Cone v. Harris

1924 OK 1004, 230 P. 721, 104 Okla. 114, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1924
Docket12288
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1004 (Cone v. Harris) 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
Cone v. Harris, 1924 OK 1004, 230 P. 721, 104 Okla. 114, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 369 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHAOKELPORD, C.

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

The petition of plaintiff was filed in the district court of Seminole county. Okla.. on the 25th day of January, 1918. By his petition he sought to set aside and vacate a purported judgment of the district court of Seminole county, a journal entry of which judgment was signed by the Honorable Tom D. McKeown, judge of the district court; and the property involved in the judgment is the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter (NE% of SP%) of section 11, township 7 north, range 5 east, in Seminole county. The plaintiff alleges in his petition that he was the owner of the property on January 12, 1914, and is still the owner thereof. That on the date above mentioned there was pending in the district court of Seminole county a suit styled “H. L. Cone versus G. G. Harris et al.” brought for the purpose of quieting the title to the land above described and other lands; that the plaintiff was represented by George C. Crump and the defendant Harris by J. A. Baker, and the case was numbered in the district court of Seminóle county as 2192; that a copy of the purported journal entry is attached and made a part of the petition ; that the journal entry was improperly, clandestinely and fraudulently obtained by the defendant Harris, and his attorney, J. A. Baker, in this wise: That on the date named the cause was pending and there was involved 120 acres of land, including the 40 acres above described, and a conference among the parties and their attorneys was had in which it was agreed and understood that judgment should be entered for the plaintiff (H. L. Cone) for 80 acres of the land; and that the case should be passed and continued as to the other 40 acres, the property involved here, until the law controlling as to that 40 acres (an Indian homestead allotment) should be better determined. That pursuant to the agreement judgment was entered as to the 80 acres (surplus allotment) and the cause continued as to the 40 acres, and no judgment was rendered. That on the 1st of December, 1914, the cause was still pending and undetermined, and on said date a notation was made by the judge upon his trial docket that the cause was not to be taken up for trial except upon request of counsel. That at some time not known to plaintiff, the attorney for G. G. Harris, the said J. A. Baker, fraudulently and without any notice presented a journal entry to the trial judge and induced him to sign it, quieting the title to the 80 acres in the plaintiff, but giving the defendant Harris the saidi 40 acres, and that the journal entry, in so far as it adjudged the ownership of the said 40 acres to be in the defendant was a fraud upon the court and upon the plaintiff, because no judgment had, in fact, been rendered affecting the said 40 acres; and thus far the purported journal entry was void and of no effect, and should be set aside and vacated. That on the 20th of November, 1916, the said J. A. Baker made a deed purporting to convey the said 40 acres to the defendant J. R. Thorne, .but that he took the conveyance without giving consideration therefor, and with full knowledge of the plaintiff’s rights, and the conveyance constitutes a cloud upon plaintiff's title. That the plaintiff did not know of the existence of the journal entry until long after it was signed, and just shortly before this action was filed, and that he is precluded from prosecuting appeal, and has no legal remedy. Plaintiff prays judgment for cancellation of the deed made to Thorne, and that the purported journal entry of judgment be canceled, set aside, and held for naught, and that case No. 2192 be reopened and placed upon the trial docket of the district court of Seminole county for final judgment as to said 40 acres.

The defendants demurred to the petition. The demurrer was overruled and the defendants answered by general denial.

This cause was called for trial on the 12th of October, 1920, and tried to the court. At the close of the cause the court made findings of fact. The court found that on the 12th of January, 1914, judgment was rendered in favor of H. L, Gone 'as to the 80 acres (surplus allotment) and indicated that Harris was entitled to the 40 acres (homestead). but would withhold judgment until some future time. That the trial judge signed the journal entry of judgment covering all the land, and instructed the attorney for Harris to withhold the filing thereof to a future time. That afterwards J. A. Baker gave notice to A. M. Fowler, as attorney for plaintiff, that the cause would be' called up on September 12, 1916, and Baker *116 and Howler were present at said time, and Baker obtained an order that the decree should be recorded. The court found there was no fraud. That the journal entry of judgment, with the order made to record it, constitutes a judgment as of January, 1914, and relates back to that date. Judgment .was entered for defendants denying the relief prayed for by plaintiff.

The plaintiff prosecutes appeal and presents his assignments of error under one proposition, as follows:

“That the testimony of both the plaintiff and defendant produced conclusive proof that the judgment attacked was obtained by a gross and palpable fraud committed upon the court and against the rights of this plaintiff in error, and that such purported judgment should have been set aside by the court below.”

The evidence upon the part of the plaintiff tends to show that case 2192, Cone v. Harris et al., was pending in the district court of Seminole county on about January 12, 1914, and the title to 120 acres of land, including the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of 11-7-5 was involved. That a conference was had by the attorneys for the respective parties in which it was agreed that judgment should be entered for plaintiff (Cone) for the 80 acres (Indian surplus allotment) and that the ease should be continued as to the 40 acres above described (Indian homestead allotment). That on about December 1, 1914, the cause was called to the attention of the court by counsel for plaintiff, in the presence of counsel for defendants, and a notation made upon the judge’s trial docket that “this cause not to be placed upon the trial docket until requested by counsel.” That a short time before the present suit was filed, or sometime in the latter part of 1917, there appeared of record in the court clerk’s journal a journal entry evidencing the rendition of a judgment on the 12th of January, 1914, in which it appeared that the defendant G. G. Harris ■had been adjudged to be the owner of the 40 acres, (homestead allotment). That there had been no adjudication as to the said 40 acres. The trial judge who presided in the district court of Seminole county, and who, it seems, signed the journal entry so recorded, in effect testified that while he was, at (hat time, of the opinion that the defendant (Harris) should recover the homestead 40 acres, he had never rendered any such judgment.

The evidence on the part of the defendant G. G. Harris tended to prove that sometime in March, 1914, the attorney for Harris had presented to. the trial judge the journal entry of which the plaintiff complains, and the judge signed it and told the attorney to withhold it from the journal until some future time; and that sometime in.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1004, 230 P. 721, 104 Okla. 114, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cone-v-harris-okla-1924.