Acton v. Culbertson

1913 OK 160, 132 P. 812, 38 Okla. 280, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 11, 1913
Docket1904
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1913 OK 160 (Acton v. Culbertson) 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
Acton v. Culbertson, 1913 OK 160, 132 P. 812, 38 Okla. 280, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 360 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TUENEE, J.

On July 15, 1909, J. J. Culbertson, one of the defendants in error, in the district court of Hughes county, sued Emily E. Acton .and others in ejectment for lots 13, 14, 15, and 16, in block 43, in the city of Holden-ville. On August 7, 1909, said defendant answered and disclaimed any interest in the property, save in lot 13, to which she claimed an equitable title, admitted the legal title to be in plaintiff, and that she was in possession thereof, but denied that plaintiff was entitled tq . possession. By way of amended answer and counterclaim, defendant, after alleging that pending this suit said city had acquired from plaintiff some alleged interest in the lot which was junior to hers and asking that it he made a party to the suit and required to defend against her cross-action, further alleged, in substance, that *282 in April, 1899, she took possession of tbe lot, which was in a common inelosure with lots 14, 15, and 16/ subordinate to the title of D. N. Kelker, and that pursuant to an understanding with him she put up a small store building thereon and occupied the same as a millinery shop, rent free, until such time as he should demand possession thereof, when it was understood that she would surrender possession thereof to him; that she had never been requested so to do or pay any rent therefor; that about December 11, 1900, said Kelker executed to plaintiff, for value, a quitclaim deed to said lot, which was duly - recorded June 3, 1901, and “from that time to the bringing of this suit the possession of said lot by defendant, as against said Kelker and this plaintiff, was lawful, hostile, under claim of right, actual, exclusive, and continuous.” She further alleged that on February 1, 1902, defendant, still being in possession thereof, made application to the town-site commission that said lot be scheduled to her, she being then, as now, ready, able, and willing to comply with all the provisions of law in such case provided; that on February 3, 1902, plaintiff made like application that said lots 13, 14, 15, and 16 be scheduled to himJ; that his application was made with intent to deceive said department, and falsely alleged that' plaintiff was then rightfully in possession of and owned tlie right of occupancy in and to all four of said lots; that at that time plaintiff did not live in Holdenville nor was he at that time a resident in the Indian Territory, by reason of all of which she says plaintiff was not in legal possession of said lot and had no right to have the same scheduled to him, and hence the act of the Secretary of the Interior in subsequently scheduling and patenting said lots to him was done by error and mistake of law; that by the failure of said Kelker or plaintiff to demand possession of said lot prior to said quitclaim to plaintiff they are estopped from claiming any interest in lot 13 adverse to her; that at the time she took possession of said lot said Kelker fraudulently represented to her that he held the legal *283 possession of said ‘lot, which she believed; that in truth he had no lawful right of possession thereto; that at the time he made like claim to a great many other resident and. business lots in said town, a large number of which were allotted to him, and that under the law he could acquire but one residence and one business lot, and that, as the patent to plaintiff of said four lots was issued and delivered by reason of said false and fraudulent acts and representations of Nelker and plaintiff, the same was issued and delivered to plaintiff by mistake of law, of all of which she said she had no knowledge until in the year 1909. For further answer she substantially states that she has “been in the open, notorious, actual, continuous, and adverse possession of said lot under claim of right for more than seven years next preceding the filing of this suit,” which was the statute of limitations of Arkansas in force in that jurisdiction at that time,' and which she says began to run from February -1, 1902, the date she made application to have the lot scheduled to her. She further states that the respective claims made to said lot by plaintiff and defendant -in their contest therefor before the Interior Department were, on his part, that he had acquired the right of possession thereto by bill of .sale from Nelker, who had acquired the same from one Jacobs, a citizen of the Creek Nation; that defendant was a tenant of KelkeFs, and that defendant was estopped to deny the title of her landlord; that these allegations were generally denied by her, and that she alleged her occupancy of the lot to be a temporary license, rent free, and subject to re-entry by said ICelker; that.no demand or notice for possession had ever been made, and that since the passage of the Creek treaty, as amended in 1902, she had been in rightful possession thereof within the contemplation of said act and claimed the benefit thereof for the purpose of obtaining title to said lot; that she was ready to pay the government therefor and then and there tendered the amount necessary to obtain the same. She further alleged in said contest that plaintiff had taken the conveyance from Kelker *284 with knowledge of her possession; that the same was not in good faith, and that the relation of landlord and tenant never existed between -her and Kelker or between plaintiff and defendant to said lot; that said contest was decided in favor of plaintiff and against defendant' and affirmed by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and again affirmed by the Secretary of the Interior about December 6, 1905, and patent issued to' him June 19, 1909; that the same was issued by error and mistake of law, and that the evidence in said contest disclosed no relation of landlord and tenant, as claimed; that if the same existed it was terminated by operation of law by the deed from) Kelker to plaintiff and by the passage of the act aforesaid; and for the further reason that at the time of the making of said deed -her possession of the lot, never having been questioned by Kelker or plaintiff, under said act rightfully vested in her a prior and superior equity and the right to acquire legal title thereto. She again pleaded a tender of the amount expended by plaintiff on said lot, with interest, and prayed that he be declared to hold the legal title for her, and that on the payment by her of his legal 'disbursements he be required to execute a deed conveying the same to her. Later by amendment she alleged, with much aggravation, an ouster .by plaintiff and the city, his alleged grantee pendente lite, and prayed $1,000 actual and $940 punitive damages, filed the same as a “cross-bill,” and later, as another, amendment to her answer, filed all the papers involved in said contest over the lot, including the testimony taken on the hearing. After that part of the ad damnum in her “cross-bill” praying exemplary damages had been stricken, and much other unnecessary pleading and reply filed, there was judgment for plaintiff on the pleadings, and defendant brings the case here, alleging this action as error.

There is no merit in the contention that defendant was entitled to go to a jury on account of her general denial. This for the reason that the petition states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and the answer, aside from the *285 general denial, admits facts sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover. Yoder v. Randol & Nix, 16 Okla. 308, 83 Pac. 537, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 576.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 160, 132 P. 812, 38 Okla. 280, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acton-v-culbertson-okla-1913.