Armstrong v. Phillips

1921 OK 81, 198 P. 499, 82 Okla. 82, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 8, 1921
Docket11448
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1921 OK 81 (Armstrong v. Phillips) 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
Armstrong v. Phillips, 1921 OK 81, 198 P. 499, 82 Okla. 82, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 186 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Washington county, Hon. Preston A. Shinn, Judge.

This is the second appeal to this court in this cause, and involves the N. W. ¼ of the N. E. ¼ of section 6, Tp. 26, R. 13 E., containing 40 acres, situated in Washington county, Okla.

The record discloses that the original petition was filed in the district court of Washington county on February 15, 1917. It alleges, in substance, that Minnie B. Armstrong was a three-eighths Cherokee Indian; that on May 15, 1909, she purchased from one John Hildebrand the land in this litigation. That said land was purchased from moneys received by her as the proceeds derived from her restricted allotted and inherited lands, and from no other source. That on February 28, 1910, she conveyed said land to Arthur Armstrong., wlho thereafter leased for oil and gas purposes to A. H. Huling and J. C. Bixler, who later assigned to McCandless, Beatty, and Condon; that on June 19, 1915, Arthur Armstrong conveyed said lands to Frank Phillips, who had developed the same for oil and gas, and had removed large quantities of oil therefrom; that her deed^ to Arthur Armstrong was made without the supervision of the county court of Washington county, and was therefore void. Copies of all instruments were attached, and plaintiff prayed for cancellation of said deed, that her title be quieted, and that she recover $25,000 damages for oil and gas taken from the land.

On March 17, 1917, defendant Frank Phillips filed motion to strike portions of plaintiff’s said petition, which motion was by the court sustained, and on May 13, 1917, plaintiff filed an amended petition. In this amended petition plaintiff abandons the theory that said lands were purchased with moneys derived from her allotted lands. She alleges that she is' the owner of the landsand that the defendant Frank Phillips unlawfully keeps her out of possession thereof. She further alleges that on the 8th day of June, 1908, she executed a deed to said lands to one Y. J. Knisley, but that said deed was void for the reason that she was at that time a minor, and for the further reason that said deed was obtained by fraud. That while the title stood in Knisley’s name, he mortgaged the land to the Citizens’ Bank & Trust Company, of which Frank Phillips was president. *84 That Knisley’s title was set aside by the court, but that the bank was threatening to foreclose its mortgage, and because of such threats she conveyed. the land to Arthur Armstrong to procure money to pay said mortgage; that her deed to Arthur Armstrong was intended as a mortgage; and that the bank and Frank Phillips had knowledge of these facts. She prays for cancellation of all conveyances, but offers to redeem from the alleged mortgage to Arthur Armstrong.

On May 24, 1917, plaintiff filed a second amended petition. In this second amended petition she still makes no reference to any claim that the land was purchased with moneys derived from her allotment. She joins the Leweinda Oil Company as party defendant, alleging that Phillips had leased the lands to said company, and that the company had knowledge that her deed to Arthur Armstrong was a mortgage. She alleges that said deed was void, because of her minority, and further alleges that -said deed was intended as a mortgage, and offers to redeem therefrom.

The defendant Frank Phillips filed an answer, which was subsequently adopted by each of the other defendants. "The answer denied all the allegations of the petition, alleged ownership in Phillips and the Lew-einda Oil Company, denied knowledge of any mortgage transactions between plaintiff and Arthur Armstrong, and set up proceedings in the district court of Washington county for the removal of plaintiff’s disabilities of minority, and decree of the court removing disabilities and conferring upon plaintiff the rights of majority and the right to do business as an adult person.

The answer further alleged that, after the removal of her said disabilities, and on February 2, 1909, plaintiff purchased certain lots near Bartlesville (referred to throughout the proceedings as the Gilkey lots), and that on May 15, 1909, she traded, the lots to Hilder-brand for the land in question. The answer pleaded estoppel, laches, and that the action was not brought within one year after majority, and pleaded the one, two, and three years statutes of limitations. The answer also pleaded estoppel by reason of plaintiff’s knowledge of operations on the lands by the defendants!, and the expenditure of large sums of money in the development of the lands for oil and gas, the plaintiff standing by without objections from the time defendants purchased the land until a long time after the development and production of oil.

Plaintiff. filed a reply, alleging that the ' proceedings conferring the rights of majority upon plaintiff were void, for the reason that the court was without jurisdiction to confer the rights of majority upon her. She denied the allegations of laches. She admits the purchase of the Gilkey lots, and alleges that she paid $300 for said lots, which sum, she says, was “proceeds from her individual allotment set aside to her as a Cherokee minoradmits that she exchanged the lots for the Hilderbrand land but says that she paid an additional consideration of $250 cash, which, she says, was also derived from her allotment.

Upon these pleadings the case went to trial, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence demurrer thereto, interposed by defendants, was sustained by the court. The case was brought to this court, and-the judgment of the trial court was reversed, this court holding that plaintiff’s evidence upon the mortgage question was sufficient to withstand a demurrer. (76 Okla. 192, 181 Pac. 715, 184 Pac. 109.) Upon rehearing, the original opinion was modified, the court still holding that, as against a demurrer to the evidence, the proof was sufficient upon the mortgage question, and that the burden rested upon defendants to show that they were innocent purchasers for value.

Upon the return of the case to the lower court, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, making Phillips Petroleum Company a party defendant, which company filed an answer adopting the answer of the defendant Frank Phillips.

Upon the issues thus joined, the ease was tried to the court, and judgment was rendered for the defendants. Upon plaintiff’s request, the court made complete findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The plaintiff assigns 15 specifications of error, but the same were argued in the brief filed by plaintiff’s counsel under four propositions, which are as follows:

(1) “That the pleadings and testimony plainly show that the plaintiff in error is a member of the Cherokee Tribe of Indians, and that the property involved in this controversy was purchased from moneys derived by her guardian as a bonus for an oil and. gas mining lease on. her Cherokee Indian allotment, during her minority; that, as such minor her allotted lands were restricted, and that the investment by her guardian, of rentals for an oil and gas mining lease in the lands in question, embraced such lands within her restricted Indian estate, and that the whole became and was charged with the trust of her guardianship during her minority.

(2) “The deed was a mortgage and the defendant in error had notice of it.

*85

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 81, 198 P. 499, 82 Okla. 82, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-phillips-okla-1921.