Colby v. Eason

1923 OK 466, 217 P. 213, 91 Okla. 214, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 722
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1923
Docket11113
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1923 OK 466 (Colby v. Eason) 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
Colby v. Eason, 1923 OK 466, 217 P. 213, 91 Okla. 214, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 722 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

*215 Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This action was commenced on the Sth day of November, 1916, by Effie Brown Eason, defendant in error; as plaintiff below, filing her petition against J. H. Colby, Levi Colby, Lula O. Colby and Mrs. China Colby, plaintiffs in error, as defendants below, in the district court of McClain county, Okla.

The parties will be referred to in this. opinion as plaintiff and defendants, just as they appeared in the lower court.

Plaintiff alleges, in substance, that she was the owner of and had been in continuous peaceable possession of the north half of the southwest quarter of the souiheast, quarter, of section six, township seven north, and range four, west, being a portion of her allotment as a duly enrolled freedman of the Choctaw Nation; that on September 22, 1909, Lillie Brown made, executed, and delivered unto J. H. Colby a warranty deed pretending to convey the title to said J. H. Colby, which deed was recorded on page 361 of volume 19 in the recorder’s office of said county; that the said Lillie Brown at the time of the execution of the deed was not the owner of the land and could convey no title to the same; that the defendant J. H. Colby had, by warranty deed, attempted to convey the land to his wife, Lula O. Colby, which deed had been recorded in the recorder’s office of said county; that the said J. H. Colby held no title and could not convey any title thereto. That thereafter, ,T. H. Colby, joined by his wife, executed a mortgage upon the land to his brother, Levi Colby, which mortgage was recorded in the recorder’s office of McClain county, and that neither of the mortgagors held any title to the said land; and that, thereafter, the defendant Levi Colby assigned said mortgage to Mrs. China Colby, which assignment was recorded in the recorder’s office of McClain county, and that Levi Colby held no title to the land and could convey no interest of any kind in said land, and that all of the said above recorded instruments constituted a cloud upon the title of plaintiff, and asked that the same be removed, and alleged that there was a conspiracy on part of all the defendants to defraud plaintiff of her title to the above described lands, and prayed for actual damages in the sum of $200 and for exemplary damages in the sum of $2,500 and for a cancellation of all (recorded instruments above referred to and for judgment divesting title out of the defendants and vesting title in the plaintiff and for general equitable relief.

Thereafter, defendant Mrs. China Colby filed her answer and cross-petition, admit ting the execution of all the instrumenta complained of, and alleging she purchased the mortgage in good faith for an adequate consideration, without notice or knowledge that there existed any defense to said i:i struments, and that she was the owner and holder of the same, and further alleged that on February 12, 1913. plaintiff deeded tin-land described to Lillie Brown, and that thereupon, by operation of law the title of said Lillie Brown became ivested in J. H. Colby and his grantees: and in her cross petition declared upon her note and mortgage and asked for judgment in the sum of $256 and interest, $50 attorney fees, the amount of her debt and that she be declared to have a first mortgage lien, upon the premises described in the plaintiff’s petition aiid for a foreclosure on said mortgage.

Defendants J. H. Colby, Levi Colby, and Lula O. Colby, in tdieir answer to cross-petition of Mrs. China Colby, admit the iru.b of the allegafions of said cross-peti tion, and Lula O. Colby, in her answer filed on the same day and date, admitted the execution of all the instruments mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and alleged that they were made for a good and valuable consideration and fot an honest and legitimate purpose and without any intention or purpose of cheating or defrauding any one, and that defendant- «was the owner of the lands and premises and entitled to the possession of Hie same, and that plaintiff unlawfully detained possession of the same and had do tained the same for the past two years to her damage in the sum of $200, and that-plaintiff on the 12th day of February, 1913, sold and conveyed said premises to Lillie Brown and that -she became the owner of said land by reason of mesne conveyance of the said Lillie Brown, and prayed judgment for the possession and damages in the sum of $200 and costs.

Thereafter, plaintiff filed her reply to the answer of Lula O. Colby, which denied all new matter and denied that she ever executed and delivered a deed to the defendant, Lula O. Colby or J. H. Colby, or ever io-ceived any consideration from them, or hat they were entitled to possession or damages against her, and alleged that she did execute a deed on February 12, 1913, to her sister, Lillie Brown, but never delivered posession of the lands and that the same ¡was never really sold to Lillie Brown, but that Lillie Brown and her mother, Susan Brown, and herself applied to a farm loan company for a farm loan upon 60 acres of land, of which *216 20 acres was held 'by each of ithe said parties, and that the agent of said loan company asked that they place the total acreage in the name of Lillie Brown and execute a mortgage thereon to the loan company and then reconvey her land back to this plaintiff, and that this was after-wards abandoned and Lillie Brown recon-yeyed the lands back to this plaintiff, and that she had always been in truth and fact the owner of and in possession of said land; and on February 11, 1918, plaintiff filed her reply to the reply of defendant Lula O. Colby and cross-petition of Mrs. China Colby, setting up the same state of facts as contained in her reply to the answer of Lula O. Colby.

On the 23rd day of June, 1919, the cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court made his findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants, canceling the deeds and mortgages as prayed for in plaintiff’s petition.

Motion for new trial was filed and overruled and exceptions saved.

On the 8th day of July, 1919, there were filed the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, which are in words and figures as follows, to wit:

“The petition in this case was filed November 8, 1916, to cancel the deeds and mortgages set out in plaintiff’s petition. Defendants filed their answer and cross-petition on the 26th of February, 1917. The court finds Effie Brown is twenty-five years of age and married; that her mother was Susan Brown and Lillie Brown is her sister; that plaintiff, Effie Brown Eason, made and executed a deed to the land in question to Lillie Brown February 12, 1913, which was filed in the office of the register of deeds February 18, 1913, and on September 2-2, 1909, Lillie Brown executed a deed to the land in question to the defendant, J. SI. Colby; that on November 18, 1911, J. H. Colby' executed a deed tp the land in question to Lula 0- Colby, which was filed in the register of deeds office November 20, 1911; that on April 24, 1913, a mortgage was executed on said land by J. H. Colby and Lula O. Colby, his wife, to Levi Colby, which mortgage was assigned by Levi Colby to Chiná Colby September 29, 1914, for a consideration of $250. The court finds that on the 27th day of October, 1914, in cases numbered 1129 and 1130, which were consolidated, that Lillie Brown obtained a judgment against J. H. Colby canceling the deed to the lands in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 466, 217 P. 213, 91 Okla. 214, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colby-v-eason-okla-1923.