Bigpond v. Page

1926 OK 964, 257 P. 793, 125 Okla. 282, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 7, 1926
DocketNo 16371
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1926 OK 964 (Bigpond v. Page) 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
Bigpond v. Page, 1926 OK 964, 257 P. 793, 125 Okla. 282, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 22 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

This action was brought by plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, against defendants in error, as defendants, to cancel a guardian’s deed, and for possession of an undivided 1/3 interest in and to the S. W. 1 /4 of sec. 6, and the N. W. 1 /4 of sec 7, T. 18 N., R. 12 E., in Creek ■ county, and for damages in the !sum of $503i-000.

Plaintiff was a full-blood Creek Indian, enrolled as a new-born opposite roll No. ‘ 935. He was the only child and sole and only heir at* law of his father, James Big-pond. who was' a member of the Creek Tribe of Indians with roll No. 7016. Sa.d James Bigpond died intestate during the year 1904 near Bristow, Indian Territory, and in what has been Creek county since statehood, and left surviving him his wife, mother of plaintiff, whose name was Pelah, and who died intestate during the year 1908 in said Creek county. Said James Bigpond had two half-sisters, Martha Bigpond and Emma Billie, the three having the same father, whose name was Billie Bigpond. The two- half-sisters were full-blood Creek Indians with roll Nos. 8914 and 5944, respectively. Said Martha Bigpond died in September, 1900, intestate and without issue, and left surviving her as her only heirs two half-brothers, one being said James Bigpond and one John Bigpond. Roll No. 3432, one full brother, Jonas Billie, No. 5945, and two full sisters, Emma Billie, Roll No. 5944, and Lina Billie, No. 5946, all full-blood Creeks. Said Jonas Billie died intestate and without issue and unmarried, leaving surviving him two half-brothers, being said James and John Big-pond, and two whole sisters, being said Emma and Lina Bigpond. Said Emma Big-pond died intestate and without issue .during the year 1906, leaving surviving her a husband., Colbert Rogers, who died during the year 1907, one whole sister, Lina Billie, and a half-brother, John Bigpond, and plaintiff, the sole and only child and heir of her deceased brother, James Bigpond. Said Emma Billie died seized of her own allotment and undivided 1 /4 interest in the allotment of her deceased sister’s allotment, being said Martha Bigpond. The plaintiff inherited, by right of representation,- his father’s interest in the allotments in controversy above described. In 1909 plaintiff’s interest in said allotments, estimated at 1/4, was sold' at public sale, under the orders of the county court of Creek county, by his guardian, C. C. Don Carlos, to Charles Page for $1,000, and on September 20 the court confirmed the sale, the guardian executed the deed', and the same was placed of record! Thereafter, on March 25, 1911, said deed was approved by the Secretary of the Interior, upon the payment of an additional consideration of $2.500. The attorney that represented the guardian in the sale received two cheeks from Charles Page in connection with the sale, one for *283 $1,000, made to the guardian, and one for $1,500, made to the attorney. At the time of the sale, and prior thereto, Page had purchased and owned the interests of the other heirs in the two allotments. Prior to the sale proceedings, said Page and W. H. Roeser had a departmental oil and gas lease on the lands, and on June 25, 1908, he reported to the United States Indian Agent at Muskogee that he had on June 15 brought in a second gas well on the land of 20,000,000 feet capacity per day and verified the report. On the same day he reported the other gas well on said land as of 2,500,000 feet capacity per day. discovered about April 18, 1908. On February, 1909, Page enclosed to the Indian Agent at Muskogee a cheek for $800 as a royalty on the two gas wells, and asked him to hold the money, stating that the land was a “dead claim,” that he had approved deeds to all of it, with the exception of a small interest, '-that he was thfsn taking through the court, which would give him complete title.

On April 30, 1910, the Texas Company, one of the assignees of a part interest in the lease, wrote the Indian Agent as follows;

“Replying to- your letter of 22nd inst. with reference to Creek lease royalty No. 2413, executed by the heirs of Jonas Bille and Martha Bigpond, deceased, will say: On October 5th, 1909, Mr. Charles Page of, Tulsa Okla., served notice on us that he was the owner of this land and to hold the royalties accruing therefrom until such time as- his deed was approved. Since said notice .was served, we have paid no royalties and are now holding 16,463.90 barrels of oil as shown by the enclosed statement.”

March Oil Company -claimed as an assignee under the departmental lease of June 1, 1907, and by a contract with Charles Page and one C. W. Kinney of May 16, 1911. The Gypsy Oil Company and Gulf Pipe Line Company are conceded to be innocent purchasers for value. If appears from the record that before the plaintiff minor’s 1/4 interest in the land was sold at public sale, the same was appraised by order of the county court at $2,900. At the time the sale • was made there was an oil well- on the land, as well as - the two gas wells above mentioned, brought in on June 28, 1909,’ and producing 269.72 barrels of oil per day.

The plaintiff pleaded the facts and terms of the sales transaction and copies of the sales record, and stated the age of the minor to be about four years at the time of the sale, and the condition of his estate and the amount of his income showed there was no necessity for the sale at the time, and contended that the attorney conducting the sale for the guardian represented defendant Page against the interest of the minor, and for the fraud practiced in this respect and the inadequate price paid for the rand, the deed should be canceled and he should have possession and damages.

The defendants answered, admitting the title as deraigned by plaintiff and the sale proceedings, but denied -the fraud alleged, and the inadequacy of the consideration paid. The issues were tried to the court without a jury, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, upon demurrer to- same by all the defendants, the court sustained the demurrer ana dismissed the petition, and plaintiff has appealed and contends that this was error and the judgment should be reversed.

We have examined all the evidence in the case and find that the defendant Page was in possession of the lands in controversy since about April or June, 1906, exploring for oil ,and gas, under a departmental lease with Emma Billie and a part of the heirs of Martha Bigpond, deceased. The two gas wells were brought in in April and June, 1908, and. on February 1, 1909, the defendant Page sent a check of $300 for. the gas royalty to the Indian Agent at Muskogee and the said agent was requested to hold the money until Page could put through a sale for plaintiff’s interest in the lands, claiming that he owned all the interests of the other heirs. On June 28, 1909, defendant Page completed - an oil well on the Martha Big-pond allotment of 269.72 barrels productions and on July 6, 1909, the guardian, C. O. Don Carlos, represented .by attorney Wm. L. Cheatham, filed his petition to- sell the 1/4 undivided interest of the minor, this plaintiff, in the two allotments. The sale was completed in December, 1909. during which time the oil well produced 26,402.04 barrels of oil. On the day the sale was confirmed and the guardian’s deed executed, the defendant Page delivered to -the attorney for the guardian two checks, one for $1,000 and one for $1,-500, in connection with this sale. This was" according to the testimony of C. F. Tingley, custodian of the records ’ of Charles Page; His testimony in part is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 964, 257 P. 793, 125 Okla. 282, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigpond-v-page-okla-1926.