Skirvin v. Sigler

1938 OK 166, 83 P.2d 530, 183 Okla. 523, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
DocketNo. 24583.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1938 OK 166 (Skirvin v. Sigler) 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
Skirvin v. Sigler, 1938 OK 166, 83 P.2d 530, 183 Okla. 523, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 333 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Oklahoma county, for damages, entered against the defendants on the 6th day of September, 1932, pursuant to a verdict of a jury. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff alleged in his petition that: On December 5, 1929, he entered into a written contract with the Skirvin Operating Company, signed by W. B. Skirvin as its president, for the leasing, for a term of five years from date, of the Skirvin Barber Shop situated in the Skirvin Hotel in Oklahoma City; such lease included all the furniture, fixtures, and equipment thereon. A purported copy thereof being attached and marked “Exhibit A.”

Plaintiff further alleged that he entered into possession of the barber shop under the terms of said lease and operated same until the month of April; that at great expense he placed the barber shop in first class operating condition and brought Earl Sigler from Tulsa, Okla.. to operate the same as his manager, which he did until the 2nd day of June, 1931; and that the profits from the operation thereof were greatly increased during that period of time. According to the allegations of the petition, notice was given the plaintiff on May 30, 1931, that such lease would be terminated, unless the sum of $4,000 was paid by him to the defendants; and thereafter, on June 1/ 1931, the defendant, Skir-vin Operating Company, again notified plaintiff to pay such sum or vacate, and *524 upon plaintiff’s refusal to vacate lie was threatened with ejection; that thereafter plaintiff operated the barber shop until June 2, 1931, at which time the defendant W. B. Skirvin, acting- for himself and said Skirvin Operating Company, took possession of the barber shop and caused the plaintiff’s agent, Earl Sigler, to be ejected therefrom.

It is then alleged that future or prospective profits from the operating of the barber shop during the remainder of the term of such lease would have doubled each year and would have amounted to $28,076.82. Certain personal property and supplies valued at $437.30 are listed as having been taken by defendants. It is specifically alleged that defendant W. B. Skirvin was acting not only for himself but for the other defendant, Skirvin Operating Company, and that by reason of malicious acts, plaintiff is entitled to recover $10,000 exemplary damages and an additional sum of $1,000 attorney’s fee, and $60 damages for loss of time in traveling, making a total of $39,-574.12 and costs prayed for in the first cause of action.

Under the second cause of action the plaintiff alleges that he is entitled to three times the amount of his actual damages— $46,989.02.

The defendants jointly answered and filed cross-petition, said answer containing a general denial and a rescission or modification of the lease contract pleaded by plaintiff, alleging that on June 1, 1930, a contract, in writing, was executed canceling the lease contract and providing that the same should expire on June 1, 1931, at which time plaintiff was to give peaceable possession of the premises; copy of modification or rescission contract was attached to answer and was shown to be upon, and a part of, the original lease contract. Certain goods valued at $84 were tendered to plaintiff.

The cross-petition alleged that plaintiff was indebted to defendant in the sum of $225 for rent which he refused to pay. The plaintiff filed his reply and answer setting up a general denial, and specific denial that plaintiff had entered into the rescission or modification agreement as pleaded by defendants, but admitting the execution thereof and alleging that plaintiff, at the time of making such purported rescission or modification agreement, was attempting to remove,. as manager of such barber shop, one J. A. Armstrong, but was unsuccessful in such attempt. Plaintiff pleaded that such rescission contract was made between plaintiff and defendants for the purpose of showing the same to the said Armstrong so that he would relinquish his claims and surrender management of said barber shop, and that it was orally agreed at the time of executing the same that it should not be binding upon either of the parties thereto, and should never be enforced between them; subsequent thereto, it is alleged, the defendant W. B. Skirvin refused to carry out such agreement by failing to show said contract to the said Armstrong, and by reason thereof the consideration failed; said allegations being in the nature of admissions of the execution of such rescission or modification agreement together with a plea of avoidance. Thereafter an amended reply was filed, in which the allegations of the original repily were supplemented and elaborated upon; defendants replied to plaintiff’s amendment to the petition, and the cause came pn for trial on September 6, 1932, resulting in a judgment against the defendants.

One of tlie assignments of error of the defendants is that the district court erred in granting relief to a plaintiff where the contract or other act sought to be avoided is substantially a fraud on the rights or interests o'f third parties.

The rule stated in 9 C. J. p. 1220, is as follows:

“Belief is refused to plaintiff where the contract or other act sought to be avoided is substantially a fraud on the rights, interests, or intentions of third parties, as where he asks the court to aid him in consummating a breach of trust. The court will not aid a particeps criminis to an illegal transaction.”

In 21 C. J. p. 182, from section 163, is the following:

“* * * This maxim expresses rather a principle of inaction than one of action. It means that equity refuses to lend its aid in any manner to one seeking its active interposition, who has been guilty of unlawful or inequitable conduct in the matter with relation to which he seeks relief.”

And on page 186 of 21 C. J. we find:

“The unconscionable character of a transaction between the parties need not1 be pleaded by defendant. Whenever it is disclosed the court will of its own motion apply the maxim. It does not matter at what state of the proofs or in what order a lack of clean hands is discovered.”

In 13 C. J. p. 492, sec. 440, it is said:

“No principle of law is better settled *525 than that a party to an illegal contract cannot come into a court of law and ask to have his illegal objects carried out; nor can he set up a case in which he must necessarily disclose an illegal purpose as the groundwork of his claim. * * * The general rule is the same both at law and in equity, and whether the contract is executory or executed. * * * In such cases the defense of illegality prevails,, not as a protection to defendant, but as a disability in plaintiff. The court does not give effect to the contract, but merely refuses its aid to undo what the parties have already done.”

One of the leading cases announcing this rule, cited in Corpus Juris, is Lyons v. Elston, 211 Mass. 478, 98 N. E. 93. In that case a decedent conveyed real estate to one of her two daughters, to the exclusion of a son, the conveyance having been obtained by undue influence of both daughters, the one, not the grantee, being a party thereto under the belief that her interests were being sufficiently protected.

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Related

Hamilton v. Boyce
48 N.W.2d 172 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1951)
Wickham v. Simpler
1946 OK 357 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 166, 83 P.2d 530, 183 Okla. 523, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skirvin-v-sigler-okla-1938.