Bucy v. Corbin

1923 OK 1173, 223 P. 134, 101 Okla. 124, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
Docket11655
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1923 OK 1173 (Bucy v. Corbin) 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
Bucy v. Corbin, 1923 OK 1173, 223 P. 134, 101 Okla. 124, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 24 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

COCHRAN, C.

This suit was instituted by the plaintiff in error against the defendants in error for the recovery of 40 acres of land'. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, and, the plaintiff having elected to stand upon his petition, the same was dismissed, and from the judgment so rendered the plaintiff in error has appealed. The parties will hereinafter be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The land in controversy was allotted to Caroline Martin, a Chérokee freedman, and prior. to the time the allottee became 18 years of age, she executed a deed to the land in controversy to H A. Beasley. Beasley thereafter executed a deed to the land to Parr and Overlees. After hecom'ng 18 years of age, the allottee executed a deed to the land in controversy and other lands to one Lamb, and thereafter filed a suit in the district court of Washington county, seeking to cancel the deed to Lamb, alleging that the same had been procured through fraud. Parr aud Overlees intervened in this action, alleging that they were the owners of the 40 acres in controversy here. The allottee filed an amended petition, in which she admitted receiving the consideration for the conveyance to Beasley, and in which she ratified and confirmed the deed and disclaimed any interest therein. During a trial of (lie case, the trial court found generally in favor of the interveners for the 40 acres of land on the ground that the allottee had ratified and confirmed the void deed after she arrived at her majority, and rendered judgment for the interveners. Thereafter the interveners deeded the land to Buey.

It is the contention of the defendants in error that the judgment is void, because it shows on its face that the trial court based its judgment upon the ratification and confirmation of a void deed executed in viola-lion of federal restrictions, and that the judgment appears on its face to be one which (he court had no jurisdiction to render. It is immaterial to the determination of this case whether the allottee, upon arriving at her majority, could legally ratify and confirm a deed executed during her minority, or whether the facts were sufficient to show a ratification or adoption thereof. For the purpose of this ease, it may be conceded that the deed executed by the allottee to Beasley was void, and that the same was not capable of ratification or adoption, or, if capable of ratification or adoption, that the acts of the allottee after she arrived at her majority amounted to neither a ratification nor adoption, yet it does not follow that the judgment rendered by the district court of Washington county was void. Those very questions were matters which were properly submitted to the jurisdiction of the district court of Washington county for its determination. At the time the judg *125 ment was rendered, the allottee was an adult and she stood before the court as any other citizen and with no more and no less rights in that court than any other citizen. The court had jurisdiction of the person of the allottee and jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit and had jurisdiction to determine the particular question for determination in that case, viz., whether the void deed was subject to ratification, and, if so, whether it had been ratified. The court exercised this jurisdiction and rendered its .judgment holding that the deed was subject to ratification and that the evidence showed that there had been a ratification thereof. In the rendition of this judgment there was no defect of jurisdiction. Any error’which may have resulted was an error of law which could be corrected on appeal, but was not a defect of jurisdiction rendering the judgment void. The opinion of this court in Welch v. Commercial National Bank, 90 Okla. 221, 217 Pac. 476, involved (lie identical question presented in the instant case. Counsel for the defendants seek to distinguish that 'case by saying that in the instant ease the invalidity of the judgment appears on the face of the judgment roli, and in the case of Welch v. Commercial National Bank, supra, it did not so appear. No such distinction can be made in the. two cases. In the Welch v. Commercial National Bank Case, the judgment roll showed that the judgment rendered was based upon an erroneous conclusion of the trial court sustaining a previous invalid judgment, which in turn had sustained a void deed. The fact that the erroneous conclusion appeared on the face of the judgment roll does not in any manner change the conclusion, because our conclusion is based upon the fact that the judgment so rendered was not invalid, there being no jurisdictional defect, the defect complained of being an error of law and not a jurisdictional defect.

We are of the opinion that the demurrer to the petition was improperly sustained, and that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed and cause remanded, with directions to overrule demurrer and proceed further in accordance with the view herein expressed, and it is so ordered.

JOHNSON, O. J., and MeNEIT/L, KENNAMER. BRANSON, and HARRISON, JJ., concur.

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Related

Billingsley v. North
1956 OK 153 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)
Neal v. Travelers Ins. Co.
1940 OK 314 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
Latimer v. Vanderslice
1936 OK 554 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Corbin v. Bucy
1928 OK 646 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
Southwestern Surety Ins. Co. v. Farriss
1926 OK 103 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Strange v. Armstrong
1925 OK 952 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Lynch v. Collins
1925 OK 108 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Abraham v. Homer
226 P. 45 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 1173, 223 P. 134, 101 Okla. 124, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bucy-v-corbin-okla-1923.