In the Matter of the Estate of Otto CROWL, Deceased. Donald R. GIBBONS and Betty Gibbons, Appellees/Petitioners, v. Leo L. CROWL and Sarah K. Crowl and Vernon Brummett, as Executor of the Estate of Otto Crowl, Deceased, Appellants/Respondents.
No. 64073.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Feb. 3, 1987.
On Rehearing March 31, 1987.
Rehearing Denied June 9, 1987.
737 P.2d 911
Maynard I. Ungerman, Hawley C. Kerr, Ungerman, Conner & Little, George Downey, Tulsa, for appellants/respondents.
ALMA WILSON, Justice:
After a hearing in the trial court, the executor of the Estate of Otto Crowl [Appellant] was ordered to specifically perform an option contract which the deceased had entered into with Mr. and Mrs. Gibbons [Appellees]. On appeal, however, the Court of Appeals held there was no consideration for the performance of the option and ordered the case dismissed. Appellees petitioned this Court by Writ of Certiorari to review the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Appellees asserted that the questioned option was always intended by the parties as part and parcel of a primary contract between Appellees and Crowl. Therefore, Appellees maintained, no new or additional consideration apart from $51,250 paid to Crowl as consideration for the primary contract, was due for performance thereof. We granted Appellees’ petition for certiorari. We now vacate the opinion of the Court of Appeals and affirm the findings and decree of the trial court.
Briefly, according to the uncontroverted testimony, Crowl owned 56 acres of land at the time Crowl and Appellees entered into contract negotiations. Appellees offered to purchase the entire 56 acre tract of land from Crowl. Crowl refused to sell all 56 acres; but offered to sell to Appellees 41 acres, together with an option to purchase the remaining 15 acres in the future at a price certain. The consideration to be paid to Crowl for the 41 acres, as well as the option, amounted to $51,250. The value of the tract of land alone was $850 per acre or $47,600. By contract dated September 19, 1972, for a consideration of $51,250, Crowl promised to sell 41 acres to the Appellees and to grant Appellees an option to purchase the remaining 15 acres. In reference to the option granted in the contract of September 19, 1972, and by way of clarification thereof, the parties on October 20, 1972 and October 31, 1972 executed successive instruments which embodied their mutual expression of the rights between them concerning the option. The clarification of the rights of the parties previously established in the original contract were thus stated:
In the event [Otto Crowl] makes a decision to sell or transfer said property either with or without consideration during his natural lifetime, then Otto shall give the Gibbonses the right of purchase at $1,250 per acre with the Gibbonses having 45 days to accept. Second, if Otto dies prior to the sale, then the Gibbonses shall have the option and exclusive right to purchase from Otto‘s estate at $1,250. (emphasis added)
The trial court found as a matter of fact that all the documents executed by the parties were made pursuant to a single transaction, and that the instrument dated October 31, 1972, reflected the true intent of the parties. The written documents presented to the trial court constituted one contract, being supplementary one to the other, and the trial court did not err in so construing them.1 The trial court said:
“I am looking at that as one transaction.”
We hold that the Court of Appeals erred in disturbing the decision of the
DOOLIN, C.J., and HODGES, OPALA, SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
SIMMS, J., concurs in result.
HARGRAVE, V.C.J., and LAVENDER and KAUGER, JJ., dissent.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION ON REHEARING
OPALA, Justice.
Appellants continue to press for invalidation of Crowl‘s option as violative of the rule against perpetuities.1 They apparently view that option as “open-ended”2 and seem to suggest a possibility that the interest it created will neither vest nor fail within the rule‘s limit.3 Their argument overlooks Oklahoma‘s statutory commitment to constructional preference for validity and appears utterly to ignore the provisions of
Because the option in suit was unmistakably intended to be exercisable immediately upon the death of Crowl—a life in being when the contractual right in the land stood created—the buyers’ acquired interest, first accrued as a claim at the end of Crowl‘s life,7 must be construed as one that is certain either to vest or fail within the period during which a suit may be brought to enforce the promise by specific performance.8 In short, Crowl‘s option clearly does not offend the rule against perpetuities. The interest conferred by its terms was both exercisable and extinguishable within the limits of the Oklahoma rule,9 i.e., “during the continuance of the lives of persons in being at the creation of the limitation or condition plus twenty-one (21) years.”10 [Emphasis supplied.]
HODGES, SIMMS, WILSON, KAUGER and SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
HARGRAVE, V.C.J., and LAVENDER, J., dissent.
