Flesner v. Cooper

1917 OK 104, 162 P. 1112, 62 Okla. 263, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
Docket7783
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 1917 OK 104 (Flesner v. Cooper) 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
Flesner v. Cooper, 1917 OK 104, 162 P. 1112, 62 Okla. 263, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 293 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

JOHNSON, C.

This is a suit between Lou Cooper, defendant in error, as plaintiff, against Gerd Elesner, plaintiff in error, as defendant, .filed in the district court of Payne county upon July 25, 1905, for the recovery of an undivided one-half interest in SO acres of land.

This is the third appeal to this court. See Cooper v. Flesner, 24 Okla. 47, 103 Pac. 1016, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1180, 20 Ann. Cas. 29, and Elesner v. Cooper, 39 Okla. 133, 134 Pac. 379. While defendant in error has not filed a brief upon this appeal, on account of the long pendency of the litigation, we have examined with extreme care the entire record and authorities upon both sides of questions raised. Although we have reached the conclusion that the cause must be reversed on the ruling of the lower court upon a motion by defendant for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, in view of the important possibility that such action may tend to expedite the future termination of the litigation we conceive it to be the duty of this court to determine the law of the case, as presented upon this appeal, in so far as it has not been determined on the prior appeals.

The facts disclosed by the evidence, so far as material here, are as follows:

George W. Gardenhire homesteaded the land in question in 1889, obtaining final receipt from the government upon December 1, 1890 Upon March 2, 1891, George W. Gar-denhire and wife executed to their son, Clyde Gardenhire, a general warranty deed to the land, for an expressed consideration of $1,-500, though in fact there was no actual consideration therefor. Upon March 24, 1891, ...uniré and wife executed to Wil-nivdp ffO*' ^7V. Scott a warranty deed purporting to convey the land; this deed also being without any actual consideration, but having an expressed consideration of $1,800. Neithei1 Clyde Gardenhire nor Scott went into possession of the land, but continued to recognize George W. Gardenhire as the owner; the latter remaining in possession during their tenure of the legal title. There was evidence tending to show that George W. Gardenhire made and procured the execution and recording of these deeds for the purpose of creating the outward appearance that ownership of the land by an innocent third purchaser had intervened so as to eliminate the probability of contests of his entry of the land or action by the government to cancel the entry upon the ground that he (George W. Gardenhire) had entered the territory before the date of its opening to settlement, and his own consequent disqualification to make the entry of the land.

While the legal title stood in the name of Scott, a patent to the land was issued by the government upon February 18, 1892, in the name of George W. Gardenhire, as patentee.

In December, 1894, the courthouse and records of conveyances of real estate of Payne county were - destroyed by fire.

Upon January 7, 1895, the said William G. Scott executed to George W. Gardenhire a warranty deed, for a purported consideration of $2,500, but with no actual consideration, purporting to reeonvey the • title to this land. During the latter part of the year 1899, the plaintiff in error purchased the land from George W. Gardenhire for- a consideration of $3,500, $700 having been paid in cash and the balance in installments running through the course of several years, at the time receiving a bond for title. The deferred payments were completed and warranty deed delivered on May ,16, 1901.

Jacob Gardenhire, a son of George W. Gar-denhire, died intestate in the month of December, 1894, and shortly after the destruction of the county records, leaving as his sole heirs at law plaintiff, his widow, and George W. Gardenhire, his father.

At the trial, it was contended by plaintiff that, at some unknown and undisclosed date, prior to the burning of the county records •and after the conveyance by Clyde Garden-hire to William G. Scott, Scott executed to Jacob Gardenhire a warranty deed to the land in question, which deed was contended by plaintiff -to have been recorded upon the records of Payne county which were burned in December, 1894. By virtue of this deed, *265 tlie plaintiff claimed by inheritance from Jacob Gardenhire an undivided one-half interest in this land.

As above stated, Jacob Gardenhire died, shortly after the destruction of the county records. George W. Gardenhire became insane shortly before the filing of this suit, and died a short time after the action was instituted and before the first trial. Scott testified that he did not receive or know of any consideration or reason for the execution by him of the deed to Jacob Gardenhire, and only remembered the fact of its execution by himself at the request of one of the interested parties. The death of Jacob Gard-enhire and the insanity and death of his father, George W. Gardenhire, removed -the only two witnesses who had personal knowledge of the reasons or intentions of the parties in the transaction, and resulted in the loss of all' of the original deeds above mentioned as having been executed prior to the destruction of the county records. By mutual concession, secondary evidence was used at the trial to replace the lost original evidences of title.

The records of a local abstracter were introduced and showed the recording upon the burned records of all of the deeds in defendants’ chain, of title originating prior to the loss of the county records, including: (1) The deed from George W. Gardenhire to his son, Clyde; (2) an'd the deed from Clyde to William G. Scott (the deed from Scott back to George W. Gardenhire being shown by later county records). But the abstract records did not show the record of a deed from Scott to Jacob Gardenhire.

The deed from Scott to Jacob Gardenhire, and the fact of its having been recorded, were shown as follows, viz.: (1) By the testimony of Scott that he had executed such a deed; and (2) by the testimony of a woman neighbor to Jacob Gardenhire that, shortly before his death, Jacob had shown her an original warranty deed to this land, purporting to have been executed by Scott to him, and bearing an indorsement to the effect that ic had been recorded.

It was conceded that George W. Garden-hire, the father of Jacob, was in possession of the land from time of entry, in 1889, till the year 1893, and from the death of Jacob, in December, 1894, till the sale and delivery of possession to defendant in 1899. Jacob Gardenhire farmed the land during the years of 1893 and 1894. The conditions of his possession were in controversy. Plaintiff was married to Jacob about three months before his death, and testified that her husband claimed to own the l’and, and exercised towards it the attitude and relations of an owner. One witness testified that he rented a part of the land from Jacob. Another witness testified that he rented a part of the land from Jacob, who signed the lease as his father’s agent. Three sons of George W. Gardenhire, and brothers of Jacob, testified for the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 104, 162 P. 1112, 62 Okla. 263, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flesner-v-cooper-okla-1917.