Capps v. Hensley

1909 OK 41, 100 P. 515, 23 Okla. 311, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1909
DocketNo. 885, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1909 OK 41 (Capps v. Hensley) 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
Capps v. Hensley, 1909 OK 41, 100 P. 515, 23 Okla. 311, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 352 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

*314 Dunn, J.

(after stating the facts as above.) Counsel for plaintiff in error in their brief take the position that section 35 of the Creek Agreement, passed and approved by Congress on March 1, 1901, c. 676, 31 Stat. 871, and afterwards ratified by the Creek nation, commonly known as the “original agreement,” gives to Creek parents, as the natural guardians of their minor children, the right to lease the lands allotted to them without the intervention of any court, and that when such leases were made, they were prima facie valid and legal. Counsel for defendant in error meet this by the authority of the cases (Indian Land & Trust Co. v. Shoenfelt, 5 Ind. T. 41, 79 S. W. 134, and Pilgrim v. McIntosh et al. [Ind. T.] 104 S. W. 858), which hold generally that a lease by a natural guardian who has not submitted himself and his actions to a court having jurisdiction, nor executed a bond, nor procured an order to lease, is void.

The first of these cases (Indian Land & Trust Co. v. Shoenfelt) was carried to the Circuit Court of Appeals, and there reversed (135 Fed. 484, 68 C. C. A. 196) on other grounds than the one of interest here. So that, so far as the principle involved in this case is concerned, it may be considered as an expression of the judgment of the Court of Appeals of the Indian Territory on the proposition. That case grew out of -the action of the United States Indian agent acting on behalf and in the interest of a minor,under the statute which gave such official power to place a minor in possession of his lands when they were held under contract “not obtained in conformity to law.” The second case was one where Pilgrim sought to enjoin the regular appointed guardian and the United States Indian agent from interfering with him in his possession of the lands of a minor, which he held under a contract made with the natural guardian. So it will be seen the defendants in each case were proceeding to protect the interests of, and acting for the minor, and the court held that as against the minor, the contracts of lease presented which had been made by the natural guardian were void. The basis for the conclusion to which the court came was that the statutes of Arkansas relating to guardians *315 and minors were controlling, and were neither repealed nor their controlling force defeated by any subsequent treaty or federal legislation.

In our judgment a proper understanding of the rule enunciated by the court in those two cases goes no further than to hold the contracts entered into by the- natural guardians void when in conflict with the interests of the minor, as represented by the government or a legally appointed guardian; that is, that they were void or not enforceable as against the minor. A contract entered into by a minor himself with an adult, is not void as to the adult, except on the same grounds that would make it void between two competent contracting parties. Infancy is a plea personal to the infant, and is not available to one dealing with him, but in reference to such contracts, “the words ‘void’ and ‘voidable’ are often loosely used, and much confusion has resulted therefrom. ‘Void’ is so frequently employed in the sense of ‘voidable’ as to have almost lost its primary significance; and, when it is found' in a statute, judicial opinion, or contract, it is generally necessary to resort to the subject-matter or context in order to determine precisely what meaning is to be given to the word.” 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1065; Pearsoll v. Chapin, 44 Pa. 9; Hammon on Contracts, § 155. In keeping with the quotation from the Encyclopedia of Law, supra, and with special applicability to the question before us, Mr. Hammon in his work on Contracts, supra, speaking to this subject says:

“The courts are not always discriminating in the use of the terms ‘voidable’ and ‘void’ and that the word ‘void’ is often used where ‘voidable’ is more or less obviously meant. This want of discrimination will be found to occur in many of the cases in terms holding an infant’s contract to be void. A majority of these cases appear to establish only that the contract cannot be enforced against the infant or some other collateral point equally consistent with its being merely voidable, except when they show distinctly that the contract is voidable, and not void. In any event, by the weight of authority both in America and in England, the doctrine that an infant’s contracts may be absolutely void does not prevail, *316 and, subject to one exception, his contracts are valid if he elects to treat them so when he comes of age.” •

In the case at bar the infant could not have made this contract- so that it would be binding as against herself, by reason of lack of competency or power. The rights of majority had not been conferred, nor had they been attained. Hence she was not competent’under the law to deal in this way with, her landed estate. Neither could the natural guardian deal with this estate, for that the power had not been vested, and in either event a contract of this character, made by the infant or by the natural guardian, would be voidable or void at the instance of the infant, because of the want of power to make it. There was nothing fraudulent in the contract. There was nothing illegal nor against public polic3r in it. The subject-matter and the entire transaction was one recognized by law, and the only defect was the existing lack of power in the party acting for the infant to effectuate an enforceable Obligation.

Plaintiff in error insists that by receiving from the lessee the money for rent of the land, under the terms of the lease, after the death of the child, was a ratification of it. This contention is answered on the part of -the defendant in error by the argument that this lease having been made in the name of and for the child, and not the father, w-as not subject to ratification, as a contract cannot be ratified by any one other than the party for whom or in whose name it is made, and we will say- that many of the eases seem to recognize this as a distinctive element of ratification. Ellison v. Jackson Water Co., 12 Cal. 542; Western Publishing House v. District Tp. of Rock, 84 Iowa, 101, 50 N. W. 551; Pearsoll v. Chapin, supra. If the father could not ratify this contract or lease for any reason, could he, after the death of the child, adopt, confirm, or affirm it, and make of it his own contract? Many of the authorities we have examined improperly, it seems to us, make no discrimination between the terms “ratification” and “adoption,” when used in reference to contracts. Some of the eases -we have just cited are of that character. A most *317 comprehensive article dealing with the meaning given by the courts and lexicographers to the terms “ratification,” “adoption,” “affirmation,” and “confirmation” is found in 19 Cent. Law J. at page 485 (1884), in which a great number of authorities are cited, and the conclusion reached therefrom is that the indiscriminate use of these words is entirely unjustified and improper. Eatification and confirmation appear to be considered as almost, if not quite, synonymous. In Black’s Law Dictionary, p.

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Bluebook (online)
1909 OK 41, 100 P. 515, 23 Okla. 311, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capps-v-hensley-okla-1909.