Sawyer v. Bahnsen

1924 OK 414, 226 P. 344, 102 Okla. 41, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 8, 1924
Docket13028
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1924 OK 414 (Sawyer v. Bahnsen) 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
Sawyer v. Bahnsen, 1924 OK 414, 226 P. 344, 102 Okla. 41, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 120 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

WABREN, J.

In this suit, the plaintiff, H. F. Sawyer, sues the defendants. J. E. Bahn-sen, A. H. Livingston, and Laura M. Livingston, to recover principal and interest on a promissory note executed by Belle Wright and John Wright and upon two extension agreements thereon executed by defendants. The original note was executed June 12, 1908, to L. W. Clapp and a mortgage on real estate was executed at the same time to secure such note. The land was sold by the Wrights prior to the maturity of the note anj. mortgage to defendants, who assumed and agreed to pay such indebtedness. On February 1, 1913, the defendants executed an extension agreement with the plaintiff, whereby the said defendants agreed to pay the principal and interest at a date five years from June 1, 1913. On June 20, 1918, another extension agreement between the parties was had to the same effect, providing for payment five years from June 1, 1918.

Meanwhile, early in the year 1916 suit was filed against defendants by strangers to these contracts, which litigation was decided ad- . versely to the defendants, and premises were surrendered by the defendants July 29, 1919. This suit was filed March 8, 1920, for the principal and one past due interest installment.

The litigation over the land wherein the defendants were unsuccessful was finally terminated in this court July 29, 1919, being cause No. 8711, Hamilton et al. v. Bahnsen et al., 75 Okla. 216, 183 Pac. 413. The matters in contention therein were purely matters of law. There were no controverted questions of fact, merely a difference as to what law of inheritance governed under the facts admitted and proven.

The trial court found for the defendants on the theory that there was no consideration for the assumption of the indebtedness and no consideration for the extension agreements of February 1, 1913, and June 20, 1918.

Were this a suit between the plaintiff, defendants, and the Wrights, this contention might be tenable, but we are confronted with two independent extension agreements of five years each, by the terms of which the defendants absolutely promise to pay the plaintiff the sums sued for in this action. On June 1, 1913, the plaintiff had a right of action on his note and for foreclosure of mortgage on lands then held by the defendants, and on June 1, 1918, had a like action for the same sums. He forbore suit in consideration of these extension agreements and such extension and forbearance is a sufficient consideration to support the agreements. 9 Cyc. 338, 342; Matthews v. Seaver, 34 Neb. 592, 52 N. W. 283; Fraser v. Backus, 62 Mich. 540, 29 N. W. 92; Parker v. Enslow, 102 Ill. 272, 40 Am. Rep. 588; Hewett v. Currier (Wis.) 23 N.W. 884; Llano Imp. Co. v. Pac. Imp. Co., 66 Fed. 526, 13 C. C. A. 625; Hays v. Smith, 65 Okla. 113, 104 Pac. 470. Section 5019, Comp. Stats. 1921, is in point here and reads as follows:

“Any benefit conferred, o.r agreed to be conferred upon the promisor, by any other person, to. which the promisor is not lawfully entitled, or any prejudice suffered ox-agreed to be suffered by such person, other than such as he is at the. time of consent lawfully bound to suffer, as an inducement to the promisor, is a good consideration for a promise.”

There was a benefit conferred on defendants in the extension of time, the freedom from litigation, the continued possession of the property. There were benefits to which *43 they were not lawfully entitled if extension had not been granted, but which' they .received from the plaintiff by virtue' of this promise. '

The court in the ease' of Llano Imp. Co. v. Pac. Imp. Co., supra, said: '

“In a suit by the P. Oo. on the note it was claimed that the contract and all transactions relating to it were ultra vires and void. Held, .that whether such contract was in fact valid or void, there was at the time the note was given sufficient ground for litigation, if the L. Oo. had chosen to treat it as void and refuse performance, to constitute a good consideration for this note, and that the P. Oo. was entitled to recover on the note.”

The plaintiff in this case on June 1, 1913, forbore to sue the Wrights and the defendants in this case. At thát time defendants were in possession of the land without a cloud on the horizon. The Wrights may have been perfectly good on execution for the amount of the note, independent of the property in question. There might have been a foreclosure if defendants had refused to pay, and the land might, and probably would, have sold for enough to pay plaintiff’s debt, with no obligation on his part for a return on failure of title. On the date of the second extension agreement suit had been brought against defendants for more than two years to cancel their title to this land. Yet in the face of this lawsuit defendants executed their second agreement to pay the debt and secured five more years’ time thereon. Plaintiff’s rpoht of action against, the Wrights expired with the extension agreement, to which they were not a party. Kremke v. Radamaker, 60 Okla. 138, 159 Pac. 475; Adams v. Ferguson, 44 Okla. 544, 147 Pac. 772; Bennet v. Odneal, 44 Okla. 354, 147 Pac. 1013.

Further, at the date of the second extension agreement the bar of the statute of limitations would have been available .to the Wrights. The extensions were evidently considered by all persons as the original obligations of the defendants, and as such amounted to a novation. Hoeldtke v. Horstman (Tex.) 128 S. W. 642; Hill v. Hoeldtke (Tex.) 142 S. W. 871; Sneed v. White (Ky.) 20 Am. Dec. 175; Morgan v. Cred. (La.) 20 Am. Dec. 285; Ferst et al. v. Bank of Waycross (Ga.) 36 S. E. 773.

The case of Hoeldtke v. Horstman, supra, holds:

“Some of the earlier decisions are disposed to treat the assumption as a contract of indemnity made for the benefit of the mortgagor, of which the mortgagee may avail himself by right of subrogation, and that his remedy may be enforced only .through an equitable proceeding-. The majority of the later adjudications, and tji,eir1;ext-yi-iters,sas yvéll,; reg'a^d such'án'ünffértakifig as a.contract made-, for, the. benefit, ,o£ the- mortgagee, lipón which 'h'é'máy,“sue^the.'.grantee 'directly. a^'lAyf/j.íJíítj^ieñ'^ssetíiíed.tQ^by'' thdmort-^Shq.l’tjh'e .‘tentjaet.- cf assumption- ptótájces somewhat of the nature of' á ndvqt^p.n.’” -

Ruling Case Law, vol. 20, page '372, section ■16, says-; ■ . . n¡.u- ■■ ' 1

“It is' a thttfoughly'well, "established rule in all jurisdiction^ ih which- the common law prevails that thé' release of the original debt- or by a novation of a contract may be established, like any other agreement, by proof of facts and circumstances from which the implication of such release would reasonably arise.”

After the sale of the lands-the Wrights appear no more in -any - transaction or litigation, and it was evident that the extension agreements were the simple and direct means by which the defendants were substituted as the original debtors. Thus the test of a novation as required by Martin v. Leeper Bros. L. Company, 48 Okla. 219, 149 Pac. 1140, is met in this case. There was an original valid obligation, the Wright note, agreement of all parties to the new contract, extinguishment of the old obligation, and a new and valid one. The only feature about which any question at all could arise would be the agreement. of the Wrights. They had sold the property and passed on.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 414, 226 P. 344, 102 Okla. 41, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-bahnsen-okla-1924.