Wright v. State Ex Rel. Walcott

1924 OK 840, 230 P. 268, 104 Okla. 57, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 30, 1924
Docket14774
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1924 OK 840 (Wright v. State Ex Rel. Walcott) 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
Wright v. State Ex Rel. Walcott, 1924 OK 840, 230 P. 268, 104 Okla. 57, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 345 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinión by

PINKHAM, C.

The defendant in error, as plaintiff, instituted this action in the trial court against plaintiffs in error, as defendants. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court.

Plaintiff alleges in its petition that on November 24, 1919, the Wilson Motor Co., of Okmulgee, Okla., a partnership comp< sed of J. M. Wilson and T. A.Wilson, being then and there the owners of the exclusive agency of the G. M. C. truck for Okmulgee county, and also the owners of certain chattels and a certain lease described in plaintiff’s petition, entered into a contract in writing with the defendants, R. Earle Wright and Wm. O. Newman, wherein they agreed to sell and did sell said agency and chattels and lease to said defendants for the sum of $13,000 to be paid in installments at the times and under the conditions set forth in said contract; a copy of which contract the plaintiff attached to its petition as an .exhibit thereto..

It is further alleged that the said Wilson Motor Co., in compliance with the terms of said contract, did sell, assign, and ■ set over said agency, chattels, and lease to said defendants, and same were taken over by said defendants, Who have been in possession and ownership of same since said date: that the $5.000 cash payment mentioned in said contract, and the $2.000 payment inemtr'iiPd ir. said contract, to be paid January 1, 1921, under the conditions mentioned in said contract, have been paid by said defendants, but that the $4.000 payment to be made January 1,1922, and the $2,000 to be paid July 1,1922, under the terms of said contract, have not been paid, but are past due and unpaid; that the said defendants have secured the exclusive agency of said G. M. O. truck for Okmulgee county from the date of said contract up to December 31, 1922; that the said Wilson Motor Co., and the said co-partners thereof have lived up to every condition set forth in said contract, and *58 have not violated the same in any particular, and that all conditions and provisions except unpaid payments have been complied with; that the said Wilson Motor Co., on April 8, 1920, for value assigned, transferred, and set over all their rights, title and interest in said contract to the Guaranty State Bank, of Okmulgee, and that on January 3, 1921, said contract was sold for value by said Guaranty State Bank to the Bank of Commerce of Okmulgee, which said bank thereafter became insolvent and was taken possession of by the acting Bank Commissioner of the state of Oklahoma, for the purpose of winding up its affairs, and by reason thereof said contract is now owned and in the possession of and held by the plaintiff:; that said payment due in said contract on January 1, 1922, for $4,000, with interest thereon, is past due and unpaid; that the payment due in said contract on July 1, 1922, of $2,000, with interest thereon from said date, is past due and unpaid.

Defendants’ answer to plaintiff’s petition contains no general denial, and admits that on November 24, 1919, they entered into a contract with Wilson Motor Co., and that exhibit “A”, attached to plaintiff’s petition, is a correct copy thereof.

Defendants deny that Wilson Motor Co. complied with the terms thereof, but aver that Wilson Motor Co., breached the said contract and violated its expressed terms in this, to wit: that by the terms of said contract Wilson Motor Co. agreed and bound itself to sell and deliver to the defendants the exclusive agency for the G. M. C. truck for Okmulgee county and the general good will of the business and that, in violation of said agreement and covenant the said Wilson Motor Co. did not in fact deliver to defendants the exclusive agency of said G. M. C. truck for said county, but that de-fenSants were required to obtain the said agency direct from the general agency in Kansas City, Mo.; that the said agency was not a property of Wilson Motor Co., that could be sold and disposed of by it, but that the Wilson Motor Co. were in fact simply acting as agents for the said G. M. C. truck at the will and pleasure of the general agency in Kansas City.

Defendants aver that the said Wilson Motor Co. further breached its said contract in that said company agreed that it would not, nor would any of its members, engage directly or indirectly in the sale of any truck in Okmulgee county, and that in violation of this covenant J. M. Wilson, one of the copartners composing the Wilson Motor Co., immediately after the execution of said contract, engaged in the sale of second-hand automobile trucks in Okmulgee county,Okla., in competition with these defendants.

Defendants further aver that by reason of the fact of the violation of said contract by the said Wilson Motor Co. and by the said J. M. Wilson, one of the copartners, these defendants are released under the terms of said contract from making further payment thereunder.

To this answer of defendants the plaintiff filed its demurrer on the ground that the answer is insufficient because it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to this cause of action.

The demurrer was sustained by the court, whereupon defendants refused to plead further and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff; to all of which defendants excepted, and the cause is now before this court upon transcript of the record and petition in error.

The petition in error asks for reversal of this case upon two grounds, to wit: (t) Said court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to the answer of defendants; (2) Said court erred in rendering judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants.

The two assignments of error are considered together in defendants’ brief.

The argument of counsel for defendants is that as the plaintiff in its petition alleges that on November 24, 1919, Wilson Motor Co. was then and there the owner of. the exclusive agency for Okmulgee county, for the G. M. C. truck, and as- the defendants in their answer specifically deny the said agency was owned by said Wilson Motor Co., these allegations raised an issue of fact as to the ownership of this agency by the Wilson Motor Co., that should have been by the court submitted to the jury, and that this issue joined in the pleadings would not leave the answer of defendants subject to demurrer; that the general demurrer filed by the plaintiff admits the allegation contained in the answer of defendants to the effect that the Wilson Motor Co. was not the owner of this agency and therefore could not sell it.

Many decisions of this court are cited where the well-settled rule is announced that a demurrer to a pleading admits every material fact properly stated in the pleading and that where a pleading states any fact upon which the pleader is entitled to any relief under the law, a general demurrer should not be sustained. C. E. Sharpe Lumber Co. v. Kansas Ice Co. et al.. 42 Okla. 689. 142 Pac. 1016.

*59 It is also a well-settled rule that the allegations of a petition 'must be construed in connection with the exhibits attached and referred to in the petition. Southern Surety Co. v. Chambers, 72 Okla. 307. 180 Pac. 711.

In First Nat. Bank v. Jones, 2 Okla. 353, 37 Pac. 824, it is held:

“Where there is a variance between the complaint and the exhibit, note or written instrument sued on, the exhibit controls.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 840, 230 P. 268, 104 Okla. 57, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-state-ex-rel-walcott-okla-1924.