Cloud v. Young

1924 OK 793, 229 P. 604, 103 Okla. 65, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 30, 1924
Docket13959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1924 OK 793 (Cloud v. Young) 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
Cloud v. Young, 1924 OK 793, 229 P. 604, 103 Okla. 65, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 239 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff below, and the defendants in error were the defendants. The parties will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff brought action for the cancellation of two certain conveyances purporting to have been executed by her, and purporting to convey interests in and to the land described as the southeast quarter of *66 section nine (9), township fourteen (14) north, range nine (9) east, and for rents and profits, and to quiet title. The plaintiff, who is a Creek Indian, claims title by inheritance from her daughter, a Creek Indian, and to whom the land was allotted, and who died intestate, leaving her surviving this plaintiff, the mother, and Benjamin Wisener, the father, as. her heirs at law. The plaintiff claims to be the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the said land. The plaintiff complains, in her amended petition on which the cause was tried, that the defendant Benjamin Young, by himself and by and through his agent, fraudulently induced her to execute in his favor a quitclaim deed dated April 20, 1909, purporting to convey to said defendant an estate for the life of the plaintiff. in the land, that while the deed recites a consideration of $600, nothing was ever paid her for the conveyance, that plaintiff did not know, at that time, what interest she owned in the land, and that.said defendant and his agent knowingly made false, fraudulent and misleading representations to her about her interest in the land, which she relied upon, and was thereby induced to make the conveyance because of mistake as to what her interests in the land were; she attaches a copy of the deed; the deed appears to have been approved on the day it was executed. She further charges that afterwards, and on the 4th of February, 1911, she was induced by false and fraudulent representations of the defendant Benjamin Young and his agent, as to the value of the land, to execute in favor of said defendant a deed conveying the land in fee. She charges that they falsely represented to her and to the county judge who approved the deed that the land was worthless except for grazing purposes, when in fact it is good agricultural land, worth $100 per acre; that they made false representations to her and to the county judge who approved the deed as to what was to be paid for the lana, representing that defendant had or would pay her $1,000, and agreed to pay plaintiff said amount, when the deed should be approved; that the defendant and his agent falsely and fraudently represented to the plaintiff and to the county judge that plaintiff had no interest in the land; that all of said representations were false and fraudulent and known to be so by defendant, and were made for the-purpose of deceiving plaintiff, who was an ignorant Indian woman, and were made to the county judge for the purpose of deceiving him, and both the plaintiff and the court were deceived, and plaintiff executed the deed and the county judge approved it; that in fact, plaintiff owned an undivided one-half interest in the land, and defendant never paid any of the recited consideration, but defendant’s agent had given her a $5 gold piece, and a trade coupon of the faqe value of $10 payable in goods at the agent’s store; that defendant Benjamin Young told her that she had no interest in the land and that was the reason why he would not pay as he had agreed; that plaintiff did not learn of the fraud that had been practiced upon her until in the early part of 1917, and had made demand for her land without avail; that she had a contract with' counsel to -bring action, and when the contract was filed of record •the defendant Benjamin Young deeded the land to defendant Everett Young. She seeks to recover rents and profits in addition to cancellation of the instruments, and to quiet title to her one-half interest in the land.

The defendants answered by general denial except matters admitted. They allege the due execution and approval of the first deed, and rely thereon. They allege the due execution and approval of the second deed, and that at the hearing before the approval agency the matter of consideration was inquired into and determined; that for the two deeds defendant Benjamin Young paid the sum of $900, which is alleged to be adequate consideration. They specifically deny that there were any false or fraudulent representations made to secure the execution of the deeds by plaintiff or to secure the approval thereof by the county judge, or that they ever promised to pay to plaintiff $1,000 consideration on approval, or any consideration other than that which is recited in the deeds, which is alleged to have been fully paid. The defendants plead and rely upon a certain judgment taken in plaintiff’s favor against Benjamin Young to establish payment of the consideration.

The plaintiff replied by denial except as to certain matters admitted. She reiterates her allegations of fraud in procuring the first deed, going more into detail as to what the alleged fraud consisted of. She charges that the defendant Benjamin Young, and his agent, falsely represented to plaintiff that she had no interest in the land, when in fact she owned one-half of it, but was ignorant and did not know it; that defendant paid nothing for the conveyances, but falsely represented to the county judge that he had paid all the agreed consideration to procure an approval. She alleges that she filed a protest against the approval of a deed dated March 4, 1909. and that the deed of that date was disapproved; that later the defendant induced her to sign an *67 instrument which they called an additional petition in protest of the deed of April 20, 1909, and the deed was approved without the plaintiff being present or neing examined by the court considering the same, or about the consideration agreed to be paid, and in fact the consideration has never been paid, and it was not known that the deed had toeen approved, but plaintiff was led to believe and understand that the deed had been disapproved. That the deed dated February 4, 1911, was procured from plaintiff on false representations that she had no interest in the land and that the land belonged to plaintiff’s children, and that the full consideration had been paid her children and the deed was being taken to clear the title; that she believed the representations, but afterwards found them to be false. That the defendants knew they were false when making them, but the truth of the matter was not known to the court or there would have been no approval. That the deed upon its face shows that it was a part of the original transaction in which the qnitclaim deed was taken, in that it seems to show that it was given for the purpose of correcting the quitclaim deed which conveyed only a life estate, while the latter deed purported to convey the fee title. That in truth and in fact the plaintiff inherited a one-half interest in the land. That the defendant secured the approval order by representing he was paying plaintiff $900, when in fact nothing was ever paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 793, 229 P. 604, 103 Okla. 65, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cloud-v-young-okla-1924.