Ruland v. Bohner

1931 OK 231, 299 P. 167, 149 Okla. 36, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 5, 1931
Docket18853
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1931 OK 231 (Ruland v. Bohner) 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
Ruland v. Bohner, 1931 OK 231, 299 P. 167, 149 Okla. 36, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 165 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The petition set up the following contract:

“Exhibit A.
“Contract for Deed.
“This agreement made and entered into this the 29fch day of August, 1925, by and between Wreatha J. Ruland, party of the first part, and India T. Bohner, party of the second part.
“Whereas said' party of the first part has this day agreed to and with said party of the second part to sell and convey by good and sufficient warranty deed the following real estate, to wit:
“All of lot sixteen (16), block fifty-two (52) Original Town of Lawton, Okla. For the consideration of thirty-one hundred dollars ($3,100.00), to. be paid as follows: Five hundred dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, to be placed' in the American National Bank for a period of time not to exceed thirty days, in which abstract of title is to be brought down to date by party of the first part, and party of the second part allowed to have attorney examine and pass on same, then if abstract of title is satisfactory party of the second part to assume a loan of six hundred dollars ($600.00) now against above described real estate, and to pay two thousand' dollars ($2,-000.00) making a total consideration of thirty-one hundred dollars.
“It is further understood that party of the first part is to pay all tax due against property for year of 1924. And that party of second part is to receive all rents from the date of the closing of this contract.
“Witnesses:
“Georgia Glass Wreatha J. Ruland
“A. L. Carlton” India Bohner. ”

And it further alleged performance by plaintiff and breach by defendant, alleged and renewed a tender, and prayed for specific performance of the contract. The defendant answered by general denial, and further pleaded that the plaintiff’s title was not merchantable because she had procured her conveyance by “false and fraudulent representations, statements and promises,” and that defendant had been informed of the defective title by various persons. The defendant further sought damages by way of cross-petition.

*37 The execution of the agreement by both parties on August 29, 1925, was not denied. On August 31st, the plaintiff executed the deed to the defendant and procured an abstract certified to that date, which was aimed over to Mr. Williams, the attorney designated by the defendant, her brother-in-law, who approved the title without qualification by opinion dated' September 2, 1925. The defendant testified that right after getting the title opinion of Mr. Williams she went to the premises with a contractor and stopped at the house of Mrs. Wallace, who asked her what she was doing, and that in answer to defendant’s statement that she had bought the premises Mrs. Wallace said that she could not get good title, since her son had tried to purchase the property a few years before and the plaintiff had told him that she could not sell it during the lifetime of her mother. She further testified that Mr. Wallace, the son, came out during the conversation and confirmed his mother’s statement. The defendant also testified that after that she waited about five days and went to Oklahoma Oity, where she saw the plaintiff, who apparently left for her work and left the defendant with her mother without objection. She said that after the plaintiff .had left she asked Mrs. Burns, the plaintiff’s mother, about “this property that I had bought”; that Mrs. Burns began to cry and said:

“ ‘Mrs. Bohner, I wasn’t to sell this place as long as I lived; it was to keep me.’ I said, ‘Then what did you do it for to Mrs. Ruland?’ And she said, T had to,’ and then she began crying and telling me some other things in regard to 'her property, and I said, ‘Mrs. Burns, do you know anything about the will?’ And she said, ‘My husband left a will and after he. died my children didn’t like it and' tore it up,’ and I said to her, ‘Was that in regard to this piece of property?’ And she said, T wasn’t to will any of my property until after I died.’ ”

She testified that Mrs. Burns was nervous, was a little bit of a body, with her face shrunken, and that she lived in the past instead of the future, and that she was beautiful to look at.

It is not denied that after getting the opinion of Mr. Williams the defendant asked ieave of Mr. Carlton, the broker, to take the abstract to a Mr. McMahon, and it does not appear that he made any objections to the title. Neither does it appear that it was within the five days after the conversation with the Wallaces or after defendant’s return from Oklahoma City. The defendant testified that on her return home she wrote the plaintiff telling her what her mother had said. It appears, however, that before writing she took the abstract to Mr. Stevens, who passed it as a merchantable title of record, but said that he had advised that she get quitclaim deeds from the parties, and asked Mr. Carlton if he would get them, and Mr. Carlton said that he would gladly get them, and that he wrote to the plaintiff and got them within a few days. This appears to have taken place September 24, 1925, as Mr. Carlton forwarded the deeds that day and the defendant on that date posted the following letter:

“Mrs. India Turner Bohner
. “619 E. Street
“Lawton, Oklahoma
“Dear Mrs. Ruland: '
“The loan I am going to get the money from would like to get a quitclaim deed from your mother also your brothers as your mother was quite old at the time she made the deed to you, and as there is quite a bit of oil stir would like to have it at once if possible.
“Very respectfully,
“India Bohner.”
“P. S. Let me know at once when I can expect them.”

The plaintiff made immediate arrangements to get the deeds and wrote defendant a letter dated September 26th, posted September 28, 1925, stating that she would attend to the matter at once and send the deeds to Mr. Carlton. Two of the deeds were executed September 30, 1925, which was after the 30-day period provided in the contract, and they were at once mailed to Mr. Carlton. The deed of one brother having been signed by initials, a new deed was drafted and was executed by him October 5, 3925, and' was received by Mr. Carlton a few days after the receipt of the deeds of the mother and the other brother. Plaintiff and her two brothers were all of the heirs of the mother. The defendant claims that she was very anxious to go on with the deal, and would have made the trade if the deeds had been received within the 30 days. She testified that two of the deeds were received within the 30 days, in which she was in error.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 231, 299 P. 167, 149 Okla. 36, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruland-v-bohner-okla-1931.