Bilby v. Bean

1914 OK 720, 137 P. 691, 42 Okla. 53, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 20, 1913
Docket3317
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1914 OK 720 (Bilby v. Bean) 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
Bilby v. Bean, 1914 OK 720, 137 P. 691, 42 Okla. 53, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 294 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITFI, C.

This was an action in forcible entry and detainer tried in the county court of Hughes county, before John L. Coffman, a member of the bar of that county, elected as special judge after the regular judge had been disqualified by the defendants. The action involved the right of possession of 40 acres of land, being a part of the allotment of Little Peter, a Creek citizen of full blood; the allotment being-made to the heir's of Little Peter after his death, he having died either in 1900 or 1901.

Plaintiff’s claim of title to the land was based upon a warranty deed from the heirs of Little Peter, executed on August 5, 1904. The .defendants were tenants of John W. Gilliland, who claimed title under a quitclaim deed from John O. Chapman, dated January 17, 1910. Chapman held a deed from the heirs of Little Peter under date of October 31, 1908, which deed had been approved by the judge of the county court of Plughes county on the 31st day of October, 1908. The evidence is undisputed that Bilby was in possession of the land in February, 1911, and that he had possession of the land for some five ox-six years prior to that date; that Bilby had growxi a crop of corn on the land for the year 1910, all of which was not gathered imtil the latter part of Januax-y or the early part of February, 1911, axid immediately after the corn was gathered Bilby turned cattle and hogs upon the land; that oxr the 8th day of Febru *55 ary, 1911, the defendants, without the consent of the plaintiff, entered upon the land and commenced plowing; that when the plaintiff’s tenants found the plows on the land they removed them out on the highway and nailed up and locked the gates in the fence inclosing the land. To show the manner in which the defendants obtained and held possession of the premises in controversy, a few excerpts from the testimony of the witnesses will be given.

Ed Turner, a witness for the plaintiff, testified in part as follows:

“Q. Would you please state to the jury if you know how they got in possession of these lands? A. Well, Mr. Bilby was plowing there on the 9th and Mr. Bean and Mr. Brown come over and I was sent down there to tell them to stay off, and they came over in the morning and asked Mr. Bryant and Mr. Ayers who they rented from, and they told them they rented from Mr. Bilby, and then I come up, and they asked me what Mr. Bilby had said about it and what I was doing there, and I told them that he had sent me down there to tell them to stay off. Q. Just state what they did there to get in? A. They said they would go to town that afternoon and see what could be done about it. The next morning about 5 o’clock I got up and went down to the field and about 6 they come over to the field and come in. Q. Who?' A. Bill Bean and Bill Brown and Ira Bean. Q. The defendants in this case? A. Yes, sir. I rode down there and got there just before they came up to where I was and says: ‘Ed, we have cut the fence. You had better guard the cattle to keep them from getting out through the gate to the road.” Then he went on back to where their plows were and went to plowing, and they took and set Mr. Bilby’s plows outside the fence. Q. What time was that? A. About 6 o’clock. Q. You say they had been there the day before? A. Yes, sir. Q. Who was in possession the day before? A. Mr. Bilby had two men working there. Q. Who was working there the day before? A. Bryant and Ayers. Q. What Bryant and Ayers? A. Coleman Bryant and George Ayers. Q. Were there any cattle in there on- the 10th day of February, 1911? A. Yes, sir. Q. AVhose? A. Mr. Bilby’s. Q. About how many. A. About 50 or 55 head. Q. What was done with the cattle? A. They drove them back into the other field. Q. What time on the morning of the 10th did you get down to these premises? A. 5 o’clock. Q. Did you see anybody there at the time you got there? A. No, *56 sir. Q. About how long from that time was it until Bean and Brown appeared? A. About 6 I think. Q. What was their attitude towards you? What did they do and say? A. I had gone down and built up a fire as it was pretty cold and I heard some one moving around back of the field. I didn’t know who it was, so I rode over back of the field, and as I rode back I heard something sounded like knocking down the gate. I rode on down to the gate and Bill Brown hollered and said, ‘We’ve tore down the gate and we’re going down there and nail the other one up.’ Q. AVhat gate? A. The gate on the west side of the field. Q. Was it a small gate or a large one? A. It was a gate for wagon and team. Q. Back of the premises? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was that the gate that was wired up the day before? A. I don’t know just when it had been wired up. Q. When you saw it the day before was it wired up though? A. Yes, sir. Q. That morning did you see any guns? A. Yes, sir; they had two. Q. Who had two? A. Bill Bean and Bill Brown. Q. What kind? A. Double-barreled shotguns. O. What did they do with the shotguns? A. They didn’t do anything with them, just carried them along in their hands and on their shoulders. Q. What did they do with the plows that Mr. Bilby had there the day before, plowing? A. Took them and set them outside in the road. Q. Was it daylight at that time? A. Not hardlyc Q. What did you go up there for, Mr. Turner? A. I was sent over there to guard the field. Q. Did you guard it? A. No, I didn’t get them out. Q. Why? A. I didn’t want to have any racket or fight. Q. Did you tell them to stay out? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was that the gate that Mr. Bilby’s men had been going in and out of the field? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did they say they were going to nail it up for? A. They didn’t say. Q. Did they nail it up? A. Yes, sir. Q. How did you know that they had torn down the gate? A. They told me. Q. Which one? A. Bill Brown. Q. How far were they from you at the time they came down to the gate that you spoke of and told you that? A. About 50 or 75 feet. Q. They got in before you got up there? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was done with their guns? A. One was carrying his gun in his hand and one carried his -on his shoulder. * * * Q. AVhat was the condition of the fence before that? A. It was up in good shape. Q. How do you know? A. I had been along it the day before on the 9th of February, 1911. Q. AVhat condition did you leave the gate in on that night when you left there? A. Wired up and steepled. Q. Who did that? A. I think Mr. Gamble did. Q. Who had been in possession of *57 those lands before that time? A. Mr. Bilby raised a corn crop on it. Q. What year? A. 1910.'’

George Ayers, a witness for the plaintiff, testified:

“Q. Now just state to the court and jury what took place there on the 10th of February. A. We went down there on the 10th. I was driving the wagon and Mr. Bryant was leading some mules. We saw when we got there that Bean and Brown were over in the field and two boys were in there with them. We went up to the gate and it was locked and steepled up. We told them that we came there to plow some, and they said that they come there for the same purpose; said Mr. Turner was there to keep them out but it didn’t do any good. Q. Did you see any guns? A. Yes, sir. Q. What kind? A. Shotguns.”

Coleman Bryant, a witness for the plaintiff, testified:

“Q. Didn’t they tell you why they didn’t want you tp come in? A. Yes, they said they had rented that place and they were going to cultivate it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 720, 137 P. 691, 42 Okla. 53, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilby-v-bean-okla-1913.