Bartlett v. Lashley

1951 OK 18, 229 P.2d 185, 204 Okla. 299, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 446
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 6, 1951
Docket33768
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1951 OK 18 (Bartlett v. Lashley) 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
Bartlett v. Lashley, 1951 OK 18, 229 P.2d 185, 204 Okla. 299, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 446 (Okla. 1951).

Opinion

ARNOLD, C.J.

This action involves the surface rights only to 160 acres of land in Creek county, Oklahoma, described as: West Half of Northeast Quarter; Northeast Quarter of Northwest Quarter; and Northwest Quarter of Southeast Quarter, Section 27, Township 14 North, Range 8 East.

Essential facts disclosed by the evidence are:

That for a number of years prior to 1930 the fee-simple title to this land was held jointly by H. W. Bartlett, Eva Maude Bartlett, and H. E. Whitehead, as tenants in common; that they severed the mineral estate and received royalties from oil production thereon, and that such royalties are still being paid to various owners of mineral interests; that in May, 1930, pursuant to a resale for delinquent taxes, the surface rights to this 160 acres became vested in Creek county through a resale deed to the chairman of its board of county commissioners; that no question is raised as to the regularity of the tax sale proceedings, nor as to the validity of the resale tax deed; that in June, 1930, M. Schuman and R. J. Ranck acquired these surface rights by a commissioner’s deed and subsequently Ranck transferred his interest to Schuman; that in August, 1931, Schu-man delivered a quitclaim deed to the land to Martin Bartlett, who is a son of H. W. and Eva Maude Bartlett, but this deed was not recorded until April, 1935; that in September, 1931, the First National Bank & Trust Company of Tulsa secured a sheriff’s deed purporting to cover the interest of H. E. Whitehead in this property by virtue of execution based upon a judgment obtained by the bank prior to the tax resale in 1930; that on November 7, 1933, Shu-man delivered a quitclaim deed to the land to the plaintiff, Theodore G. Lash-ley, which deed was duly recorded on November 8, 1933; that during the time when the land was owned by the Bart-letts and Whitehead, Whitehead acted as the agent of the owners in renting and collecting the rents on this land; that in 1920 he made a rental contract with an elderly negro named J. J. Sherman, who went into possession and continued under said rental contract to occupy and cultivate the land until the tax resale of 1930, and thereafter remained in the occupancy of the premises during 1931, 1932, and 1933; that on January 11, 1934, plaintiff Lashley rented the land to a tenant who went into possession under a written contract; that in August, 1934, Lashley secured a quitclaim deed from the First National Bank & Trust Company of Tulsa covering the one-third interest therein originally owned by H. E. Whitehead; that from the time plaintiff took possession of the land in January, 1934, he continued in the possession and control thereof through tenants to the date of trial of this action, and that he paid all of the taxes assessed against *301 the land from 1930 to the date of trial; that on April 19, 1937, Martin Bartlett and his wife executed a deed to the land to Merrill S. Bartlett, Martin’s brother, and on March 9, 1943, Merrill S. Bartlett executed a deed to the land to Jane A. Bartlett, wife of Chester W. Bartlett, another brother of Martin; that neither Martin Bartlett nor Merrill Bartlett were ever in possession of the land after January, 1934, and neither collected any rents or profits or paid any taxes thereon; that in 1946 plaintiff was negotiating a sale of this land and for the first time discovered the recorded deed from Schuman to Martin Bartlett and the deeds among the Bartletts purporting to transfer title to the land; that he then sought to obtain a quitclaim deed from Jane A. Bartlett and her husband but they refused to execute the same and thereupon this action to quiet title was commenced.

In plaintiff’s petition he asserted title to the surface of the land under his quitclaim deed from Schuman and denied the validity of the Schuman deed to Martin Bartlett as notice to him by reason of its not having been recorded, and asserts that he is an innocent purchaser for value without notice and that he has been in open, notorious, and adverse possession of the land since January, 1934, under color of title and sought to have his title quieted.

The amended answer and cross-petition of the defendants Jane A. Bartlett and Chester W. Bartlett denied generally the allegations of plaintiff’s petition and affirmatively alleged that plaintiff had full knowledge of the interest of Martin Bartlett and of his possession of said property at all times. It was further asserted that the quitclaim deed from Schuman to Lashley was void for champerty and conveyed no title or interest to the plaintiff. Defendants sought in their cross-petition to have their title quieted.

Upon trial of the action to the court findings of fact were made on which judgment was entered quieting, plaintiff’s title and denying any relief to defendants under their cross-petition.

Defendants contend that plaintiff cannot claim he is an innocent purchaser for value for three reasons:

First, because plaintiff had actual knowledge qf the possession of Martin Bartlett and therefore constructive notice of his claim.

Second, because of the inadequacy of the consideration paid to Schuman.

Third, he knew his grantor Schuman was not in possession of the land.

Their contention that plaintiff had ac-utal knowledge of possession by Martin Bartlett is based upon an assumption of fact not sustained by the evidence. The only basis for this assumption is the occupancy of the land by J. J. Sherman under the contract which he made with H. E. Whitehead in 1920, but the tax resale and the resale deed issued pursuant thereto wiped out any right, title, or interest of the original owners, including H. E. Whitehead, so that Sherman’s tenancy under the Whitehead contract was also extinguished. The title conveyed by the resale deed was a new and virgin title, and Sherman’s continued occupancy of the land thereafter was not adverse as the tenant of anyone, nor adverse as to himself, because he entered the same under a contract recognizing the superior title of those from whom he rented. After the tax resale and the delivery of the resale deed Sherman’s continued occupancy was simply that of an occupant without contract liable for the rent to the true owner. (41 O.S. 1941 §19.) The evidence conclusively establishes that Martin Bartlett never personally took possession of the land. There inheres in the judgment of the court a determination that Lashley was a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice, and there also inheres in the judgment a determination that Whitehead in collecting rents after the date of the deed to Martin Bartlett and before the execution and delivery *302 of the Lashley deed did not represent Martin Bartlett. These findings and determination are not clearly against the weight of the evidence. The continued occupancy of the land by this elderly negro was not notice to anyone of any claim which Martin Bartlett had to the premises.

The alleged claim of inadequacy of consideration paid to Schuman cannot be sustained for the reason that plaintiff knew of the sheriff’s deed held by the Tulsa bank. He knew that as agent for said bank he collected the small rentals that were due from Sherman in 1933 under a written contract which he made with Sherman for the bank in May of 1933.

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Bluebook (online)
1951 OK 18, 229 P.2d 185, 204 Okla. 299, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-lashley-okla-1951.