void at the option of the party of the first part, and the first party shall be entitled to immediate possession of said premises.
“In addition to the rights and remedies contained in the foregoing paragraph, because of the fact that this contract is of great value to the second party in connection with the lease of the lot and building immediately to the South of the Real Estate herein described, and because damages under this contract are not readily capable of ascertainment and are too difficult for a court to determine, and because the effect of this contract is to limit the sale of the real estate exclusively to O. O. Owens for a period of eighteen (18) months, in the event of any default of any of the conditions, covenants and agreements, or in the event of the failure to make any payments at the time and in the manner above specified by the second party, the first party in addition to retaining all payments theretofore made by Barall Food Stores, or by the second party, shall have the right to receive and recover from second party the. further sum of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) as agreed liquidated damages. * * * ” (Emphasis ours)

Owens’ claimed breach of the above-quoted contract occurred as hereafter related. At the end of December, 1939, when Barall Food Store’s eighteen-months lease expired and its occupancy of the lot ended, none of the $49,350 Owens had, by the above-quoted contract, agreed to pay El Gato for it, had been paid, except an amount between three and four thousand dollars that had been credited on said price out of the $9,000 in rentals received from said food store tenant (as provided in the above-quoted “Contract for Sale * * *”). Owens then entered into negotiations, through his now deceased attorney, with El Gato, represented by Mr. Watson, to extend the life of the “Contract for Sale * * * ” beyond the eighteen months prescribed therein for his payment of the full purchase price.

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Related

Shoban v. Board of Trustees of Desert Center Unified School District
276 Cal. App. 2d 534 (California Court of Appeal, 1969)
Cline v. Hullum
1967 OK 226 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1967)
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397 P.2d 673 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
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1963 OK 213 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 172, 332 P.2d 22, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-el-gato-investment-company-okla-1958.