Stoddard v. Gookin

625 P.2d 529, 191 Mont. 495, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 678
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1981
Docket80-168
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 625 P.2d 529 (Stoddard v. Gookin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoddard v. Gookin, 625 P.2d 529, 191 Mont. 495, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 678 (Mo. 1981).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

J. Lawrence Stoddard appeals from a judgment entered against him in the Sixteenth Judicial District Court, Fallon County, denying his claims against Marvin H. Gookin and Sharon Gookin for cancellation of a deed, damages or in the alternative, specific performance.

*498 We find the issues in this appeal are:

1. Whether the escrow bank should have delivered to the Gookins a deed terminating Stoddard’s interest in the real property.

2. Whether the District Court should have allowed evidence of an oral contract to purchase an interest in real estate.

3. Whether the District Court should have made findings of fact and conclusions of law in this case.

4. Whether the evidence in the case is sufficient to support the judgment.

In 1970, Marvin and Sharon Gookin entered into a written five-year lease of ranch property with parties identified as “McGhee”. This lease included an option to the Gookins to buy the real property for a sum of $100,000.

While the lease was in effect, J. Lawrence Stoddard and the Gookins agreed orally that the Gookins would exercise their option to purchase the McGhee property, that the contract for the purchase of the McGhee property would show Stoddard and his wife and the Gookins as cotenant-purchasers, and that thereafter, Stoddard would pay $30,000 to the Gookins in exchange for their cotenancy interest in the contract for the McGhee property.

Stoddard and the Gookins retained a Baker attorney, R. L. Culver, to prepare the necessary documents to carry out their agreement. The attorney prepared a contract for deed, warranty deeds, and an escrow receipt for deposit of the instruments with the Bank of Baker.

On June 1, 1973, a contract for deed was executed between the McGhees as sellers and the Stoddards and Gookins as cotenant purchasers. Stoddard made the downpayment of $10,000 to the McGhees. The Stoddards, and the Gookins each signed warranty deeds, that, if recorded, would respectively convey to the other sole title to the ranch property. A promissory note for $30,000 was executed by Stoddard, due and payable to the Gookins on November 1, 1973. The note and the deeds were to be held in escrow at the *499 Bank of Baker. An escrow receipt was prepared, which included the following instructions for the escrow holder:

“If said $30,000.00 note is paid on or before November I, 1973 by J. Lawrence Stoddard [the escrow agent shall] . . . deliver the deed executed by Marvin H. Gookin and wife to J. Lawrence Stoddard, unto the said J. Lawrence Stoddard, and destroy the remaining deed.

“If said note, plus interest, is not paid by November 1, 1973, then deliver to Marvin H. Gookin, the warranty deed executed by J. Lawrence Stoddard and wife to Marvin H. Gookin and destroy the other deed.”

An additional part of the escrow receipt provided:

“This escrow is taken expressly subject to terms, exceptions, provisions and conditions herein stated which are acceptable and approved by all the parties accepting this receipt or interested in the escrow being as follows:

“5. Time is and shall be insofar as the escrow agent is concerned of the essence of this agreeement and part of the consideration, and a waiver in one instance to a time condition shall not operate to prevent an objection for any subsequent default in point of time.”

It may be gleaned from the testimony, though with difficulty, that on or approximately November 2, 1973, Marvin and Sharon Gookin and J. Lawrence Stoddard entered into a different arrangement. Stoddard agreed to pay the $30,000 in two installments, $15,000 “in a very short time” and an additional $15,000 on or after January 1, 1974. The new arrangement was for the Gookins’ tax advantage. The parties further agreed that the Gookins, instead of moving from the ranch premises immediately upon the payment of the $30,000 as originally contemplated, would be allowed to remain on the property for an unspecified period of time in 1974 to winter livestock on the ranch.

On November 2, 1973, upon request by the Gookins for payment of the first $15,000, Stoddard paid $2,000, and stated that the re *500 maining $13,000 amount would be paid after he sold some stock through a stock broker. Gookin made several additional requests for this payment without result. On November 24, 1973, Marvin Gookin found it necessary to leave Baker for Minnesota because of the illness of his father. He was gone from November 24 until December 6, 1973. Before he left, he talked to Attorney Culver, and asked Culver to give Stoddard an additional four days for the payment of the balance of the $15,000, with notice that if the payment were not made, the Gookins would seek to get the deeds which were then supposed to be deposited in escrow. At that point, no deposits of the instruments for escrow had been made. One of the reasons given was that Mrs. Stoddard had delayed in signing the deed. On November 26, 1973, Culver took the instruments to the Bank of Baker, and deposited them in escrow. The instruments deposited included the two warranty deeds and the promissory note, dated June 1, 1973, which by its terms, was payable on or before November 1, 1973. Shortly after the instruments had been deposited with the escrow bank, Attorney Culver made contact with Stoddard and advised him that he must make payment within a few days. Stoddard testified that within a few days he brought the balance of the payment to Culver's office, but Culver advised him to take the money to the Bank of Baker. Stoddard did not do this. On December 6, 1973, after Marvin Gookin returned to Baker, and found that the payment had not been made by Stoddard, he got in touch with a Billings attorney. As a result, the Billings firm wrote to Stoddard on December 7, 1973, as follows:

“You are hereby notified that any prior agreement that you may have had to purchase certain land from Marvin H. Gookin and Sharon Gookin in Range 59 East, Fallon County, has been breached by your failure to pay sums when due. You are further notified that by reason of this breach, the agreement is terminated and all sums previously paid are forfeited.

“You are further advised that you have 10 days from the date of this letter to remove all your livestock from the Gookin property.”

*501 On the same day, the Gookins went to the Bank of Baker, and obtained from the bank the instruments which had been deposited in escrow. They recorded the warranty deed granting them sole title to the property.

On or about December 10, 1973, Stoddard came to the Gookins’ residence and attempted to tender the balance of the first $15,000 payment. Marvin Gookin refused to accept the same, saying that the deed was recorded and the matter was closed.

Following that time; the Gookins have continued to possess the ranch property, and have made the annual $9,000 payments to the McGhees as required by the contract. At the time of trial, three additional $9,000 payments remained to be made to satisfy the McGhee contract.

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Related

Gookin v. Huntley
837 P.2d 412 (Montana Supreme Court, 1992)
Nimmick v. Hart
Montana Supreme Court, 1991
Winkel v. Family Health Care, P.C.
668 P.2d 208 (Montana Supreme Court, 1983)
Stoddard v. Gookin
661 P.2d 865 (Montana Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 529, 191 Mont. 495, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoddard-v-gookin-mont-1981.