Ashur v. McCreery

1931 OK 235, 300 P. 767, 150 Okla. 111, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 304
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1931
Docket19889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1931 OK 235 (Ashur v. McCreery) 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
Ashur v. McCreery, 1931 OK 235, 300 P. 767, 150 Okla. 111, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 304 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

This is a suit to remove cloud from title, brought under the doctrines of equity jurisprudence, and not a suit under the statute for the determination of adverse claims. The parties all claim under a common source of title, one W. H. Phillips, and ihe defendants claim also under a tax deed.

By three deeds executed in 1910 and 1911, Phillips conveyed an undivided one-half interest in the east half of the sbuthwest quarter of section 6, in township 12 north, of range S west of the Indian Meridian, in Oklahoma county, Okla., except 5 acres out of the southeast corner of said tract, in a square form, to Gertrude Chaffee, an undivided one-third interest in said premises to Annie Challes, and an undivided one-sixth interest in said premises to Sarah C. Hoover.

By deed dated June 27, 1922, Sarah C. Hoover conveyed whatever interest she may then have had to the plaintiff M. Ashur. She had never made a prior conveyance, and the sole question for determination as to that interest is the validity of the tax deed.

By deed dated June 3, 1922. Annie Challes conveyed whatever interest she may then have had to the plaintiff M. Ashur, and she had made mo prior voluntary conveyance, but one-half of her interest, an undivided one-sixth interest in the premises, had been sold under an alias execution issued out of the district court of Oklahoma county, Okla., on a money judgment, so that the title to that one-sixth depends as well on the validity of that sale as on the validity of the tax deed, and the interest of the other one-sixth interest depends solely on the validitj of the tax deed.

By deed dated January 12, 1923, said Gertrude Chaffee conveyed whatever interest she may then have had in the premises to the plaintiff M. Ashur. The title to this undivided one-half interest is more complicated, as it depends not only upon the valid-tv of the tax deed, but also upon the allegations of wrongful filling of blanks and wrongful delivery of a deed, and upon a misdescription of the premises which is (flaimed to have rendered the deed void and not subject to reformation for want, of equity.

By deed dated November 23, 1925, the plaintiff M. Ashur conveyed her interest to the plaintiff Prances McVean, who claimed in the petition to be the owner of the premises. The court found for the defendants as to the undivided one-palf interest of Gertrude Chaffee and as to the undivided one-sixth interest sold under execution, aggregating a two-thirds interest, as to which it found for the defendants, and it found for the plaintiff as to the undivided one-sixth interest of Annie Challes which had not been sold under execution, and as to the undivided one-sixth interest of Saiyih C. Hoover. The interest as to which the court found for the plaintiffs depended only on the question of the validity of the tax deed, and it is evident that the court concluded the tax deed to be invalid; and it is also evident that the court found for the defendants as to the two-thirds interest on other grounds.

As to the Gertrude Chaffee' undivided one-half interest, it appears that in 1912 the Putnam Company was endeavoring to block up a considerable aceage to procure the location of a cotton mill, and the complications flow from those efforts. It is alleged in the petition that Gertrude Chaffee executed a. conveyance of her undivided one-half interest with the grantee’s name left blank, and that she left the deed with one I. M. Putnam, president of the Putnam Company and of the Urban Land Company, to be delivered upon fulfillment of certain conditions, and that he wrongfully filled in the blank and wrongfully delivered the deed without requiring performance of the conditions. It appears from the evidence that the deed in question was not left with I. M. Putnam. An escrow agreement appears *113 in evidence, but it recites only that Gertrude Chaffee has a vendor’s lien, and makes provision for the release of the lien. Miss Chaffee did not recall just what she did execute, and testified that she just signed what they had there, and that she did not herself put the papers in the bank, but was present when it was done. After the parties had rested, the plaintiffs amended to allege that the deed had been executed to the Urban Land Company and was wrongfully delivered out of escrow. It does not appear that any deed to the Urban Land Company was ever placed in escrow. Miss Chaffee did not know what went into escrow, and Miss Stinson, who was an officer of the Urban Land Company, testified that Miss Chaffee voluntarily deeded the premises to that company and delivered the deed to it. Later on, the Urban Land Company executed a deed to this undivided one-half interest in the premises to the Putnam Company, and this latter company purported to convey the entire fee to the Cotton Mills Securities. Company, who, on November 1, 1912, purported to convey the entire fee to Joe M. McCreery; McCreery mortgaged the premises on November 1, 1912, to one IV. A. Hule, and then reconveyed the premises to the Cotton Mills Securities Company. The deed executed by Miss Chaffee contained a misdescription of the premises, the description appearing in her deed being, “* * * an undivided one-half interest in the east half of the southwest half of section six (6), township twelve (12) north, range three («>) west of the Indian Meridian, except five (5) acrés in the southeast quarter of said tract, containing thirty-seven and one-half (37%) acres, more or less, according to the government survey thereof. * * *” This deed purported only to convey the undivided one-half interese, which was all the interest owned by Miss Chaffee, and so did the deed to the Putnam Company, but all the later deeds, and the mortgage, purported to convey the entire fee. Also the misdescription appears only in the deed to the Urban Land Company. The mortgage was later foreclosed, and Miss Chaffee was not made a party defendant, nor. although the mortgage purported to cover the entire fee, was either Annie Challes or Sarah O. ■ Hoover made a defendant. In the meantime. C. E. Johnson had procured a tax deed covering the entire fee. lie represented the holder of the mortgage, and he testified that he took the deed to protect the mortgage. Mr. Swofford. the mortgagee, did not bid at the sale, but the premises were bid in by and conveyed by the sheriff to Fred W. Fleming. The tax title was quitclaimed by Mr. Johnson to Mr. Swofford and by him to Mr. Fleming. The defendant Hogan answered to the effect that since the suit was instituted Mr. Fleming had contracted to convey the premises to him, and he adopted the answer of Mr. Fleming. So that, as the issues were framed, the plaintiffs sought to remove as against Mr. Fleming and his ven-dee, Mr. Hogan, as to this undivided one-half interest, the line of conveyances beginning with the deed of Miss Chaffee. They attacked the deed in the petition as having been completed and delivered by I. M. Putnam without authority. After the close of the testimony they amended to claim a delivery in escrow to the bank of a deed executed to the Urban Land Company, and the wrongful delivery of that deed. They also contended that the deed was void because of the misdescription and that reformation would be denied for want of equity. They complain of the decision of the trial court for errors of law occurring at the trial, on the ground that the decision was contrary to law and against the weight of the evidence, and against clear proof that the deed was delivered without the consent of Miss Chaffee.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 235, 300 P. 767, 150 Okla. 111, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashur-v-mccreery-okla-1931.