Thompson v. Giddings

1954 OK 281, 276 P.2d 229, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1954
Docket35833
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1954 OK 281 (Thompson v. Giddings) 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. Giddings, 1954 OK 281, 276 P.2d 229, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 666 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This action was instituted by defendant in error, as plaintiff, against plaintiff in error, as defendant, to quiet her title to 40 acres of land described as: The 5½ of *231 the Ni/2 of the NWy4 of Sec. 21, Twp. 7 N-, Rge. 1 E., in Logan County, Oklahoma. Said defendant sought by cross-petition to obtain specific performance of a contract plaintiff allegedly entered into with him to sell him. an undivided one-eighth or “five-acre” oil royalty interest in said tract. Reference to the parties by their trial court designations will be continued.

Plaintiff’s home is at Langston, Oklahoma. According to the undisputed facts she had just gone to Oklahoma City to the home of her nephew, an Oklahoma A. & M. College student, when defendant, in company with another man, went there to see her on the afternoon of July 20, 1951, to ascertain if she would sell him the royalty interest. An oil well- had just been drilled upon the land and a drill stem test made that morning. According to the information then had by both parties the test indicated the well would be a producer. After some discussion, and uncertainty on defendant’s part, as to just which 40-acre tract plaintiff owned in the NWy, of Sec. 21, she pointed out the above described 40 acres as hers on a map defendant procured and he finally stated he would pay her $250 per acre for the 5-acre interest. Accordingly, before he departed, he left with her his personal check for the sum of $1,250, bearing the notation in the lower left-hand corner thereof: “5 A Royalty N14 Sec. 21-17-1”, ascertained that she1-would be in Guthrie, Oklahoma, the next day, arranged to meet her there to have a deed to said interest drawn, executed and’ delivered, and obtained from her a receipt for his check. The receipt, written in plaintiff’s own handwriting, is in words and figures as follows:

“July 20
“Rec’d a check from Mr. Thompson for 5' Ac, of Royalty $1250 00 to hold & Rec’d cash, money on Sat. July 21, 1951.
“S. B. Giddings.”

The next day plaintiff went to Guthrie and saw defendant, but by then she had earlier that morning been to Coyle, Oklahoma, and accepted a check for a higher price for the royalty from a Mr. Fry of that town. Accordingly, upon meeting defendant at Guthrie she attempted to return to him his check and get back the receipt she had given him. Defendant would not do this however, so she later mailed the check to him, but he has ever since retained her receipt. After defendant had instituted other litigation seeking to enforce the contract he claimed with her he dismissed ■ it without prejudice and asserted his claim by the aforesaid cross petition in this action, wherein he has tendered to her the $1,250 in cash and established that at all times since he gave it to her there were sufficient funds in his account to have paid the check.

At the close of the trial, the trial court entered judgment for plaintiff and refused to grant defendant any relief on his cross petition, after making the following findings :

“First: The Court finds in this case that there was no common understanding or a meeting of the minds of the parties involved, that is, the plaintiff and defendant, and that the writings and statements were lacking in mutuality and understanding and was unfair and unjust and wanting in equity.
“Second: The Court finds as a fact from all of the evidence offered in said cause, that the purported writings are. indefinite and uncertain and leave too much to be supplied and presumed and does not constitute a valid enforceable contract under all the evidence herein, and further finds the circumstances under which the contract was executed rendered doubtful whether the act was understood by the defendant.
“Third: The Court further finds from all of the evidence and circumstances in said cause and the general conduct of the parties that there was lack of understanding, mutuality and a gross inadequacy of consideration, all of which taken together the court finds, renders the enforcement ‘of said alleged writings as a contract, inequitable, and that said writings and parole under all of the evidence do not constitute a valid and enforceable contract in equity and was not entered into fairly and understanding^.”

*232 In his present appeal from said judgment, defendant maintains generally that it and the findings on which it is based are contrary to law and clearly against the weight of the evidence. In the first part of his brief he attacks the Court’s findings as to a valid and enforceable contract between him and the plaintiff, and his argument thereunder pertains, among other things, to the first question we consider, namely: Were the writings in the present case sufficient to render the contract (assuming that there was one) enforceable under the Statute of Frauds?

Plaintiff seems to recognize, as does at least one of the cases she cites, Hawkins v. Wright, 204 Okl. 55, 226 P.2d 957, that a memorandum of an enforceable oral contract for the sale of realty may consist of a variety of informal writings between the contracting parties, but she argues in substance that the check and receipt (in the language of the trial court’s findings) “are indefinite and uncertain and leave too much to be supplied and presumed * * * ” to be sufficient as such a memorandum. Defendant denies this and maintains that under the circumstances the check and receipt constituted a sufficient memorandum.

In determining which of these adverse views is correct it is well to initially recognize that though the check was never signed or endorsed by plaintiff (the party defendant seeks to have “charged” or held to the alleged contract) the receipt, which was admittedly signed by her, refers to the check. Both the check and the receipt referring to, or being a part and parcel of the same transaction, may be considered together and each as supplementing or curing any deficiencies in the other, in determining whether they together supplied the essential requirements of a sufficient memorandum under the Statute of Frauds, 15 O.S.1951 § 136. Halsell v. Renfrow, 14 Okl. 674, 78 P. 118. And see Nauman v. Powers, 147 Kan. 641, 78 P.2d 27, and other cases cited in the Annotations at 153 A.L.R. 1112, and 20 A.L.R. 363; Restatement of the Law, Contracts, Vol. I, Secs. 207, 208.

Plaintiff contends that the “memorandum” here does not describe the property involved with sufficient particularity. Her counsel first says that it isn’t “nearly as clear and capable of reasonable interpretation as the receipt” in Hawkins v. Wright, supra. We do not agree. The receipt in that case merely described the property as the “Hawkins Place” and the Court pointed out not only that neither the realty company there, nor its employee who signed the receipt, was authorized in writing by the property owner to give the receipt, but that the insufficiency of the property’s description merely as the “Hawkins Place” could be readily apprehended when it was considered that “there might be several places in the community that could properly” be designated by the same name.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 281, 276 P.2d 229, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-giddings-okla-1954.