Eaves v. Busby

268 P.2d 904
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1954
Docket35557
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 268 P.2d 904 (Eaves v. Busby) 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
Eaves v. Busby, 268 P.2d 904 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

The petition substantially alleges that Lucy J. Huddleston, Choctaw by blood, Roll No. 15013, was allotted 320 acres of the land described and located in Pontotoc County, Oklahoma. Lucy married J. B. Roberson. She died on the 21st day of November, 1917, intestate, possessed of said land. Her heirs were her husband, J. B. Roberson, and their three children, namely: Geneva Pauline Dennis, James Herbert Roberson, and William Brice Roberson. Her husband inherited an undivided %rd interest and the children inherited an undivided %ths interest each in the land here involved.

J. B. Roberson died on December 30, 1943, intestate, his surviving heirs being Geneva, James, William, and the plaintiff, Hope V. Eaves, and each heir inherited an undivided ¼⅛ interest in the estate of J. B. Roberson, deceased. Whether Hope is the daughter of J. B. Roberson, deceased, by a subsequent marriage, is evidently a matter of controversy.

On August 21, 1944, Geneva, joined by her husband, Jack Dennis, the administrator of the estate of J. B. Roberson, deceased, and by James, deeded certain of the described land to the defendant, Orel Busby; that on September 12, 1944, William deeded a portion of the described land to Orel Busby. Defendants, other, than Busby, are alleged to claim an interest under conveyances from other heirs of J. B. Roberson, deceased, some with and others without knowledge of plaintiff’s asserted right to an undivided ⅛⅛ interest and certain mineral interests in the land described.

That each enumerated conveyance is void as to the plaintiff for'the following reasons: That on October 20, 1944, the County Court of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma,' entered its order approving the final account, and decree of distribution in probate case No. 4130, entitled, “In the Matter of the Estate of James Banks Roberson, deceased.” That the plaintiff is not named in said proceedings as an heir of J. B. Roberson, deceased, and the estate was distributed to Geneva, James and William to the exclusion of the plaintiff; thát she was not given notice of said proceedings and that the heirs named knew that she' was their half-sister and as such was entitled to an inherited interest in the estate. It is generally alleged that the administrator of the estate and the three named children of J. B. Roberson, deceased, agreed among themselves that they would not notify plaintiff of said probate proceedings although they knew she was an heir- and knew that she lived in Oakland, California.; that pursuant to said agreement .they filed a petition in the County Court of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, in said Cause No. 4130, for the appointment of Jack Dennis, the husband of Geneva, as administrator and represented to the court that the three named children of J. B. Roberson, deceased', were his sole’ heirs and cáused the final-order of heirship and distribution to be made by the County Court in fraud of plaintiff’s interest in the estate. Plaintiff learned of said alleged fraud on September 20, 1946, and brought the present action on the 26th day of August, 1948. Plaintiff pleads that the decree in probate is not void on its face and that more than two years have expired since the entry of the decree' of distribution in the estate, and that therefore she is entitled to inv.oké a court of equity in an original action for the enforcement of her asserted rights in said land. The prayer asks that all deeds by the heirs to Busby and all other mesne conveyances be cancelled and that the decree of distribution in the County Court be vacated, and that plaintiff have an accounting of all rents and profits from the land and general damages against such defendants who were bona fide purchasers for value and- for general equitable relief.

Each named defendant interposed a separate demuprer to plaintiff’s petition. The *906 separate demurrers were sustained and upon plaintiff refusing' to plead further her petition was dismissed, from which order and judgment she appeals.

This is the second case between these parties involving the same mineral rights in the same identical land that has reached this court. The first one is Busby v. Eaves, 205 Okla. 346, 237 P.2d 445.

Busby, in that action, brought a suit in the District Court of Pontotoc County to quiet his title in 100 acres of the land involved, and a stated undivided interest in the mineral rights in portions of the land described. Numerous parties were made defendants in the action to quiet title, including the three children of Lucy J. Hud-dleston-Roberson and J. B. Roberson. After .judgment was rendered in Busby v. Eaves, supra, Mrs. Eaves filed a motion or petition in that proceeding alleging that she had no notice or knowledge of the disposition made in Re Estate of J. B. Roberson, deceased, No. 4130, in the County Court of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, and further alleged the same grounds of fraud as contained in her present action. Busby filed his objections to opening the case and setting aside the judgment upon the ground that Eaves failed to give all parties interested in the case notice of the motion or petition, and upon the further ground that Eaves' motion or petition did not .state facts warranting the vacating of the judgment. The trial court entered an.order vacating its judgment and treated Eaves’ motion or petition as an answer in Busby’s action. Upon appeal, we held:

“When the district court has rendered judgment quieting title to land and adjudicating that H. died intestate, seized of such land, and that the sole heirs of H. were the spouse R. and three children, and after the death of H. and before filing such quiet title suit, R. has died and there has been county court administration of the estate of R. and final determination in such county court proceedings that the sole heirs of R. were the three named children; and thereafter a person who did not appear as a party to either such suit or in such proceedings claims to be an additional heir of R. and makes appearance in the quiet title suit and seeks to open or vacate the district court judgment by application made under the statute 12 O.S.1941 § 176, and therein and thereby seeks to ignore the aforesaid county court determination of heirship or to thereby collaterally attack the same, such application does not state a cause of action to open or vacate such district court judgment.”

In the case of Charles E. Harding Co. v. Harding, 352 Ill. 417, 186 N.E. 152, 88 A.L.R. 563, we find the principle of law succinctly expressed in the latter citation at page 575, as follows:

“The distinction between the effect of a judgment as an absolute bar to a cause of action and as an estoppel as to particular facts relied on as evidence was pointed out in Outram v. More-wood (1803) 3 East, 346, 102 Eng.Reprint 630. In this case Lord Ellen-borough, Ch. J., stated: ‘The court very properly distinguished there between what operates by way of bar to a future recovery for the same thing, and what by way of estoppel. * * * It is. not the recovery, but the matter alleged by the party, and upon which the recovery proceeds, which creates the estoppel. The recovery of itself in an action of trespass is only a bar to the future recovery of damages for the same injury; but the estoppel pre-eludes parties and privies from contending to the contrary on that point, or matter of fact, which, having been once distinctly put in issue by them, or by those to whom they are privy in estate or law, has been, on such issue joined, solemnly found against them.’ ”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P.2d 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaves-v-busby-okla-1954.