First Nat. Bank of Butler v. Welch

1925 OK 1004, 250 P. 100, 119 Okla. 270, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
DocketNo 15158
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1925 OK 1004 (First Nat. Bank of Butler v. Welch) 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
First Nat. Bank of Butler v. Welch, 1925 OK 1004, 250 P. 100, 119 Okla. 270, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 209 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, C.

The land involved in this suit was purchased! from the School .Land Department by James A. McFarland making the initial payment and executing his certificate of purchase notes for deferred payments, and receiving a certificate of purchase as required by the laws of the state governing the sale of school lands. January 23, 1920, McFarland, joined by his wife, transferred and assigned the certificate of purchase to A. L. Smith," E. T. Sumrall, Frank Mitchell, and M. H. Fariss in satisfaction of a note and mortgage on the land held by them. Smith, Sumrall, Mitchell, and Fariss, by their attorney, presented the assignment of the certificate of purchase to the Commissioners of the Land Office, tendered the amount of the deferred payments due the state, and requested that patent be issued to "them. They were then and there notified that a mortgage of McFarland’s interest in the land, executed by McFarland and his wife to the First National Bank of Butler, to secure their note in the sum -of $3,000-, was on file.' Notwithstanding the fact that the mortgage of the First National Bank had been recorded in the office of the School Land Department, the deferred payments were made by McFarland’s assignees and patent issued as requested. The patent was filed for record February 27, 1922, in Roger Mills county where the land was situated. March 29, 1922, Smith, Sumrall, Mitchell, and Fariss conveyed the land by warranty! deed to W. IT. Welch, but before that deed was recorded, the First National Bank of Butler, on the 10th day of April, 1922, caused its mortgage to be filed and recorded in the office of the county clerk of Roger Mills county. Thereafter, W. H. Welch commenced this suit against the First National Bank of Butler to have the bank’s mortgage adjudged to be void as against him, to remove the *271 cloud upon his title, and to quiet title in him.

The defendant answered by general denial except as to certain admissions. It admitted that patent was issued by the Commissioners of the Land Office, but alleged that at the time it. was issued, the patentees, Smith, Sumrall, Mitchell, and Fariss, had actual and constructive notice of its mortgage, and agreed with the Commissioners or the Land Office to assume payment of the defendant’s mortgage, and alleged that the sale by them to W. H. Welch, plaintiff, was not made in g-< od faith and was not an actual sale; that no consideration was paid; that the plaintiff, W. H. Welch, took the deed with full knowledge of the defendant’s mortgage, without consideration, and for the purpose of defeating defendant’s mortgage lien up n the land. It alleged that the patentees, Smith, Sumrall, Mitchell and Fariss, grantors of plaintiff, had an interest in the action and were necessary parties to a complete determination of the issues. By proper reply issues were joined on the new matter set out in defendant’s answer. By agreement of parties, and by leave of court, Smith, Sumrall, Mitchell and Fariss filed a supplemental petition as parties plaintiff, and admitted that they had an equitable interest in the subject-matter of the action, in that they had given to the plaintiff. Welch, a warranty deed and that they had a lien on the land for the balance of purchase price due. The case was tried without a jury and resulted in judgment for plaintiff. From this judgment the defendant, First National Bank of Butler, appealed.

One of the c< ntentions of the bank is that under sections 9331, 9385 and 9396, C. S. 1921, a mortgage on school land filed in the office of the Commissioners of the Land Office is constructive notice to subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers. Section 9331 relates to the transfer of purchaser’s! rights. It provides, in substance, that all purchasers of school land shall have the right to transfer or assign all their rights, title, and interest in and to such land, and that such assignment shall be in form and executed and acknowledged as required by the laws governing conveyances, with the proviso that. bef< re delivering the patent, such assignment. to be valid, shall be duly recorded in a proper book kept by the Commissioners of the Land Office for that purpose. The balance of the section refers to the manner and method of transfer of the purchaser’s interest where the assignee of the certificate of purchase assumes payment of dererred payments and executes a new certificate of purchase note. That section contains no reference to mortgages or their registration.

Section 9385 refers to the assignment of school land leases as security for indebtedness. It provides that no assignment of the school land lease as security shall be valid unless filed for record in the office of the Commissioners ot the Land Office within 30 days after its execution. This section has no application to the transfer of certificates of purchase, but only applies to school land mases prior to sale cf the land.

Section 9390 is as follows:

“AIL of the records in possession, control, care and custody of the Commissioners of the Land Office are hereby declared to be public records, and certified copies thereof are admissible in evidence in the courts of this state. Any person shall be entitled to receive a certified copy of any instrument on reel rd with the Commissioners o, the Land Office on the payment of a fee as prescribed by the commission.”

It will be observed that no reference is made in either section to mortgages on lands after sale by the School Land Commissioners. Section 9326 pre vides that in a sale of school lands a certificate of purchase reciting the conditions of such purchase, shall be issued to every purchaser immediately upon the execution of the contract of purchase, and that the certificate of purchase shall be entitled to record, as evidence < f same, under the provisions of the law of conveyances.

Section 9321 provides that the C< mmissioners of the Land Office shall, as soon as possible after the sale of the lands, transmit to the clerk of the county in which the lands are located, a detailed description of each part of the land so sold, and the names of the purchasers, and that the clerk shall extend the same upon the tax roll for the purpose of taxation, and the same shall then become subject to taxation the same as other lands, and the taxes assessed thereon collected and enforced in like manner the same as other lands.

It is clear from these provisions of the statute, that the purchaser of school lands becomes the owner subject to the state’s lien for de erred payments and the registration of the certificate of purchase is notice < f such ownership. In the absence of a statute otherwise providing, it is clear that a mortgage on such lands must be recorded in the office of the county clerk where the land is situated to constitute constructive notice. For these reasons we hold that the filing of the bank’s mortgage in the office of the School Land Commissioners was not constructive notice of the bank’s mortgage.

*272 It being conceded that the patentees had actual notice of the bank’s mortgage at the time they applied for a patent, and before making the final payment due the state and receiving the patent, the question then is, Did such actual notice render their title subject to the bank’s mortgage?

McFarland had bought the land from the School Land Department of the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 1004, 250 P. 100, 119 Okla. 270, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-butler-v-welch-okla-1925.