Coon v. Jackson

1931 OK 435, 6 P.2d 811, 154 Okla. 97, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 495
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 14, 1931
Docket20149
StatusPublished

This text of 1931 OK 435 (Coon v. Jackson) 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
Coon v. Jackson, 1931 OK 435, 6 P.2d 811, 154 Okla. 97, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 495 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

Two causes of action are consolidated herein, involving the right of inheritance of Jonas Jackson, defendant in error, to the homestead and surplus portions of the allotment of John Ereeman, deceased, a full-blood Choctaw Indian. This appeal comes from the district court of Grady county, Okla. On May 10, 1923, the first cause of action, styled, Jonas Jackson v. O. D. Coon, Minnie Coon, and Alcorn Oil Company, Defendants, was filed in said court under No. 7734, and the second cause, being styled, Jonas Jackson v. Joe Davis, Pittsburg Mortgage Investment Company, a Corporation, and Mary Lloyd, was filed in said court under No. 7735: The same were consolidated in said court under No. 7734, and are identical, except that a separate tract of land in each action is sought to be recovered by defendant in error.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court. Jonas Jackson, defendant in error, as plaintiff, and O. D. Coon, Minnie Coon, Alcorn Oil Company, Joe Davis, Pittsburg Mortgage Investment Company, and Mary Lloyd, plaintiffs in error, as defendants. The consolidated cause was tried in the district court of said county, on the 15th of January, 1925, before a jury, and the jury returned a verdict for the defendants, and thereafter, the plaintiff, Jonas Jackson, prosecuted his appeal to the Supreme Court of this state, and this court, in an opinion under date of June 1, 1926, reversed the judgment of the trial court, and remanded the action for further proceedings.

The action was an action in ejectment. The plaintiff alleged that he was a citizen by. blood of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians, and that he was the owner of and entitled to the premises in question, by inheritance, being the sole heir of said John Freeman, deceased, the allottee, whose allotment was east at the time of his death, June, 1907, prior to statehood, under chapter 49 of Mansfield’s Digest. The defendants contended that said decedent died subsequent to statehood, and that the devolution of said estate was governed by the laws of the state of Oklahoma. This court, in its opinion, stated, in/part, as follows:

“We have carefully examined all of the evidence in this case, and we fail to find any competent evidence to support the findings and judgment of the trial court, but, on the contrary, the evidence overwhelmingly and conclusively shows that decedent died prior to statehood.”

After discussing the evidence, this court concluded in its opinion as follows:

“* * * And there is no evidence to support the finding that the decedent died subsequent to statehood. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in keeping with the views herein expressed.”

This opinion is reported in 118 Okla. 221, 247 Pac. 27. The mandate was issued on the 21st of June, 1926, and contains the following provisions:

“Now, therefore, you are hereby commanded to cause such reversal to show of record in your court, and to issue such process and to take such other and further action as may be in accord with right and justice in said opinion.”

On June 28, 1926, the plaintiff, Jonas Jackson, filed his motion in the district court of Grady county to spread said mandate of record and to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants.

The defendants, on October 18, 1926, served plaintiff with a notice to take depositions of sundry witnesses before a notary public, on the 23rd of October, 1926, in the town of Pauls Valley, Garvin county, Okla., to be used as evidence in the trial of said cause, at which time the deposition of Sealey James, the mother of John Freeman, the deceased child of said Sealey James and George Freeman, deceased, was taken. She testified that she had been living during the past 18 years at Pauls Valley, Okla.; that her said husband, George Freeman, died three or four weeks before her said son, John Freeman, died, and that John Freeman died in June, 1908.

The testimony of W. J. Thompson, a resident of Pauls Valley for 50 years, was also *99 taken, relative to a trip that lie made to the Choctaw Nation in February, 1908, to get Sealey James and her family to move to Garvin county. He testified that at that time John. Freejman wals living; that, in October of the same year, after receiving a letter from Sealey James, he returned to the Choctaw Nation, and moved Mrs. James and her family to Pauls Valley; that he entered the expenses of the trip in a small book which shows an expense of $7.20 made in October, 1908; that after Sealey James had moved to Garvin county, he paid for the funeral expenses of John Freeman, deceased.

In the original trial, the defendants offered no evidence on the date of the death of said John Freeman, but relied upon the evidence offered by the plaintiff. The depositions offered on behalf of defendants included the testimony of different witnesses than those who testified at the former trial, and this new evidence is materially and substantially different from that submitted by plaintiff on the former trial, relative to the time of the death of John Freeman.

On the 21st of April, 1928, said defendants filed, in said court, their response to motion of plaintiff for judgment on the mandate, setting forth in said motion the testimony of the aforesaid witnesses relative to the time of the death of John Freeman, ,The determination of the time of the death of said John Freeman is decisive of the issues in the ease. If he died prior to statehood, the devolution of the allotment cast under chapter 49, secs. 2522-2545) Mansfield’s Digest of Arkansas. If he died subsequent to statehood, the same is cast under the successsion statutes of Oklahoma. The trial court sustained the motion of the plaintiff for a judgment against said defendants upon said mandate.

The opinion of this court reversed the former judgment of the trial court, and remanded the same for further proceedings.

In the case of McIntosh v. Lynch, 93 Okla. 174, 220 Pac. 367, this court said:

“Where a cause is reversed and remanded by the Supreme Court, with directions to the trial court to take such other and further proceedings in the matter as shall accord with said Supreme Court opinion, it stands in the court below the same as if no trial had been had. Pleadings could be amended, supplementary pleadings filed, and new issues formed under proper restrictions.”

34 Corpus Juris, 774, states:

“As a general rule, 'the judgment of an appellate court, reversing a judgment, decree, or order of a trial court does not purport to be final or to pass upon the merits of the controversy, and hence does not operate as res judicata, but leaves the parties in the same position as they were before the judgment of the lower court was rendered.”

2 Freeman on Judgments (5 Ed.) p. 2416, sec. 1167, states as follows:

“The reversal of a judgment by any competent authority restores the parties litigant to the same condition in which they were prior to its rendition. The judgment reversed becomes mere waste paper; and the parties to it are allowed to proceed in the court below to obtain a ‘final determination of their right’ in the same manner and to the same extent as if their cause had never been heard or decided by any court.”

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 435, 6 P.2d 811, 154 Okla. 97, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coon-v-jackson-okla-1931.