Abrams v. Neal

1936 OK 622, 61 P.2d 1103, 178 Okla. 158, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1936
DocketNo. 26816.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1936 OK 622 (Abrams v. Neal) 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
Abrams v. Neal, 1936 OK 622, 61 P.2d 1103, 178 Okla. 158, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 520 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The amended petition on which this case was tried alleged that Charles A. Neal was the duly appointed, qualified, and acting administrator of the estate of Melissa J. Abrams, deceased, by order of the county court of Ottawa county, and that this action was prosecuted for the benefit of the estate.

In the first cause of action the petition-further alleged that Mrs. Abrams died intestate in Ottawa county, being a resident thereof, on the 21st of December, 1934, leaving as her sole and only heirs at law her two sons, S. W. Abrams and Earl B. Abrams, the defendant, both of whom were of age: that at the time of the death of Mrs. Abrams, and for many years next prior thereto, she was the sole owner of the entire estate and seized and in the open, undisputed,' and notorious possession of about 400 acres of land in Ottawa county; that the administrator succeeded to the rights of possession and the title of Mrs. Abrams to this property; that since the death of Mrs. Abrams, Earl B. Abrams, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, filed for record an instrument designated a warranty deed with the county clerk of Ottawa county, in which Mrs. Abrams purported to convey to defendant 200 acres of this land, and that this deed was duly recorded in the public records; that since the death of Mrs. Abrams, the defendant also filed on January 4, 1935, another instrument designated “warranty deed”, wherein Mrs. Abrams purported to convey to the defendant the remaining 200 acres in said land; that this instrument was also recorded. It was further alleged that immediately subsequent to the death of Mrs. Abrams, the defendant wrongfully took possession of this property, and was in the possession thereof, claiming title and right of possession under and by virtue of the two deeds above mentioned, and defendant refused to deliver possession of this property to the plaintiff as administrator for the purpose of administration, although plaintiff was entitled to possession for said purposes, and that defendant has neither title to nor right of possession of said property.

It was further alleged that both of these deeds were null and void, and of no force and effect for two reasons:

(A) That the deeds and each of them were wholly without consideration; and,

(B) That neither of said deeds was delivered by Mrs. Abrams in her lifetime, nor did she intend to deliver either of said deeds to the defendant in her lifetime, but' that on November 15, 1927, Mrs. Abrams executed both of these deeds and kept and retained them in her exclusive possession in her safe-deposit box in a bank in Miami, with the intent and purpose that these deeds should be delivered to defendant after her death; that prior to her death, the defendant, without the knowledge or consent of Mrs. Abrams, took these deeds from the safe-deposit box, retained them in his possession until after her death, and then recorded the deeds; that said deeds were in effect an effort on the part of Mrs. Abrams to make testamentary disposition of this property, but that the same are null and void because they were not executed and published in the presence of witnesses as required by law, and properly attested, and were void as instruments of conveyance because they were never delivered to the defendant by Mrs. Abrams as required by law.

The second cause of action sought to quiet the title to this property in the estate, and to cancel the deeds which the defendant put of record as hereinabove mentioned.

The defendant filed an answer consisting of a general denial to each count in the petition. Thereafter, defendant filed a request that this ease be set on the equity docket for the reason that it was an equity case. Subsequently, the defendant filed a motion to strike this ease from the jury docket, charging- that the same is an equity case. Subsequently, the defendant filed a that possession of the real estate was a mere incident for the equitable cause of action for the cancellation of these deeds. The trial court denied this last motion, and permitted the cause to be tried to a jury over the objections and exceptions of the defendant.

*160 Tlio first question raised by tlie appeal in this ease is that the trial court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant below to strike this cause from the jury assignment and place the same upon the equity docket. The causes of action set out in the two counts of the petition have been set out because of this question raised by the plaintiff in error, who was defendant below.

A careful examination of this amended petition discloses that it is alleged that this property belonged to Mrs. Abrams at the time of her death, and at the time of her death that she was in the open, undisputed, and notorious possession of this property, and that the defendant immediately subsequent to her death wrongfully took possession, and was in possession, and was claiming title and right of possession under the two deeds from Mrs. Abrams to the defendant, and that defendant refused to deliver possession of this property to the administrator for the purposes of administration.

It was further charged that the defendant had neither title to nor right of possession of this property. The first count in the petition, therefore, is to dispossess the defendant for wrongful possession of this property. True, the first count further alleges that the deeds to the defendant were void, and that title never passed because there was a failure of consideration, and because these deeds were not delivered by Mrs. Abrams in her lifetime, and Hint she did not intend to deliver these deeds to the defendant during her lifetime. Execution of those deeds by Mrs. Abrams on November 15, 3927, is admitted in the petition, however, and it is charged that these deeds remained in her safe-deposit box in a bank at Miami, intending that they should be delivered after her death.

This court has followed the rule that the fact that the petition in an action for recovery of real property prays that title to the real estate sought to be recovered be set at rest or quieted in the plaintiffs did not make the action a nonjury cause, but it remained an action properly triable by a jury under the provisions of the statute. Mitchell v. Gafford, 73 Okla. 152, 175 P. 227; Aldridge v. Anderson, 115 Okla. 131, 240 P. 99; Likowski v. Catlett, 130 Okla. 71, 265 P. 117.

Under section 350, Okla. Stats. 1931, issues of law must be tried by the court unless referred, but issues of fact arising in actions for the recovery of specific real property shall be tried by a jury unless a jury trial is waived or a reference be ordered.

The plaintiff below requested that the case be placed on the jury docket, and the natural inference is that by that request the plaintiff desired that the cause b.e submitted to the jury on the issues formed. The trial court properly refused to strike this case from the jury assignment, and properly submitted the cause to a jury under the statute and under the decisions of this court. But it is urged that the primary relief sought was the cancellation of these two deeds, and at page 22 of the brief of plaintiff in error counsel says that, upon cancellation of these deeds, the possession would go automatically, and yet counsel for plaintiff expressly undertook to frame his cause of action in ejectment when his real cause of action was cancellation of the deeds, in order that the plaintiff might obtain a jury trial, and this could be for no other purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 622, 61 P.2d 1103, 178 Okla. 158, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrams-v-neal-okla-1936.