Chouteau v. Chouteau

1915 OK 815, 152 P. 373, 49 Okla. 105, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1915
Docket4747
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1915 OK 815 (Chouteau v. Chouteau) 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
Chouteau v. Chouteau, 1915 OK 815, 152 P. 373, 49 Okla. 105, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 16 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

Defendants in error began this action in the district court of Craig county, on September 23, 3911, seeking partition of the lands described in their petition. The plaintiffs in error, who will hereafter be referred to as defendants, filed their second amended answer to said petition; and on July 22, 1912, the court sustained a demurrer to said second amended answer, and defendant Addie Chouteau excepted to the ruling of the court upon said demiurrer, elected to stand upon her answer, and declined to plead further. The other defendants filed their third amended answer, and on December 23, 1912, the court sustained the demurrer of plaintiffs to said third amended answer, and, said defendants electing to stand upon their third amended answer, the court, upon motion of plaintiffs, and over the objections of defendants, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants, as prayed in the petition, and defendants bring error.

; Defendants urge that plaintiffs’ demurrer to the answers should be, held to search the record and relate back to the petition,( and should have been sustained *107 thereto, and cite the following authorities as sustaining their contention: Bartholomew v. Guthrie, 71 Kan. 705, 81 Pac. 491; McCarthy v. Holden, 54 Kan. 313, 38 Pac. 261; State v. Commissioners et al., 12 Kan. 426. Plaintiffs urge that this rule is qualified, however, by the condition that, in order for the demurrer to relate back to the petition/the defendants at the time must insist that this be done, and call the áttention of the court to the defect in the petition, and they claim the defendant Addie Chouteau did not do this. The record is silent on this subject so far as she is concerned, but at the time the demurrer was sustained to the third amended answer of the other defendants they insisted that the demurrer should search the record and be sustained to the petition. If defendants’, contention be correct, the case must be reversed; and without deciding whether it was necessary for defendant Addie Chouteau to call the attention of the court to this contention at the time, we shall treat the demurrer as searching the record and relating back to the plaintiffs’ petition, on behalf of all the defendants, and determine whether the petition was sufficient.

The petition is assailed upon three grounds: (1) That there is no allegation of possession in plaintiffs; (2) there is no allegation of assignment of dower to the defendant Addie Chouteau, widow of deceased; (3) there was no allegation of proof of heirship in the probate court on the part of plaintiffs.

Under the first objection to the petition it is urged that it contained no allegation of possession in plaintiffs, or a demand for possession. Under the decisions in the state of Kansas, from which our statute comes, it is held that a joint tenant out of possession cannot maintain a *108 suit for partition against his cotenants, who hold adversely to him, without joining with the demand for partition a cause of action for possession of the land. Denton v. Fyfe, 65 Kan. 1, 68 Pac. 1074, 93 Am. St. Rep. 272; Chandler v. Richardson, 65 Kan. 152, 69 Pac. 168; Moorehead v. Robinson, 68 Kan. 534, 75 Pac. 503. It is further held that a, joint tenant out of possession, by joining in his petition a demand for possession, may maintain an action for partition against his cotenants, who hold adversely to him. Scarborough v. Smith, 18 Kan. 399; Scantlin v. Allison, 32 Kan. 376, 4 Pac. 618; Ott v. Sprague, 27 Kan. 620.

The petition alleges that William Chouteau, deceased, was a Shawnee Cherokee citizen by blood, and died in Kansas City, Mo., February 3, 1905, seised of an allotment of lands, which is described, and that all of the' parties hereto were heirs at law of the deceased; that plaintiffs, with the exception of Walter Chouteau, a minor, were children, and said Walter Chouteau was a grandchild of deceased, and that defendant Addie Chouteau was his widow; that no partition or settlement of his estate had ever been had, and that, subject to the widow’s dower, each of the said children and the grandchild were entitled to a one-ninth interest in said land; and prayed for partition, or, in the alternative, for sale of said lands and a division of the proceeds. ' Nothing is said in the petition about possession. It is alleged, however, that plaintiffs were the owners of an interest in the land, and, in the absence of anything to the contrary, possession by them will be presumed, and, if there is an adverse holding as against their claims, -it is a matter of defense, that should be set up in the answer. Moorehead v. Robinson, supra; Hayes et al. v. McReynolds et al., 144 Mo. 348, 46 S. W. *109 161; 30 Cyc. 191. And even if the defendants were in possession, the mere possession of a tenant in common, no matter how full and complete, does not of itself operate as an ouster of his cotenant, or amount to an adverse possession as against the claims of such cotenant. There must be something to show a denial or a repudiation of his cotenant’s rights, or the possession will be deemed to be had in subordination to the rights of the other co-tenants. Squires et al. v. Clark et al., 17 Kan. 84.

Under the second objection, that there is no allegation that dower had been assigned to the widow, and that by reason thereof she was entitled to remain in possession of the lands until dower had been assigned, and until such assignment partition cannot be had, it is sufficient to say that it does not anywhere appear from the record that she was in possession at the time of the institution of this suit, or at the time of the judgment of the court, and -if such were the fact, and if it were a defense, that matter would have to be urged as an affirmative defense, and should have been pleaded in her answer.

The third objection, that no allegation of proof of-^heirship in the probate court is alleged, cannot be sustained. The defendants rely upon section 12, c. 65, Sess. Laws 1910, which provides that:

“In all estates now being administered, or that may hereafter be administered, any person claiming to be an-heir to the deceased, or entitled to distribution in whole or in part of such estate, may, at any time after the expiration of one year from the issuing of letters testamentary, or of administration upon such estate, file a petition in the matter of such estate, praying the court to ascertain and declare the rights of all persons to said estate, and • all interest therein and to whom disposition thereof should be made.”

*110 This objection is not good, for the reason that it does not appear that the estate of the deceased, William Chou-teau, was being administered, and this statute provides for such petition being filed in a pending administration, and, besides, it is further provided in said section that:

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 815, 152 P. 373, 49 Okla. 105, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chouteau-v-chouteau-okla-1915.