Ward v. Ward

1941 OK 389, 119 P.2d 64, 189 Okla. 609, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1941
DocketNo. 29894.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1941 OK 389 (Ward v. Ward) 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
Ward v. Ward, 1941 OK 389, 119 P.2d 64, 189 Okla. 609, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 332 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Love county by J. G. Ward, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, against Blanche Ward, Paul Burgess, and the First National Bank of Marietta.

*610 Plaintiff in substance alleged that defendant Blanche Ward is the widow of B. E. Ward, deceased; that B. E. Ward was plaintiff’s brother; that plaintiff and B. E. Ward, by oral agreement, formed a partnership in the State of Arkansas about the year 1922, for the purpose of carrying on a wholesale meat business, and that from time to time the business was expanded to include wholesale and retail meat business and dealing in the business of buying and selling cattle, the purchase of farm land, the operation of farm lands and ranches and carrying on a general trading business in cattle, farm products, and equipment; that both parties devoted their entire time to the business and shared equally in the profits and losses, each drawing out necessary living expenses, and permitting all other earnings to be carried in the partnership business for the purpose of buying additional cattle, lands, and equipment to increase the holdings of the partnership; that in 1929 the partnership purchased 990.7 acres of land in Love county, Okla. (describing same), which land was paid for with funds belonging to the partnership; that cattle for stocking said land were purchased and paid for out of partnership funds; that title to said land, without the knowledge of plaintiff, was taken in the name of B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward, his wife; that in 1935, 160 acres of land in said county (describing it) was bought and paid for, without plaintiff’s knowledge, in the same way; that in 1938, the partnership purchased 8021/2 acres of land in said county (describing it) which was paid for out of partnership funds, and, without the knowledge of plaintiff, title taken in the name of B. E. Ward; that in January, 1937, said partnership bought and paid for 40 acres of land in said county which was paid for out of partnership funds, title being taken in the name of B. E. Ward and J. G. Ward; that in December, 1937, five acres of land in said county (describing it) was purchased and paid for in the same way and title taken in the name of B. E. Ward and J. G. Ward. (There is no controversy as to the ownership of the 45 acres in the two tracts last above mentioned.) That from time to time large numbers of cattle had been purchased and paid for out of partnership funds; that other personal property such as horses, mules, hogs, etc., had been acquired by said partnership, and at the time of the death of B. E. Ward there were 527 head of cattle, 5 horses, 2 mules, 17 hogs, 8,000 bushels of oats, 10,000 bales of hay, and various farm instruments on said farm or ranch belonging to said partnership. That B. E. Ward died intestate on July 23, 1933, and that defendant Blanche Ward had applied for letters of administration on the estate of B. E. Ward, deceased, and was claiming all of said profits.

Plaintiff alleged that he did not know that the title of any of the land so purchased had been taken in the name of B. E. Ward or B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward, and did not discover that fact until after the death of B. E. Ward. He further alleged that there was on deposit in the defendant bank in the name of B. E. Ward the sum of $9,000, which he alleged in fact belonged to the partnership. As to defendant Paul Burgess, plaintiff alleged that said defendant was the overseer and manager of said farm or ranch and had actual possession of the real and personal property in controversy. Plaintiff asserted that all of said property, both real and personal, including the $9,000 on deposit in said bank, was partnership property, and that under law of Oklahoma, plaintiff, as the sole surviving partner, is vested with the legal and equitable title and was entitled to the possession thereof for the purpose of liquidating said partnership. He prayed judgment decreeing that all of said property, real and personal, is the property of said partnership operating under the name of Ward Brothers, consisting of plaintiff J. G. Ward and B. E. Ward, deceased, and for possession of same for the purpose of liquidating said partnership affair.

After her demurrer to petition was overruled, defendant Blanche Ward answered by general denial, except as to specific admissions set out. She admitted that the 45 acres of land standing in the name of B. E. Ward and J. G. Ward *611 was the property of said B. E. and J. G. Ward, but alleged that all other lands mentioned in said petition were the absolute property of B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward as shown in the title deeds; that all of said property other than said 45 acres was bought by said B. E. Ward and defendant Blanche Ward, and paid for with their own money, and that at the time of the various purchases, the instruments of conveyance were placed in the name of B. E. Ward or B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward, with the full knowledge of plaintiff. By cross-petition she claimed that plaintiff was indebted to said B. E. Ward, at the time of his death, in the sum of $1,827.50, for which sum, as ad-ministratrix of the estate of B. E. Ward, she prayed judgment.

Plaintiff replied by general denial.

The case was tried to a jury. The court, by its instructions, limited the issue to the single question of whether or not the properties purchased in Love county and taken in the name of B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward belonged to the partnership of Ward Brothers, composed of B. E. Ward, now deceased, and J. G. Ward.

The verdict was that the properties in controversy are properties belonging to the partnership firm of Ward Brothers.

Defendant Blanche Ward, individually and as administrator of the estate of B. E. Ward, filed a motion for new trial. The motion was overruled and the court entered judgment,

“. . . that the said plaintiff do have judgment against the defendant, based upon the verdict of the jury, together with costs of this case for which let execution issue.”

From this judgment defendant Blanche Ward appeals. Since the appeal was filed, plaintiff J. G. Ward died, and the cause was revived in the name of Frances Ward, administratrix of the estate of J. G. Ward, deceased.

It is at once apparent that the judgment must be set aside, or at least modified, because, among other things, it does not dispose of at least one of the matters in issue, viz., the possession or right of possession of the property in controversy.

One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial is that the verdict is ambiguous on its face and not responsive to the court’s instructions. As pointed out, the court, in one part of the instructions, limited the jury to one question of fact, that is, whether or not the properties in Love county, title to which was taken in the name of B. E. Ward or B. E. Ward and Blanche Ward, belonged to the partnership of Ward Brothers. Later in the instructions, the court expanded the question so as to include the personal property in controversy. No mention whatever was made of the money on deposit in the First National Bank of Marietta. The verdict, however, is apparently broad enough to cover those funds as well as the lands and other personal property.

This being a case of equitable cognizance, the verdict of the jury was not binding on the court, but advisory only.

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Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 389, 119 P.2d 64, 189 Okla. 609, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-ward-okla-1941.