Thompson v. Funk

1932 OK 217, 12 P.2d 239, 158 Okla. 88, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 931
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 15, 1932
Docket20341
StatusPublished

This text of 1932 OK 217 (Thompson v. Funk) 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
Thompson v. Funk, 1932 OK 217, 12 P.2d 239, 158 Okla. 88, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 931 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

KORNEGAY, J.

This was a suit commenced by the present defendants in error, namely, R. B:. Funk and Yyrna A. Funk, against the present plaintiffs in error, James S. Thompson, Nancy E. Thompson, and W. E. Mills, in the district court of Oklahoma county on the 16th day of May, 1928, for the specific performance of a contract entered into between the parties for the transfer by the present plaintiffs in error of lots 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of block 36, Maywood addition to Oklahoma City, and the west half of lot 4 and lot 5 of block 43 of the town-site of Clinton, Okla., in exchange for parts of sections 18 and 19, township' 7 north, range 26 east, located in LeFlore county, and known as the Funk farm, and also the northwest 10.93 acres of lot 2, section 30, in the same township and range. These were to be conveyed by warranty deed, subject to a $10,000 mortgage in favor of the School Land Department. In addition to this, the Funks were to convey by quitclaim deed a three-acre tract with some buildings thereon, which was block 20 of the Pennsylvania addition to the city of Poteau.

The Oklahoma City property was mortgaged to a Mrs. Payne for $22,000. The contract was not specific as to whether or not the respective grantees should assume the indebtedness that was secured by the respective mortgages. According to the allegations of the petition, the defendants, Thompsons, had failed to comply with the agreement, and in violation of the agreement had on the 21st of April, 1928, conveyed the Oklahoma City property to their codefendant, Mills, by warranty deed, which was recorded on the 23rd of April, 1928. There was an averment of constructive knowledge of the defendant Mills as to the rights of the parties, and that the copy of the contract declared on had been filed and recorded on the 12th of April in the office of the clerk of Oklahoma county. There was a prayer for judgment for specific performance, and for an accounting, and there was an offer of conveyance of the LeFlore county land.

None of the pleadings were verified. The contract had been executed in triplicate, one copy of which was retained by the real estate agent, O. R. Oureton, who had drawn the contract, one was held by the plaintiffs below, and one was held by the defendants below.

An answer was filed setting up an alteration in the contract, that was made by Oureton, according to the testimony, the alteration appearing on the recorded copy. It was a change from the word April to May in the recorded copy, and also a change from April 10th to April 14th in that copy. All parties agreed that the change from April to May, that appears in the body of the instrument, was duly authorized. The plaintiffs in error claim, however, that the change from April 10th, in the body of the contract, to April 14th was not authorized. It was further claimed that the Oklahoma City property was the homestead of the plaintiffs in error, who were husband and wife, and the property had been transferred, as shown by the abstract that is made a part of the case-made, by Mrs. E. F. Payne to “James S. Thompson and Nancy E. Thompson, husband and wife,” under date of November 22, 1927. The certificate to *89 the abstract, in which this conveyance appears, is dated the 10th of April, 1928, at 7:30 a. m.

The next preceding date is the 14th of November, 1927. The defendants made a general denial, and admitted the execution of the contract, but claimed it hacl been altered without consent, and that the plaintiffs had failed to comply with the contract, and the title the plaintiffs had was not merchantable, and that the plaintiffs had failed to furnish abstract showing that they had a merchantable title, and special reliance was had upon the failure to furnish an abstract on or before April. 10, 1928, and that this failure had avoided the contract.

It is further claimed that thereafter Funk had demanded a quitclaim deed and had abandoned the contract by refusal to quitclaim the Oklahoma property to the plaintiffs in error. The eighth paragraph of the answer averred that after the refusal of the quitclaim deeds and failure of Funk, the change from April 10th to April 14th was made in the instrument by some one on behalf of the plaintiffs below, and that it was placed on record by the plaintiffs, “knowing that by mutual consent and agreement the said written contract had been mutually abandoned by plaintiffs and both of these defendants, and that the change of the date in said contract was made for the purpose of allowing for an apparent additional time, and made for the purpose of showing on the record that the said plaintiffs had until April 14, 1928, to comply with said contract, when they knew that such time was in fact limited by said contract to April 10, 1928.”

There was a further allegation of being ready with the abstract at the time and place specified in the written contract, and a failure on the part of the plaintiffs below to be there with their abstract. This breach was specially relied upon as destroying the rights of the plaintiffs under the contract. There was a further allegation that the purpose of the change was to put it upon record and cloud the title of the defendants below, the present plaintiffs in error.

There was an original cross-petition, later dismissed, setting up a breach of the obligation of the plaintiffs below, and the appearance of the defendants below with their abstract, ready to go on, and an allegation that the suit of the plaintiffs below was not prosecuted in good faith, and saying that defendants had been put to $1,000 expense, and asking for an adjudication that the contract was null and void, because the precedent conditions were not complied with, and that a material alteration therein had been made, which vitiated it, and asking for its cancellation and for $1,000 actual damages and $2,000 punitive damages.

There was a reply denying the allegations generally. The defendant Mills adopted the answer of his codefendants, and the reply to this was a denial generally. In addition to the general denial, plaintiffs denied the alteration of the contract, and stated that any alteration made in the contract was made by the agent of the defendants and at their instance and request. There was a further allegation of a delay from the 4th to the 7th of April, 1928, occasioned by the acts of the defendants, and that at the instance of the defendants and pursuant to their instruction, the defendants’ agent changed the time for the delivery of the abstracts from April 10th to April 14th, and that the changes were incorporated therein, and that they acted thereon.

There is a further allegation of breach by the defendants below of their contract concerning the delivery of abstracts, and deeds, and allegations of being deceived by the defendants, and a plea of estoppel, and a denial of the damage. In reply to the answer of Mills, they made the same allegations, with the addition of the contract being on record at the time Mills got his deed.

With these pleadings, the parties went to trial before the district judge, and in: trodueed their evidence, all parties testifying, and also the real estate agent. A demurrer was interposed to the plaintiffs’ evidence and overruled, and defendants excepted. The evidence closed and the parties rested, and the case was continued to August 17, 1928, for arguments of counsel, and was taken under advisement from the 17th of August, 1928, to September 11, 1928.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 217, 12 P.2d 239, 158 Okla. 88, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-funk-okla-1932.