Stillwater Indus. Found., Inc. v. STATE EX REL. BD. OF REGENTS
This text of 541 P.2d 173 (Stillwater Indus. Found., Inc. v. STATE EX REL. BD. OF REGENTS) 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.
Opinion
STILLWATER INDUSTRIAL FOUNDATION, INC., a corporation, and the City of Stillwater, Oklahoma, a Municipal Corporation, Appellees,
v.
The STATE of Oklahoma ex rel. the BOARD OF REGENTS FOR the OKLAHOMA AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGES, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Fitzgerald, Houston & Worthington by Donald L. Worthington, Stillwater, for appellees.
E. Moses Frye, Charles E. Campbell, Stillwater, and Larry Derryberry, Atty. *175 Gen. of Oklahoma, and Jerry Weis, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellant.
*174 DAVISON, Justice.
This action was commenced in the District Court of Payne County, Oklahoma, on March 7, 1973, by the Stillwater Industrial Foundation, Inc., Appellee, hereinafter referred to as Plaintiff or Industrial Foundation, against the State of Oklahoma, ex rel. The Board of Regents for the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges, hereinafter referred to as Board of Regents or University, and The City of Stillwater, hereinafter designated as City, as Defendants.
Plaintiff's suit was for the purpose of quieting its title to approximately 52.54 acres of land located adjacent to the present Municipal Airport to the City of Stillwater.
The Defendant, Board of Regents, filed its Answer and Counterclaim alleging that it had the right to re-entry under its deed to City for conditions broken and prayed that title to the property be quieted in it.
Judgment was rendered in favor of Plaintiff. The City was satisfied with the judgment and appears here as Appellee. Only the Board of Regents has appealed.
The Plaintiff is a nonprofit organization, and only organized for the purpose of developing and attracting new industry to the City of Stillwater for the mutual benefit of the City, the Board of Regents, the citizenship of that vicinity and surrounding areas. The record indicates that Plaintiff is operated as a mutual civic organization with the Officers, Trustees and the attorney donating their time without pay. That the Board of Regents had at all times been represented by various Trustees of Plaintiff organization.
In 1929 the City purchased the lands involved herein for a substantial sum of money ($13,000.00).
On May 5, 1941, City conveyed the involved and other land by deed to The Board of Regents for one dollar and other consideration, with a Stipulation in the deed as follows: "Second Party agrees to use the above described land for a public airport."
Prior to December 16, 1963, Plaintiff did not own an industrial tract, but just prior thereto Plaintiff and the Board of Regents were contacted by an industrial corporation from Wichita, Kansas, seeking an industrial site near the Stillwater Airport for the purpose of installing a plant to manufacture air parts and castings. At that time the involved land was in the Municipal Airport pattern and its release therefrom was obtained from the Federal Aeronautics Administration.
The evidence disclosed that the Plaintiff and the Board of Regents decided a conveyance of a portion of the involved land to the Wichita organization would be very beneficial to the University, the City and the Plaintiff. That at a meeting between the representatives of all of the parties herein, it was decided that the best way to give good title to the proposed builder would be for the Board of Regents to deed the land back to the City to merge the condition placed in the deed above referred to from the City to the Board of Regents which required the land to be used as a public airport.
The evidence disclosed that pursuant to the above understanding the Board of Regents, on December 6, 1963, executed its Quit Claim Deed back to the City covering the involved premises for a recited consideration of Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other valuable consideration which referred to Exhibit "A" attached to said deed which provided as follows:
"It is specifically agreed that the consideration for the execution of this document also includes the following factors:
"1. The construction of the new facility planned on this tract of land will offer to Oklahoma State University many research contracts in the future.
"2. The construction of the facility and its ultimate operation will bring to this *176 community an expected total of 100 new families.
"3. The construction of the proposed facility on this site will be the first of several industries surrounding the campus of Oklahoma State University which will be available for research contracts to University personnel.
"4. The construction of this facility will lend to the support of the municipal airport due to the increased air traffic at the airport."
On December 16, 1963, City executed its Quit Claim Deed to the land involved in favor of Plaintiff, subject to the same provisions as mentioned in the last referred to deed from the Board of Regents to City.
It appears from the evidence that the sale to the Wichita organization failed to materialize when a bond issue proposed by the City pertaining to the involved land failed to pass. There was testimony to the effect that the conditions contained in the deed from the Regents to City was for the purpose of obtaining the help of the personnel and friends of the college to help in the passage of the bond issue.
The evidence further discloses that Plaintiff, through its personal representatives, had shown the lands involved to more than one hundred industrial prospects after the deal with the Wichita organization failed to materialize. That in 1973 Plaintiff had two, for sure, and another good possibility prospect to construct industrial facilities on the involved acreage.
Other evidence disclosed that in 1973, through the efforts of Plaintiff, an industrial plant was going to locate on the subject land for the purpose of making electronic equipment but the industrial prospect was informed, by the Board of Regents, through their attorney that the Board claimed ownership of the land and the prospect declined to be in a lawsuit and the deal collapsed. This action by the Industrial Foundation followed.
On January 3, 1973 the Industrial Foundation conveyed back to the City 3.12 acres of the lands involved herein. The consideration shown in said deed was Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration. It was stipulated by all the parties that this deed was executed for the purpose of the City increasing the hangar capacity at the Municipal Airport and this had been approved by the F.A.A.
It is conceded by all parties that this is a case of equitable cognizance and the law governing such cases is stated in the case of Anglin v. Edwards and Gauntt Oil Co., Okl., 418 P.2d 647, as follows:
"It is a long established rule of law in an equitable action that there is a presumption in favor of the findings of the trial court, and where such findings of the trial court are not clearly against the weight of the evidence, the judgment will be affirmed."
Many cases have followed this reasoning.
Also in the case of Thompson v. Smith, Okl., 420 P.2d 526, this court stated:
"Where evidence in case of equitable cognizance is conflicting, trial court's finding thereon will not be disturbed on appeal unless clearly against the weight thereof... .
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541 P.2d 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillwater-indus-found-inc-v-state-ex-rel-bd-of-regents-okla-1975.