Etchen v. the Texas Co.

1921 OK 187, 199 P. 212, 82 Okla. 62, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 24, 1921
Docket9654
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1921 OK 187 (Etchen v. the Texas Co.) 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
Etchen v. the Texas Co., 1921 OK 187, 199 P. 212, 82 Okla. 62, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 178 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

HARRISON, C. J.

This case involves title to a Cherokee allotment, on which oil and gas wells have been operated.

Two suits, L. A. Keys v. The Texas Co., and L. A. Keys v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co., were begun in the district court of Nowata county, to recover royalties which Keys alleged to be due him from the oil companies. The oil companies each answered, and, upon their motion, various other persons were made parties to the suits, among whom was Prank C. Elliott, the original allottee, a quarter-blood Cherokee, who, through his guardian, filed answer and cross-action in each case, claiming all the royalties himself, and asking that all leases, deeds, and other instruments of conveyance of the land from him be canceled as a cloud upon his title. The two cases were consolidated and tried, and judgment rendered in favor of the allottee, and from such judgment both cases come here in one appeal.

While the actions were begun in the first place for the recovery of royalties, they ultimately turned upon and were decided upon the invalidity of the conveyances from the allottee.

Several different conveyances of the land, in one way or another and by different persons, had been obtained from the allottee, some being oil and gas leases, some assignments, some contracts of sale, and some warranty deeds. The trial court held them all void and ordered them canceled. Some were held void because on the date of their execution the allottee was a minor, and all the others void on the ground that both before and after attaining majority the allottee was incapacitated from excessive drink and acute alcoholism, and being non compos mentis, naturally was incapable of exercising control of his own judgment, and that the conveyances were not made ,by. him as his own free and voluntary act and deed, and were therefore invalid.-

Numerous errors are specified and assigned, 2S in number, but the controlling question 'before the trial court was, and before this court is, whether this allottee had sufficient mental powers to protect himself against the, wiles of those who obtained the various instruments of conveyance from him. The assignment of errors is grouped into five propositions or points, the first of which being: That the court erred in admitting the testimony of Doctors Atkins, Whepler, and Morfit as to the mental condition of the allottee subsequent to January 1, 1915, said date being subsequent to the date of the conveyances in question. As to th’s contention it appears that two of these witnesses, Doctors Atkins and Whepler, were specialists in the treatment of mental diseases ; that they duly qualified as expert witnesses and showed themselves qualified specialists in this class of diseases, one having actively specialized in tire treatment of mental diseases for a period of ten years, and the other 23 years. The third witness, Dr. Morfit, had been actively in the general practice of medicine 22 years, and showed himself thoroughly versed on the question. Besides, each of these doctors was personally acquainted with the allottee, and had treated him at different periods for mental weakness and acute alcoholism. Each testified as .to the effect which prolonged and excessive use of alcohol had had upon the patient’s mind, and also testified as to the normal strength of his mind after having been cured of the effects of alcoholism. Hence, their testimony as to the natural mental capacity in its natural state was competent for whatever probative force it might have. The admissibility of their testimony is contested on the ground that their knowledge of the patient was acquired subsequent to the execution of the conveyances, this contention being based mainly upon the assumption that the conveyances were held void solely upon the ground of his intoxication at the time they were made, and that testimony as to his being incapacitated from alcoholism at a time subsequent to the date of conveyances was not competent to show whether or not he was too drunk to know what he was doing at the time he made the conveyances. But it must be borne in mind that the validity of the sundry conveyances made by him was attacked not only upon the ground that he was drunk at the time they were executed, but also upon the ground of inadequacy of consideration and the ground that by nature he was weak-minded, normally incompetent, and without mental powers to protect himself against the persons who had procured the conveyances from him. His natural weak-mindedness and mental incapacity being a material issue, testimony as to his mental powers in their natural and normal state at any period of his life was competent. His mind, las mental endowments' by nature and for life, being the issue before the court, testimony as to the strength of his mental powers should not be confined to any particular period of life. Anderson v. Cranmer, 11 W. Va. Rep. 562; Boyd v. Boyd (Ark.) 184 S. W. 838. Jones v. Travers (Ark.) 172 S. W. 828; Paulus v. Reid (Iowa) 96 N. W. 757; 18 C. J. 219; State v. Wright (Iowa) 84 N. W. 541; Blume v. State (Ind.) 56 N. E. 771; Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 228; Sprinkle v. Wellborn (N. C.) 52 S. E. 666; Lyons v. Van Riper, *64 26 N. J. Eq. 337; Cruise v. Christopher, 5 Dana (Ky.) 186; Beach v. Wilton (Ill.) 91 N. E. 492; Roby v. Colehour (Ill.) 25 N. E. 777; 18 C. J. 237, sec. 164.

In Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 228, it is said:

“ ‘Upon this I believe that no difference of opinion w:ll be found to exist,’ said Mr. Justice Patterson in a celebrated case, ‘as to the principle on which such evidence is admissible. Every act of the party’s life is relevant to the issue.’ ”

In State v. Wright, supra, the court said:

“In all cases involving the question of mental capacity, it is competent to go into the minutest details of the personal history of the individual.”

In Anderson v. Cranmer, supra, the court said:

“The point of time to be looked to by the court or jury in determining the competency of a grantor to make a deed is that when the deed was executed; but the condition of the grantor’s mind, both before and after the execution of the deed, is proper to be considered in determining what was his mental condition at the time the deed was executed.”

On the question as to the grounds for setting aside a deed the Iowa Court in Paulus v. Reed, supra, in the body of the opinion, said:

“But it is not necessary in order to defeat a contract, that weakness of mind amounting to positive idiocy or insanity be shown. If it appears that there is a mental deficiency so marked as that the conclusion is justified that the party has not exercised any deliberate judgment concerning the transaction in question, but, on the contrary, has been simply as putty in the hands of á stronger will, then it cannot be said that a contract has been executed. A vital element is lacking, in that there cannot then be said to have been any meeting of minds. Out of such a transaction there is presented the product of but one mind.”

On the same question, in Jones v. Travers, supra, the Supreme Court of Arkansas said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 187, 199 P. 212, 82 Okla. 62, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etchen-v-the-texas-co-okla-1921.