Crist v. Cosby

1902 OK 32, 69 P. 885, 11 Okla. 635, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1902 OK 32 (Crist v. Cosby) 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
Crist v. Cosby, 1902 OK 32, 69 P. 885, 11 Okla. 635, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 30 (Okla. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

PaNOOAst, J.:

On the 29th day of June, 1900, the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, commenced her action in the district court of Canadian county, and obtained a temporary order of injunction from the probate court of that county, the petition in the case, omitting the caption, being as follows :

“1. That she is, and for more than four years last has been, an actual resident of the county of Canadian. That she settled with her husband, one M. Thomas, in the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indian reservation, on the opening of said reservation for settlement in 1892, and for more than five years thereafter resided upon said land with her husband; that said M. Thomas, who made valuable improvements thereon and cultivated the same, and the same, during all of said time, was the homestead of said M. Thomas, and this plaintiff, his wife. The said land was described as follows; to-wit: The S. E. quarter of section 7, township 11, range 7, west I. M., in Canadian county, O. T. and is the same land referred to in the levy of a certain execution now in the hands of the defendant Cosby, hereinafter more specifically referred to.
“2. Plaintiff further alleges that on or about the 20th day of April, 1898, the said-Thomas departed this life, leaving this plaintiff and Jacob Thomas; Roy Thomas and Stella Thomas, his minor children residents upon said land. That thereafter, to-wit, on or about the 7th day of June, 1900, plaintiff united in marriage with W. H. Crist, who is now her husband, and the plaintiff says that she is the same person described in the said execution in the hands of the defendant Cosby referred to.
*637 “3. The plaintiff further alleges that on or about the first clay of May, 1898, she was induced to sign a certain paper, which she was led. to believe and did believe, was an application for life insurance, but which afterwards proved to be a promissory note for the sum of eighty eight dollars and eighty cents ($88.80); that the note was payable to the order of one R. M. Cohen, according to her best recollection and belief, the said Cohen being then and there solicitor for a life insurance company, and the said notes were given by plaintiff in consideration of certain life insurance then and there contracted for through the said Cohen, but which this plaintiff never received or accepted, and which was never issued to her. That the said Cohen soon thereafter departed from the county of Canadian, and that plaintiff has never had any knowledge of his 'whereabouts since his departure.
"4. Plaintiff further alleges that the said Andrew King-kade, mentioned in exhibit ‘A.’ hereto attached, was also a life insurance agent and co-partner with the said Cohen in the said •transaction, but plaintiff avers that he was not a payee nor party to said promissory note; that said Kingkade is a resident, or was thereafter a resident, in the county of Cleveland, residing in the city of Norman, in said county.’
5. Plaintiff further alleges that thereafter plaintiff received a summons from the probate judge in the county of Cleveland, purporting to summon the plaitniff to appear in an action before said probate judge against this plaintiff for the recovery of the amount in said note, that the said summons required the appearance of the plaintiff before said judge to answer on the 24th day of August, 1899, that the same was not served on plaintiff until the 28th day of August, 1899, and such was the only service of her in said case, and the said Andrew Kingkade and the said Cohen, were made co-defendants in the said action against the plaintiff; and the plaintiff avers, from information and belief, that the making of the said Andrew Kingkade defendant in the said proceedings in the said action before the said probate judge was for the single and only purpose of making excuse and pretense to issue a *638 summons to the county'1 of Canadian by the said probate judge in the said proceedings. That said Kingkade was not a party to said note, but plaintiff says that he was the agent of the said •— - insurance company. And plaintiff says that the summons issued by the said probate judge was directed to the sheriff of Canadian county, wherein this plaintiff was found, and was served therein at the time and in the manner as heretofore stated. That no service was had upon Ihe said Kingkade, nor upon either of the said co-defendants in the county of Cleveland, nor elsewhere. That the said probate judge, notwithstanding there was no summons served upon the said Kingkade in the county of Cleveland, nor upon the said Cohen in the said county, proceeded to render judgment in said cause against this plaintiff, and plaintiff hereto attaches a copy of the judgment so then and there entered, and a transcript thereof is filed with the district clerk in and for the county of Canadian, being the same transcript upon which the execution hereinafter referred to was issued, and marks the same exhibit fA/ and makes the same a part of this petition.
“6. Plaintiff further alleges that the said defendant, A. A. Cosby, is the sheriff of Canadian county, Oklahoma, and that such sheriff received the execution issued upon said transcript, and by virtue of said execution has made a levy upon certain property, and has advertised the same, and is about to sell said property, and unless restrained will sell the same. Said property is described as follows, to-wit: One dwelling house and barn and all other buildings located on the S.E. 1-f of section (7) seven, township (11) eleven, range (7) seven, west I. M., in Canadian county, O. T. Also the undivided one-third interest in all growing crops located upon the above described land, which were levied upon to satisfy said judgment.
“7. Plaintiff further says that the levy upon said property is made upon the assumption that said property belongs to this plaintiff, when in truth and fact plaintiff is not the owner of said property, nor any part thereof in her own right; *639 that whatever interest she has therein is in the nature of a fiduciary interest. That the improvements referred to upon said land are permanent and lasting improvements, and are a part of said real estate, and, as such, are not subject to levy as the property of this plaintiff. That the title to the land upon which said improvements are located, is still in the government of the United States, though the heirs of the said Thomas, deceased, have a right to acquire title thereto under the laws of the United States, by making the requisite proofs of said settlement and improvements by said Thomas. That the said one-third interest to the said crop of wheat referred to in said levy, is the property belonging to the said heirs of the said Thomas, deceased, and is not the personal property of this plaintiff, but her only interest in and to said wheat is as the administratrix of the said Thomas, and that her interests, if any such be had, is joint with the heirs of the said Thomas, deceased, and not a several and distinct interest.
“8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1902 OK 32, 69 P. 885, 11 Okla. 635, 1902 Okla. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crist-v-cosby-okla-1902.