Pettett v. Cooper

24 N.E.2d 299, 62 Ohio App. 377, 16 Ohio Op. 89, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 288
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 N.E.2d 299 (Pettett v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettett v. Cooper, 24 N.E.2d 299, 62 Ohio App. 377, 16 Ohio Op. 89, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 288 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Matthews, J.

The appellant, Carrie C. Cooper, defendant in the trial court, was the owner of a farm *378 which she had leased to the apjpellee, L. J. Pettett, plaintiff below, for a term of one year from March 1, 1935, with the privilege of renewal for an additional year. The lease was in writing, bnt contained no provision imposing any conditions upon the right to renew or prescribing any method by which, or time in which, the intention to renew should be manifested.

More than three months before the expiration of the year and while the privilege of renewal still existed, the appellant, through her agents, entered into negotiations with the Resettlement Administration of the United States Government for the sale of this farm. As the prospective purchaser, at least in the beginning of the negotiations, demanded an unencumbered fee simple title with the right to immediate possession, and as appellee was in open possession of the farm to the knowledge of the Resettlement Administration which notified the appellant specifically that it would require -a relinquishment in some form of whatever right he (the possessor) might have, the appellant, through her agents, entered into negotiations with the appellee for the surrender or cancellation of his rights under his lease.

The sale to the Resettlement Administration was consummated on March 13, 1936, by the delivery of a deed by the appellant, purporting to convey an unencumbered fee simple title, with right to immediate possession, and the payment of the purchase price by the Resettlement Administration. The appellee, at the same time, executed and delivered to the Resettlement Administration a quitclaim deed conveying to it whatever title he had in the farm.

The appellee alleged that the negotiations between him and the appellant resulted in a contract, in accordance with which he agreed to surrender his lease in consideration of the promises of the appellant to pay $2,150 and to waive her right to rent for the last *379 three months of the term; that he vacated the farm in accordance with his promise, and executed and delivered a quitclaim deed to the Resettlement Administration. The appellant failing to pay the $2,150, this action was instituted therefor.

The appellant denied both that the negotiations between her and the appellee resulted in any agreement to pay any amount and that the quitclaim deed was delivered in performance of any such contract. She also, by cross-petition, asked for judgment for the unpaid rent.

The issues were submitted to the jury, which by its general verdict found for the plaintiff, appellee, on all issues. Motions for a new trial and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict were overruled and judgment entered on the verdict. It is from that judgment that this appeal was taken.

(1) A part of the negotiations between the appellant and appellee took the form of letters passing between the appellee and appellant’s agents’. It is contended that by the letter of January 27, 1936, the parties completely integrated their intention into the writing, so as to exclude all prior negotiations on the subject. Predicating her contention upon this premise, the appellant asserts that the record presents no evidence of a meeting of the minds. This necessitates an examination of these letters in the light of the surrounding circumstances, as the law never determines the meaning of language in vacuo when it is used to create a legal relation between parties.

Now what is the evidence?

We find that there is no dispute that the appellant agreed to pay $2,150 and relinquish right to three months rent for the cancellation of the lease of the appellee; this obligation being conditioned upon the sale by appellant to the Resettlement Administration *380 for $37,500. As there was such a sale, the obligation thereupon became unconditional.

The appellant, claiming that there had been no meeting of the minds so as to create a bilateral contract and that at most she was bound by a unilateral promise that could have been accepted only by a cancellation of the lease contemporaneous with a conveyance by her of the fee simple title on or before February 29, 1936, to the Resettlement Administration, introduced evidence tending to support this thesis. We find, however, substantial evidence of oral negotiations tending to prove that a bilateral contract was entered into binding the appellee to cancel and the appellant to pay if and when the appellant sold the fee simple premises to the Resettlement Administration. In addition, the evidence of negotiations between the appellant’s agent, the appellee, and the Resettlement Administration officer to secure the latter’s consent that the appellee might continue in possession for another year is not compatible with continuance under the existing lease. If retention of possession was attributable to that, this consent of the grantee of the reversion would have been unnecessary. The transfer would have had no effect on the lessee’s right.

But, it is said that the appellee testified that the letter of January 27, 1936, constituted the contract between the parties, and that inasmuch as it is stated in that letter that “in event payment is not made by February 29th, there will be no trade,” we cannot consider this other evidence from which conclusions favorable to appellee can be and were drawn, and that as payment was not made by February 29th, whatever obligation existed, if any, expired on that date. It should be stated that a litigant cannot, by testifying to a legal conclusion, change the legal relations of the parties — and the appellee’s testimony was no more than a legal conclusion. That the letter was not *381 written for the purpose of creating a formal written memorial of all the terms of the contract between appellant and appellee, is clear. By reference to the letter requesting it, it is clear the purpose in writing the letter was to advise the Resettlement Administration that appellee would vacate the farm upon payment of $2,150. This letter was written at the request of one agent of appellant to another of her agents who also occupied some relation of representative of the Resettlement Administration. In the latter’s letter of January 29, 1936, to the appellee, which is a response apparently to the letter of January 27, 1936, it is stated that “If your lease is cancelled — we are to pay you $2,150 out of the proceeds of the purchase price paid by the Government to Mr. Cooper,” and it is argued that this left the relation conditional and nonobligatory. We do not think that is necessarily the meaning. Notwithstanding the existence of a binding contract to cancel, the actual cancellation until made, was hypothetical, and where cancellation and payment were to be concurrent, the one was conditional upon the other.

Now it is only the writing or writings that are adopted by the parties as the final and complete expression of their agreement, that excludes all prior and contemporaneous negotiations on the same subject. 2 Restatement of Law of Contracts, 307, Section 228. We find no such intention expressed in this letter or in the actions of the parties. In the comment to Section 228, supra, it is said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 N.E.2d 299, 62 Ohio App. 377, 16 Ohio Op. 89, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettett-v-cooper-ohioctapp-1939.