Peters v. Bledsoe

1920 OK 204, 190 P. 407, 78 Okla. 256, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 11, 1920
Docket10156
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1920 OK 204 (Peters v. Bledsoe) 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
Peters v. Bledsoe, 1920 OK 204, 190 P. 407, 78 Okla. 256, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 376 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

The judgment herein sought to be reversed was rendered against W. S. Peters, plaintiff in error, requiring him to comply with the terms of a certain contract or escrow agreement, by which he, plaintiff in error, bound himself to convey to defendant in error, G. G. Bledsoe, a certain tract of land situated in Okfuskee county, Oklahoma. W. S. Peters was an attorney of the Okfuskee county bar, and G. G. Bled-soe was a farmer of Okfuskee county.

On November 1, 1916, Peters and Bledsoe entered into a written agreement which was placed in escrow in the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Boley, Oklahoma, by the terms of which agreement said hank was to deliver to Bledsoe the warranty deed attached to said written agreement, by which deed Peters conveyed to Bledsoe a certain 80-acre tract of land situated in Okfuskee county, said deed to be delivered to Bledsoe upon the payment by Bledsoe of certain notes attached to the agreement and the assumption of payment by Bledsoe of a certain mortgage for $1,500 then existing against said tract. One of the notes, amounting to $100, fell due on the 1st day of November, 1917; on said day, however, Bledsoe, then living on the laud in question, was confined to his bed, sick of typhoid fever, and under the treatment of a doctor. He told his physician on that day of the note being due on that day and of his desire to pay same, but his physician, Dr. J. L. Scott, advised him hq was not able to go to town, that his fever was then 102, whereupon it was agreed between Bledsoe and the doctor that the doctor, who was on intimate and friendly terms with Attorney Peters, should see Peters that day and tell him of Bledsoe’s condition and that he had the money to pay the note and would in a few days come in with his wife and pay it off, and should ascertain from Peters wheth-ei such arrangement would he satisfactory. The doctor testified that he saw Peters on that day and delivered the mesasge from Bledsoe, and that Peters said, in substance, that such an arrangement was all right; that he had been making some money and would not need what Bledsoe owed on the note for a few days. The doctor further testified that he returned on that day to Bledsoe’s home and told Bledsoe what Peters had said.

*257 Bledsoe testified that, relying upon the message his physician had brought him from Peters, he did not go to town that day to make payment, hut that the nest day, the 2nd of November, he was informed by another party that things did not look just right (meaning the actions of Peters), whereupon he went into the town of Boley on that day, the 2nd of November, and offered to pay the note to the bank, but the banker refused to receive the payment, stating that on the day before Peters had advised him not to accept the payment because the agreement had been breached by Bledsoe’s failure to make payment on the first day of November. He thereupon employed an attorney, and within a few days the attorney made a. further tender of payment to Peters, which was declined. The bank in the meantime had turned the written agreement and deed attached over to Peters and had mailed the unpaid promissory notes to Bledsoe; thereafter Bledsoe brought suit to require Peters to comply with the terms of the agreement —that is, to accept payment of the promissory notes due and to deliver the deed to the land.

At the conclusion of the trial the court decreed that Peters should replace the escrow agreement with deed attached in the bank, and that Bledsoe should replace the promissory notes with the bank and that the parties, Peters and Bledsoe, should comply with the terms of the agreement, and that upon the payment of the amount due under said ■agreement, which amount due at that time had been tendered into court and -was found by the court to have been tendered, the bank or escrow holder should thereupon deliver the deed to Bledsoe.

Plaintiff in error asks that this judgment be reversed,.principally upon the ground that by the terms of the agreement “time was made the essence of the contract,” and that by the failure on the part of Bledsoe to comply with the terms of the contract by payment of the note on the 1st of November he should forfeit his right to a fulfillment of the contract.

On the other hand, it is contended by Bled-soe, first, thqt by the terms of said contract time was not made the essence thereof, and, second, that his failure to make payment on the 1st day of November was justified by Peters’ message sent by the doctor, even though the agreement be construed to mean that “time was of the essence of the contract.”

The court found that, under the terms of the agreement, time was not expressly made the essence of the contract, and further found that, though Bledsoe did not strictly comply with the terms and conditions thereof with reference to the time of payment, his failure to do so was excused hy the conduct of Peters, but did not find whether, by necessary implication, time should be considered as of the essence of the contract.

Both of these findings are sustained hy the record. The instrument in question did not in words expressly provide that time was to be considered as of the assence of the contract. This being true, and the finding that Bledsoe’s failure to make payment on November 1st was excused by the conduct of Peters being sustained by the evidence, it was therefore unnecessary for the court to go into the field of speculation and decide whether by necessary implication “time was intended to be the essence of the contract.”

Section 968, Rev. Laws 1910, provides:

“Time is never considered as of the essence of a contract unless by its terms expressly so provided.”

In Drumright v. Brown et al., 76 Okla. 162, 184 Pae. 110, this court, in a well-considered opinion hy Mr. Justice Rainey, after quoting the above statute, said:

. “Although no particular form of expression is necessary, it must appear from the plainly expressed provisions contained in a contract, independent of all extraneous matter or circumstances, that it was the intention of the parties thereto that time should be of the essence thereof.”

The obvious reason for the wording of the above statute, as well as for the foregoing interpretation thereof by this court, is that the terms of the written instrument are more clearly and more safely expressed by explicit wording than by being left to the uncertainties of implication.

Additional light may be thrown upon and a clearer view obtained of the full meaning of the above statute by carefuly considering in connection therewith the preceding sections 945 to 967, inclusive, bearing in mind also that said sections are uncjer artcle 3 of the chapter on Contracts and such article devotes itself entirely to defining just how contracts in this state are to he interpreted.

Section 945 provides:

“All contracts, whether public or private, are to be interpreted by the same rules, except as otherwise provided by law.”

Section 946 provides that effect is to be given to the intent of parties; 947 provides bow intention of parties may be ascertained; 948 provides what language governs; 949 pro *258

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Related

Oklahoma Improved Seed Co. v. Smith
1935 OK 1083 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Lucky Thirteen Oil Syndicate v. Barrett
1932 OK 361 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)
Bledsoe v. Peters
1924 OK 256 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 204, 190 P. 407, 78 Okla. 256, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-bledsoe-okla-1920.