Dardenne v. Daniels

1936 OK 161, 56 P.2d 793, 176 Okla. 557, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1936
DocketNo. 25749.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1936 OK 161 (Dardenne v. Daniels) 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
Dardenne v. Daniels, 1936 OK 161, 56 P.2d 793, 176 Okla. 557, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 262 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

There is much discussion of many propositions in this appeal, but after prolonged study of the case we find that it is only necessary to determine whether the order appealed from should be sustained on the doctrine of laches. With that idea in mind, we make the following statement of only the necessary facts in such a way as to give the plaintiff in error.the benefit of every doubt on those issues which are disputed :

On November 4, 1920, the plaintiff (plaintiff in error here) filed suit in the district court against J. A. Daniels, Scott A. Year-gain, J. S. Cheyne, and two other parties, praying that title to certain land previously conveyed by plaintiff he quieted in him, and also setting forth a cause of action in ejectment. The petition was founded on an allegation of inalienability of the land, with no charge of fraud or claim of rescission.

To that petition the defendants answered, pleading title in them under deed executed by the plaintiff after restrictions against the alienation of the land had been removed. The answer also attached authenticated copies of the orders of the Department of the Interior removing the restriction against the alienation and certifying competency of plaintiff to alienate his land and conduct his own business affairs, both of which antedated the deed. No Jfeply was filed by the plaintiff, and thus the new matter alleged in said answer stood admitted by the pleadings.

On March 26, 1921, a stipulation for dismissal and judgment for defendants was filed by the plaintiff and the defendants Scott A. Yeargain and J. S. Cheyne, signed by one of plaintiff’s two attorneys. On March 30, 1921, a journal entry of judgment upon said stipulation was filed, dismissing the action with prejudice as to the defendants Yeargain and Cheyne, and decreeing the title to be in said defendants, and quieting their title thereto as against plaintiff. Thereafter, on April lt 1921, a stipulation was filed by plaintiff personally, and the defendant Daniels personally, agreeing that the action be dismissed with prejudice as to that defendant.

On August 27, 1921, the other attorney of plaintiff returned from absent confinement in a hospital and filed a petition to vacate the above judgment of March 30, 1921 (based on the stipulation), in which it was alleged that the first attorney was not authorized to enter into the stipulation, and that the stipulation of plaintiff with defendant Daniels was obtained by fraud and undue influence. This opinion assumes, for the purpose of reasoning, that said stipulation was obtained by fraud and that the first stipulation was filed without authority. Nevertheless, plaintiff did file the petition to vacate the judgment on August 27, 1921. No reference was made, in that petition, to the original cause of action and there is no question of inalienability or restriction before us. Thu¿ said petition to vacate, filed August 27, 1921, is the petition which should have been, and was not, prosecuted with diligence. The defendants filed their separate answ-ers to that petition to vacate, in which they alleged that the second attorney knew of the judgment having been entered, and that after its rendition and prior to the filing of petition to vacate, and with full knowledge of the facts, he ratified and affirmed the stipulation by himself filing a motion to correct the name of a coplaintiff and obtaining an order to that effect. No reply was filed by plaintiff to the defendants’ answers to the petition to vacate.

On November 24, 1922, the plaintiff was declared incompetent and. a guardian was appointed. On February 16, 1923, the plaintiff, by and through his newly appointed guardian, filed a separate and independent suit in equity in the same district court against the same defendants for recovery of the land, wherein he alleged fraud and undue influence in the obtaining of the deed, and also that he was mentally incompetent on the date of the deed by reason of excessive use of alcoholic liquors, and prayed for cancellation of the deed. The petition in that ease asked also that it be consolidated with the petition to vacate the judgment in this case. The court sustained a demurrer to the petition, and upon appeal this court *559 affirmed tliat judgment, bolding that plaintiff could not maintain an independent suit to reach the same end as that sought by the petition to vacate in this action. Dardenne v. Daniels, 101 Okla. 201, 225 P. 152.

Now begins the present controversy. On June 26, 1933, almost twelve years after the filing of the petition to vacate the judgment on the ground of fraud, and more than nine years after this court affirmed the sustaining of the demurrer in the second suit referred to above, plaintiff by his guardian filed a “supplemental petition” herein, asking to set aside the original judgment and to cancel all conveyances made by the original defendants to third parties since the rendition of the original judgment of March 30, 1921. The supplemental petition made all those persons and companies parties defendant who had acquired any interest in the land during the twelve-year period. In the meantime two of the original parties defendant. Oheyne and Yeargain, had died. Thereafter the plaintiff filed a “second supplemental petition” making additional parties defendant and also an amendment to the first “supplemental petition.” The defendants then filed a motion to strike these pleadings, and the trial court sustained that motion. It is this order, striking the supplemental petition, the amendment thereto, and the second supplemental petition, from which the plaintiff appeals. The defendants point out that on September 3. 1923, there was entered in the record of the original case, upon what is called the minute book, an entry to the effect that the motion to vacate the judgment was heard and overruled and the p^intiff allowed an exception. The plaintiff denies that any such ruling was ever made, and contends that the minute was entered on the records through mistake or fraud. For the purpose of this decision we assume (without deciding) that the contentions of the plaintiff in this respect are correct, and that the matter was not in fact adjudicated on September 3, 1923, but that on June 26, 1933, when the plaintiff filed the supplemental petition, the original petition to vacate was still pending.

These facts are outstanding: (1) The p'aintiff. and later he and his guardian, permitted his petition to vacate to grow stale in the files of the court for a period of twelve years, the last nine years of said delay having been passed idly by after a reminder from this court in Dardenne v. Daniels, supra, that relief was obtainable under the petition to vacate in the instant ease; (2) during this twelve-year delay two of the original defendants have died, and the contradiction of a large part of the evidence upon which plaintiff bases his claim of fraud would be impossible for the present defendants, due to the deaths of those parties who were important actors in the original transactions; (3) during this unusual delay the intervening rights of a great number of third parties have come into the case. The list of such third parties, who have acquired vapious kinds of interests, mining and otherwise, covers many pages of the record. The (plaintiff says that these third parties are not innocent purchasers due to the fact that they had constructive notice by pendency of suit. Nevertheless, plaintiff’s delay has removed from this world two of the witnesses by whom those defendants’ defense could possibly have been established.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 161, 56 P.2d 793, 176 Okla. 557, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dardenne-v-daniels-okla-1936.