Washington v. Colvin Et Ux.

1915 OK 1042, 155 P. 251, 55 Okla. 774, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 227
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 14, 1915
Docket5824
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1042 (Washington v. Colvin Et Ux.) 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
Washington v. Colvin Et Ux., 1915 OK 1042, 155 P. 251, 55 Okla. 774, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 227 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

COLLIER, C.

This action was brought by Susan Washington, hereinafter called “plaintiff,” against E. A. Colvin and wife, hereinafter designated “defendants,” to rescind a transaction entered into by said parties for the exchange of real estate; the title to the real estate of plaintiff being at the time in trustees.The .evidence shows that a written contract was entered into by said parties for the exchange of certain lands, in which transaction defendants were represented by an agent; that by said contract plaintiff was to assume the payment of a mortgage in the sum of $300, which • was upon the city property to be deeded to her trustees by defendants, “to be paid-to said agent of defendants within three years from the 3d day of March, 1912, in installments of $8 per ■month”; that on May 23, 1913, J. C. Long, assignee of said agent, foreclosed said mortgage, and title and possession to said lands were lost to plaintiff. It is shown by the pleadings that the parties deeded to each other the lands as agreed; that defendants went into possession of the property deeded by plaintiff’s trustees to them; that at the' time this action was brought defendants were in possession of and claiming said property by virtue of said deed .executed to them by plaintiff’s trustees, in accordance with said contract. There is no -allegation or proof in the case that said agent was authorized in writing to act as the agent of defendants in making said deal. It further ap *776 pears from a decree introduced in evidence that, after the execution of said deed by defendants to plaintiff’s trustees, said trustees were relieved as trustees, and the property deeded to them as trustees was decreed to belong to and vest in said plaintiff. Defendants filed an answer and cross-petition, in which they admit that the agent making the deal was their agent,'and deny that said agent had authority to make the representations as to the time and manner of payment of said mortgage to be paid by plaintiff, alleged to have been made, and aver that they had no knowledge of such representations, and that plaintiff had filed of record a caveat, which was a cloud upon their title to the lands in controversy, and prayed that same be canceled, and they introduced evidence fully supporting the allegations of their said cross-action. To said cross-petition, plaintiff filed an answer. Defendants demurred to the evidence of plaintiff in the case in chief, which demurrer was sustained and judgment rendered for defendants, which' was' duly excepted to. The court also rendered judgment for the defendants on their cross-action, awarding the relief prayed; to which plaintiff excepted. Motion was filed for new trial, which was overruled and exceptions saved. To reverse the judgments' rendered, this appeal in prosecuted.

While it is true that the agent was not authorized in writing to make the transaction made between the parties, there is no question but that defendants ratified his action by accepting the benefits thereof, and must bear its burdens, if any. Defendants armed their agenit by appointing him as their agent to make the deal; and whether or not they authorized, or had knowledge of, the misrepresentations averred to have been made by such agent as to maturity and manner of payment of the mortgage assumed *777 to be paid by plaintiff, is entirely immaterial, as defendants accepted the benefits of the deal made by their agent.

It is a rule of general application that:

“He who would avail himself of the advantages arising from the act of another in his behalf must also assume the responsibilities. If the principal has knowingly, appropriated and enjoyed the fruit and benefits of an agent’s act, he will not afterwards be heard to say that the act was unauthorized. One who voluntarily accepts the proceeds of an act done by one assuming, though without authority, to be his agent, ratifies the aot, and takes it as his own with all its burdens, as well as all its benefits. He may not take the benefits and reject the burdens, but he must either accept them or reject them as q whole.” (Mechem on Agency, sec. 148.)

See, also, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Shirk et al., 20 Okla. 576, 95 Pac. 218.

To entitle one to a rescission upon the ground of fraud, the party seeking the rescission must, by clear and convincing evidence, establish the fact that the fraud charged has been perpetrated. This the plaintiff in the instant case has failed to do. The only fraud charged by plaintiff is that said agent made fraudulent representations as to the time of maturity of the mortgage and the time in which it was to be paid. The mortgage in question was not put in evidence, and a careful examination of the contract of sale fails to disclose the date of maturity of the mortgage and the conditions thereof. Consequently, we are unable to say from the evidence that defendants’ agent, misrepresented the date of maturity of the mortgage. Regardless of the time that the mortgage assumed was to become due, it was not incompetent for said agent who owned the mortgage to agree that the terms of payment of the mortgage be three years, payable in installments of *778 $8 per month; and we think that a proper construction of this feature of the contract was that the time of maturity of the mortgage was to be three years, provided plaintiff paid each month thereon the sum of $8. The stipulation as to the payment of said mortgage contracted in said contract, notwithstanding said mortgage was foreclosed about 15 months after the payment thereof- was assumed, may have been made in the utmost good faith, and hence not an agreement or misrepresentation of the agent of defendants upon which .to predicate a rescission. The decree of foreclosure was rendered more than one year after said contract was entered into, and it shows that not one of the monthly installments, stipulated to be paid by plaintiff, was pai¿T; and it is a reasonable presumption to be drawn from this evidence that such failure to pay said monthly installments brought about said foreclosure and the resultant loss sustained by plaintiff. , In short, that the laches of plaintiff, and not the fraud of defendants’ agent, was the active factor that resulted in the loss of the property to plaintiff.

'It is earnestly argued in the brief of defendants that the-failure of plaintiff to offer in her petition to do equity is fatal to her right to prevail in this action. To this contention we cannot agree.

In Stevens v. Elliott et al., 30 Okla. 41, 118 Pac. 407, Sharp, C., speaking for this court, holds adversely to this contention of defendants, and quotes with approval the case of Knappen v. Freeman, 47 Minn. 491, 50 N. W. 533, in which it is said:

“It was one of the rules of pleading in courts of equity, in suits where the court might impose conditions on the plaintiff, or give the defendant affirmative relief, as in suits for specific performance, cancellation of instruments, *779 rescission of contracts, or for accounting, that the plaintiff in his bill should offer to do whatever the court might deem equitable. This was upon the maxim that he .who seeks equity must do equity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 1042, 155 P. 251, 55 Okla. 774, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-colvin-et-ux-okla-1915.