Cox v. Kelley

1956 OK 72, 295 P.2d 1061, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 28, 1956
Docket36811
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1956 OK 72 (Cox v. Kelley) 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
Cox v. Kelley, 1956 OK 72, 295 P.2d 1061, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 432 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

HUNT, Justice.

The defendant in error, L. P. Kelley, instituted this action against the plaintiffs in error, Eddie Cox and John Allen Phillips, II, on May 1, 1953, to quiet title to one hundred sixty acres of land in Atoka County, and alleged in his petition that he was the owner, in possession, and that the defendants claim some adverse right, title or interest in and to the land and pray judgment quieting his title thereto as against the claims of the defendants.' The defendants, Cox and Phillips, filed a joint answer and cross petition wherein they deny that the plaintiff was in possession of the land or ever had been, and allege that they were *1063 in the actual possession and that the defendant, Eddie Cox, had been in possession thereof for a long time prior to the commencement of the action, and deny that plaintiff had any right, title or interest in the real estate, and further allege that Eddie Cox is the owner in fee simple of the land, except an undivided twenty acre mineral interest, which Cox had conveyed to Phillips, and allege that the real estate was conveyed by segregated coal and asphalt land patent to Winnie Selsor in 1920, pursuant to her purchase thereof at public sale, which patent was filed and recorded on October 8, 1941; that thereafter, on November 18, 1950, Winnie Selsor conveyed the real estate to Eddie Cox by deed, which was recorded on November 22, 1950. By cross petition the said defendants • allege that L. M. Thompson, who was made a party to the action, claimed some adverse title to the land, which constituted a cloud upon the title of the defendants, .and further allege that the plaintiff Kelley claimed title to the land under a purported resale tax deed issued by the County Treasurer to the Board of County Commissioners under date of May 21, 1940, and by a deed issued by the Board of County Commissioners to L. P. Kelley on July 23, 1940; that plaintiff never obtained possession of the- real estate and that his claim thereto is barred by the five-year statute of limitation, subdivision (3) of Section 93, Title 12 O.S.1951, that the defendants and their predecessor in title have been at all times since the issuance of the purported resale tax deed in the continuous, actual, exclusive and adverse possession of the real estate, that the resale deed is void because the real estate was advertised and sold at resale for taxes, a portion of which were not due and delinquent at the time of, the first’ publication of the notice of tax sale, that the resale was based on an original sale, of which there was not sufficient notice; that the assessments for.taxation of the land for several years upon which resale was based were null and void and the defendant Cox tendered payment of all taxes, penalties and costs, which is required in order to redeem the land from the purported sale. The defendants prayed that the title to the real estate be decreed in them according to their respective interests, and that the purported resale tax deed and county deed under which plaintiff claims title be can-celled, also the 1953 lease to.L. M. Thompson. The plaintiff Kelley filed reply to the answer and cross petition of the defendants, Cox and Phillips, denying the allegations thereof, and further alleges that the deed executed by Winnie Selsor to Eddie Cox on November 18, 1950 conveyed no title to the land because the grantor was a full blood Creek Indian and the land was restricted land and deed was never approved by the County Court nor the Secretary of the Interior, and that whatever title and interest Winnie Selsor may have had in the land was cancelled by the resale of the land for taxes on May 13, 1940, and the resale deed issued pursuant thereto, and was further void because at the time of the execution of the deed by the grantor, Winnie Selsor, the plaintiff Kelley was in actual peaceable and adverse possession of the land and the said grantor had not been in the actual or constructive possession thereof since May 13, 1940 to November 18, 1950, and had not leased or demanded any rents, revenue or profits from the land for more than twelve months prior to the execution of the deed to Eddie Cox and the deed was champertous and void, and the defendant Cox and his grantee have no right to maintain their cross action.

Plaintiff further alleged that he is the owner and in possession of the land and has been since July 23, 1940, when deed was issued by the Board of County Commissioners to him, that he has been in the actual, constructive, peaceable, adverse possession of the land since the date of the execution and recording of the deed for a period of more than five years, and that after the expiration of five years from the recording of the deed the plaintiff’s title became absolute and plaintiff pleads the five-year statute of limitation, Title 12 O.S.1951 § 93, paragraphs (3) and (6). Plaintiff denied the right of the defendant Cox to redeem the land and prayed that the title to the land be quieted in him as against the claims of the defendants.

Application was filed by the defendants, Cox and Phillips, to disqualify the District *1064 Judge on the ground of bias and prejudice; based on acts and alleged statements by the court concerning the defendant Cox, which application was overruled.

On motion of plaintiff the County Treasurer and Board of County Commissioners of Atoka County were made parties defendant in the action and the Treasurer and Board of County Commissioners answered by general denial and claimed a lien on the land for all taxes assessed or assessable thereon since May 13, 1940.

The record shows that Winnie Selsor was also made a party to the action and served with summons, but filed no pleading. Upon a trial of the issues judgment was entered for the plaintiff, L. P. Kelley, quieting title to the land in him and barring the defendants from claiming or asserting any right, title or interest in the land.

Findings of fact, chiefly in accord with the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, his reply and answer to the defendants’ answer and cross petition, were made by the trial court, the substance thereof being in part as follows.: The court, found that L. P. Kelley purchased the land by a deed from Atoka County on the 23rd day of July, 1940, which deed was recorded in the office of the County Clerk' on the same date as its execution; that the said Kelley went,into possession of the described property by and through Herman Johnson, his agent, and has maintained continuous open, notorious and adverse possession ever since; that the five-year statute of limitation is applicable in this case and does apply, that the quit claim deed executed by Winnie Selsor to Eddie Cox on November 18, 1950, and duly recorded, is champertous and void as to the defendant.in error Kelley; that Eddie Cox is not now and has never been in possession of the described property, that Winnie Sel-sor. never rented the lands and received no rents nor profits at any time since the land was purchased by her, that she paid no taxes on the land for any of the years in which it was sold for taxes, that is, from 1924 to the time of the deed from Atoka County to L. P. Kelley; that the deed from Winnie Sel-sor to Eddie Cox was champertous because the grantor had never been, in possession of the land at the' time of the execution of the deed. The defendants, Eddie Cox and John Allen Phillips II, filed motion for new trial,- which was -overruled, and they appealed. •

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 72, 295 P.2d 1061, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-kelley-okla-1956.