Abels v. Bennett

64 N.W.2d 481, 158 Neb. 699, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 80
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1954
Docket33542
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 64 N.W.2d 481 (Abels v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abels v. Bennett, 64 N.W.2d 481, 158 Neb. 699, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 80 (Neb. 1954).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

The subject of this action is a deed alleged to have been executed and delivered for a valuable consideration by appellees in which C. R. Bennett is named as grantee and which by its terms conveyed to him an undivided one-half of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under .described land in Buffalo County owned by appellees. The object of the suit was to obtain an adjudication of invalidity of the deed and to quiet title of the land in appellees against all claims of appellants on the ground that the purported deed was secured by fraud and misrepresentation of L. R. Graham, undisclosed agent of C. R. Bennett, who conducted the transaction for the grantee. The findings of the district court were for appellees and a judgment was entered granting them the relief they sought.

Any interest of Laura O. Bennett in the subject matter of the case is limited to that which results from her *701 marital relationship with C. R. Bennett. It subsists or disappears according to the fate of her husband in the litigation. C. R. Bennett is designated herein as appellant, and L. R. Graham as Graham.

The claim of appellees, the owners of the land involved, is that about May 22, 1941, they gave an oil and gas lease thereon to Graham, and he filed and had it recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county. He at the same time filed and had recorded in that office an instrument in writing purporting to be a mineral deed allegedly executed by appellees which by its terms conveyed to appellant one-half of the minerals in the land. This document is designated herein as the deed. The lease and deed each had attached a certificate of acknowledgment.

The appellees say the negotiations between them and Graham related only to an oil and gas lease and they did not at any time have any transaction with appellant or any person known to be acting for him. Appellees had no intention to sign a deed and knowingly only signed an oil and gas lease as the result of their negotiations and contact with Graham. If the deed had subscribed thereon the signatures of appellees they were obtained by Graham, the undisclosed agent of appellant, by fraud and misrepresentation. Appellees or either of them did not sign the deed knowingly and were not asked to acknowledge its execution and did not do so. They had no notice or knowledge of it or the recording of it until October 1952. The deed is a cloud on the title of appellees to the land. It damages them in their ownership and enjoyment of it. They have no adequate remedy at law. •

Appellant denies the allegations of appellees except their ownership of the land subject to the rights of appellant as the owner of one-half of the minerals in the land by virtue of the deed; alleges the cause of action stated by appellees is barred by the statute of limitations, and they have been guilty of laches and are *702 estopped to deny the title of appellant by virtue of the-deed; and asserts that appellant had no knowledge of the transaction concerning the execution of the deed and that he is an innocent purchaser for value of the interest in the land conveyed by the deed of appellees, to him. Appellees deny the new matters alleged by appellant.

The proof conduces to show that: Carl Abels is a native of Germany. He came to the United States when he was about 10 years of age and attended school with considerable irregularity and repeated interruptions until he was about 19 years old. He learned the English language sufficiently to read and write it with some proficiency. He is a farmer and at the time important to the transaction under investigation lived on a quarter section of land owned by appellees since about ■ 1920,. 3 miles northwest of the village of Amherst. Emma Abels, his wife, is obviously limited in education and general experience. She attended school for some periods. Her comment was that they did not have schools when she was a young person like they have today “and I had to make my own way as far as I got.” The school she attended was a small country school that had no grades, “it was just the first, second, third, and fourth readers.” She can read and write to a limited extent.

Graham was a resident of Effingham, Illinois. He had been for about 15 years engaged in buying oil and gas leases and deeds representing mineral rights. Appellant resided in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He had been engaged in purchasing mineral rights. He would assemble small drilling blocks for the purpose of drilling. He-did not desire mineral rights in a large compact acreage. He desired the tracts in which he acquired mineral rights to be separated. He had known Graham for about 15 years and had done business with him. In 1941 Graham heard “of an oil play going on in Nebraska.” He contacted appellant in Tulsa, Oklahoma, concerning; *703 his interest in acquiring minerals in Nebraska. Appellant was interested and it was arranged that Graham would go to Nebraska, investigate the situation, ascertain the price being paid in the area for minerals, and when this was done he would communicate the result to appellant. This he did. Appellant then told Graham he would like 2,000 or 3,000 acres in the areas in Nebraska where other companies were operating. It was understood that the mineral deeds would be in the name of appellant as grantee and Graham would file them for record. He thereafter on several occasions conferred with appellant by telephone while he was procuring deeds in Nebraska. It was a part of the method of operation that Graham would and he did take oil and gas leases on land in which he was named as lessee and a deed to appellant for a part of the minerals in the land.

Graham and an elderly man by the name of Clint Hamilton, a notary public employed by Graham to accompany him, strangers to appellees, on May 22, 1941, came to their farm home. Graham introduced himself to Carl Abels in the farmyard, stated his business as a purchaser of oil and gas leases, and solicited Carl Abels for such a lease on his land. Graham said the lease would be for 10 years if the yearly rental was paid and that any time the rental was not paid the lease would terminate. The three of them went into the house where Mrs. Abels was. She was introduced to Graham. He repeated in her presence what he had told her husband. He did not say anything, according to appellees, about purchasing a deed of any part of the minerals in the land. The conversation concerned only an oil and gas lease for not to exceed 10 years and to terminate at any time the payment of rental according to the lease was in default. Appellees decided to give that kind of a lease to Graham. This was the first experience appellees had with a transaction of this character. There were things stated by Graham they did not understand. He did some *704 writing on a typewrier lie had with him and when he finished he had papers he directed appellees to sign. They were laid on a table with the place of signature of only one of them exposed and when it was signed it iyas turned back and the next one was signed. This process was repeated until the signatures were attached to all of them. How many instruments appellees signed they did not know. They were not offered the privilege of examining or reading the papers before they signed them or while Graham was there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 N.W.2d 481, 158 Neb. 699, 1954 Neb. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abels-v-bennett-neb-1954.