Brewer v. Davidson

1945 OK 201, 163 P.2d 987, 195 Okla. 654, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 19, 1945
DocketNo. 31573.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1945 OK 201 (Brewer v. Davidson) 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
Brewer v. Davidson, 1945 OK 201, 163 P.2d 987, 195 Okla. 654, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 535 (Okla. 1945).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

Mildred Davidson, as plaintiff, commenced this action in the district court of Mayes county, Okla., on June 19, 1942, against Hugh Brewer and V. R. Casey, as defendants, to cancel a certain tax resale deed and to quiet title to the following described land in Mayes county, to wit: “E. Vz of S. E. Vi, the N. W. Vi of S. E. Vi and S. W. Vi of S. E. Vi of section 5, township 21 north, range 21 east.”

The parties will be referred to by their trial court designations.

After issues had been joined by answer the case was tried to the court, resulting in a decree for plaintiff canceling the resale deed of defendants and quieting plaintiff’s title to the entire 160 acres upon plaintiff making her tender good by depositing with the court clerk the sum of $240.77. After unsuccessful motion for new trial, defendants lodged their appeal in this court. In their brief defendants rely on two propositions stated thus:

“The plaintiff did not plead nor show by clear, cogent and convincing proof that she had done all the law requires of her to do in her purported effort to pay all of the taxes upon the land in question.
“The county treasurer in a resale advertisement is not required to consult the records of any office other than his own to ascertain the name of the owner of the land to be inserted in the advertisement.”

According to the evidence of plaintiff, in September, 1937, R. L. Davidson conveyed by warranty deed to his wife, Mildred Davidson, 390 acres of land in Mayes county, including the land above described except the S. W. Vi of the S. E. Vi thereof, title to which she later acquired at sheriff’s sale under a mortgage foreclosure. At the date of Mr. Davidson’s deed to his wife all taxes on the 390 acres were paid up to and including 1935. In March, 1939, the plaintiff requested her husband, R. L. Davidson, to go to the county treasurer’s office at Pryor and pay all delinquent taxes on the 390 acres of land, including the taxes for 1938. Acting as her agent in this matter, R. L. Davidson visited the treasurer’s office at Pryor on March 11,1939, for the purpose of paying these taxes. At that time the treasurer’s office was extremely busy collecting taxes and issuing receipts, and it was suggested to Mr. Davidson that he leave a list of the lands on which he desired to pay taxes together with a check to the county treasurer with the amount left blank, and as soon as the treasurer could get to it he would fill in the correct amount in the check and issue his receipts for the taxes, which were to be mailed to plaintiff at her address in Tulsa, Okla. This was done, and on March 20, 1939, the treasurer filled out the check for the sum of $47.85 and issued tax receipts covering the years 1936 and 1937, which he mailed to plain *656 tiff and which she duly received. Plaintiff never examined these receipts to see what years were covered thereby, but presuming that her agent had paid all the taxes, as she had requested him to do, she put the receipts away without examination. Neither her husband nor her son, both of whom are lawyers, ever examined these tax receipts to see if they covered the taxes which were intended to be paid by the check of March 11, 1939. These lands were sold in the 1942 tax resale for the 1938 and subsequent years’ taxes. As soon as plaintiff received information that the lands had been so sold she went to Pryor for the purpose of redeeming the same and succeeded in redeeming all of the 390 acres except the 120 acres here involved, which had been sold to the defendants. Thereupon she commenced the instant action.

There is no substantial conflict in the evidence as to these material facts, though the evidence introduced by defendants tended to contradict plaintiff’s evidence as to the conversation between the agent of plaintiff and the county treasurer or his deputy concerning his purposes, the manner of payment, etc.

Upon this branch of the case plaintiff relies upon the following proposition:

“The bona fide effort of the defendant in error to pay the 1938 taxes which was thwarted by the negligence or mistake of the county treasurer, renders the tax deed void as to the east half of southeast quarter, and the northwest quarter of southeast quarter.”

Under this proposition and upon the evidence disclosed by the record, as summarized above, plaintiff invokes the rule announced by this court in the following cases: Grimes v. Carter, 185 Okla. 469, 94 P. 2d 544; Headley v. Hall, 191 Okla. 352, 129 P. 2d 1018; McKinney v. Farrow et al., 194 Okla. 397, 152 P. 2d 265; Ponder et al. v. Ebey, 194 Okla. 407, 152 P. 2d 268; Thompson v. Freeman, 194 Okla. 554, 153 P. 2d 99; Martin et al. v. Bodovitz, 194 Okla. 614; 153 P. 2d 825. Against this contention of plaintiff defendants merely urge that the plaintiff has not pleaded or shown by clear, cogent, or convincing proof that she had done all the law requires her to do in her purported effort to pay all the taxes on the land involved.

The proof is very clear and cogent on the purpose or effort of plaintiff to pay her 1938 taxes prior to the 1942 tax resale as indicated. She frankly admitted she never examined the tax receipts when she received them, nor thereafter, and never made further inquiry about the matter but presumed all the back taxes were paid. An examination of the tax receipts would have disclosed otherwise. Though, under all the evidence, the question as to her bona fides is not free from doubt, the trial court was no doubt mindful of the well-established rule that such proof must be clear, cogent, and convincing. It apparently was fully satisfied with the evidence on the point in spite of her failure to examine the receipts or make further inquiry about the payment of her taxes. The decree of a trial court in an equitable action will not be disturbed unless against the clear weight of the evidence. The trial court in this case had the advantage of having the witnesses before it, hearing their oral testimony from the witness stand, observing their demean- or, and had a better opportunity for determining where the greater weight and probative value of the testimony rested than does this court, and we cannot say as a matter of law that the evidence was not also convincing on the question of plaintiff’s bona fide effort, nor can we say that her conduct in the respects indicated was not justified under all the circumstances. Noble v. Bodovitz, 175 Okla. 432, 52 P. 2d 1046; Smith v. Beam, 176 Okla. 408, 55 P. 2d 980; Thompson v. Jones, 188 Okla. 16, 105 P. 2d 751.

It is therefore concluded that as to the 120 acres of land involved under plaintiff’s first proposition, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

As to the remaining 40 acres involved, being the S.W.V4 of the S.E.1/^, of said section 5, the issues of fact and of law are quite different from those relating to the 120 acres.

*657 Plaintiff acquired title to the S.W. V4 of the S.E.1/4 of said section 5 at sheriff’s sale under a decree of foreclosure in cause No. 6600 on May 28, 1941. This tract of land was also sold to defendants at the 1942 tax resale for delinquent taxes for 1938 and subsequent years.

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Bluebook (online)
1945 OK 201, 163 P.2d 987, 195 Okla. 654, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-davidson-okla-1945.