Craig v. Unknown Heirs, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Trustees & Assigns, Immediate & Remote, of Craig

1961 OK 2, 358 P.2d 835, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1961
Docket38878, 38879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1961 OK 2 (Craig v. Unknown Heirs, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Trustees & Assigns, Immediate & Remote, of Craig) 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
Craig v. Unknown Heirs, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Trustees & Assigns, Immediate & Remote, of Craig, 1961 OK 2, 358 P.2d 835, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 356 (Okla. 1961).

Opinions

BLACKBIRD, Vice Chief Justice.

This appeal involves a controversy concerning the title and right to possession of one acre of land with a school house, or building, and teacherage thereon, in a rural community of Cleveland County, known as “Independence.”

Before establishment of the school thereon, the acre of land was conveyed by its owners Samuel B. and Caroline G. Craig to “The Trustees of School District No. 37 of Cleveland Co., Oklahoma, and Their Successors in Office” by general warranty deed executed and delivered in 1903. Immediately following the legal description of said acre in the deed, is the following:

“To Be used for a School House site only and when it is used for any other purpose it is to Revert back to the grantors herein or their heirs and assigns.”

After the subject land had been used as a “School House site” by District No. 37 for many years, it was deemed necessary, in [837]*8371957, to “disorganize” said district and annex the northern part to Norman Independent District No. 29 (1-29), and the southern part to Noble’s District No. 40 (1-40). The situation, as described by the witness, Billy W. Marlar, was as follows:

“ * * * It seems as though the State passed a law that we had to have fifteen pupils at that time to maintain our school for State aid, we only had thirteen the previous year which would not qualify us for State aid for a school the coming year, so we had to, as I understand it at the time, we would automatically be transferred to the Noble District if we just set there and never done anything. * * * as president of the School Board, I called a special meeting of the community and we had * * * possibly forty people present of the community that was interested in the school building and what was going to happen to their children, where they were going to school at. And we discovered the situation and we come up with the idea that we would divide the school district, approximately the southern half would go to Noble and the northern half would go into Norman * * * and so we set it up that way and held our election. * * * ”

The County Superintendent’s order of annexation, in accord with the results of the above-mentioned election was made March 29th, 1957, but classes continued on the premises involved until the end of the term in May of that year. During that school term the teacherage was occupied by tenants paying rent to the school board of District 37. About the end of said term, however, they moved to other quarters more to their liking, and in the latter part of the same month (May, 1957) various property owners and residents in the Independence community (that had comprised said District 37) formed a corporation named: “Independence Community Corporation”. Said corporation’s purposes, as described in its articles of incorporation, were as follows:

“ * * * those intended by the Statutes of the State of Oklahoma with respect to religious, educational and benevolent corporations, more specifically, to acquire Independence School teacherage located on an acre in the Southeast corner of Section 2, Township 8 North, Range 2 WIM, Cleveland County, Oklahoma, on RFD 2, out of Norman, Oklahoma, the use of the School having been discontinued for school purposes, together with the Independence Cemetery located about an eighth of a mile South of the School in the Northwest corner of Section 12, in said Township; and in connection therewith to carry on the normal community activities under such rules and regulations as shall be adopted from time to time by the members of the Corporation and its Board of Directors; such activities to include non-denominational religious activities, school alumni activities, home demonstration activities, singing clubs, recreational groups (recreation as used here is intended to include supervised dancing), and in general such community activities as will preserve and perpetuate the identity of the locality, the interest of the alumni of such School in the neighborhood and as will generally foster and perpetuate good will and a neighborly feeling throughout the community; all in the interest of people residing in the former Independence School District, their friends, neighbors and guests, and of the alumni of said School wherever they may be.” (Emphasis ours).

Thereafter, apparently with the knowledge of, and/or without protest from, the Superintendent of District 29 (Norman), the above-named new corporation assumed possession and control of the property, placing locks on the school house, erecting a sign bearing its name on the building, renting the teacherage to a new tenant, and insuring the property in its name. During the year 1958, said corporation used, or permitted the school house to be used for vari[838]*838ous activities of individuals or organizations in the community of the nature mentioned in its articles of incorporation, except dancing, together with Sunday School of the Nazarene Church, some funerals, and both regular and special meetings of the corporation. Also, during the same year, when “about forty seats” were removed from Jefferson School (apparently a school in the City of Norman) during its remodeling or rebuilding, said seats were transported to, and now remain stored in, said school house.

In August, 1958, after the Independence Community Corporation had accumulated a balance of more than $200 in net income from the uses it had been making of the subject property, including pie suppers, and had graveled the road to the premises, and was in the process of repairing or replacing “warped” sheet rock in the teacherage to make it “more liveable” for a prospective new tenant, and Samuel and Caroline Craig were both dead, their heir, Willard Craig, and other heirs of said deceased grantors, went upon and occupied the premises, in March, 1959, tearing down the Independence Community Corporation sign, posting “keep out” signs on it, and asserting and enjoying exclusive possession of the premises.

Soon afterward, in the same month, the Independence Community Corporation, as plaintiff, instituted an action in forcible entry and detainer against Willard Craig and the other occupying Craig heirs, as defendants, in one of Cleveland County’s Justice of the Peace Courts. Upon trial of said cause, the Justice of the Peace rendered judgment for the plaintiff corporation. Defendants thereafter appealed the case to the District Court as its Cause No. 18335.

Shortly thereafter, the Craig heirs, as plaintiffs, instituted a quiet title action against Independence Community Corporation, Independent School Districts No. 29 and 40 of Cleveland County, and the unknown heirs, executors, etc., of Samuel B. and Caroline G. Craig, deceased, as defendants, said action being docketed as District Court Cause No. 18337. In their petition, said plaintiffs alleged, in substance, among other things, that use of the subject acre of land as a school house site was abandoned in 1957, and that thereupon the “ * * * real property automatically reverted * * * ” to them, as heirs of Samuel and Caroline Craig, deceased. In the petition’s prayer, plaintiffs asked the court to decree, among other things, that the defendant corporation and school districts “ * * * have no right, title, interest or estate in and to said property and premises.’1 (Emphasis ours).

In its answer, the defendant corporation asserted no claim of title to

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1961 OK 2, 358 P.2d 835, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-unknown-heirs-executors-administrators-devisees-trustees-okla-1961.