Fletcher v. Popejoy

1922 OK 746, 209 P. 746, 87 Okla. 185, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 3, 1922
Docket10804
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1922 OK 746 (Fletcher v. Popejoy) 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
Fletcher v. Popejoy, 1922 OK 746, 209 P. 746, 87 Okla. 185, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 260 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Caddo county by the plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, against the defendant in error, as defendant, to cancel a certain oil and gas lease on the following tract of land situated in Caddo county, Okla., to wit :“N. W. % of section 34, township 6 north, range 10 west of the Indian Meridian.”

The oil and gas lease sought to be canceled was executed by plaintiff, John W. Fletcher, purporting to convey the oil and gas rights to defendant, R. Ben Popejoy, for a period of ten years and as much longer as oil and gas was produced in paying quantities.

The petition states that the plaintiff, John W. Fletcher, filed upon said land as a government homestead and resided thereon, and thereafter a patent was issued to him by the government of the United 'States after due proof of his actual occupancy thereof as required by law. and that the plaintiff had .occupied the same as his homestead by himself and family. That his wife, Birdine Fletcher, was still living, and that they had never been divorced nor legally separated.

The petition also set up allegations of fraud on the part of the defendant in procuring the oil and gas lease and in transactions connected therewith.

The case was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered holding the lease to be a valid and subsisting oil and gas lease on said land. The plaintiff saved all necessary exceptions: perfected this appeal, and seeks to reverse the judgment of the trial court. For convenience, the par ties, will be referred to as they appeared in the court below.

The plaintiff sets out several specific assignments of error, and then discusses them under the following heads: 'The actionable fraud; the homestead; judgment in divorce action of Fletcher v. Fletcher; reopening of the case, and the court erred in overruling motion for a new trial.

Under the homestead question presented by plaintiff, he contends that the lease was void because it was not signed by his wife. We agree with this contention.

It is not disputed that the land in controversy was filed on by the plaintiff as a homestead entryman either in the year 1901 or 1902. The certificate of final proof was offered in evidence and bears date of March 14. 1905. executed by T. Roosevelt, as President. by his Secretary.

The defendant’s answer denies generally' the allegations of the petition; denies any fraud in procuring the lease; denies the land was the homestead of the plaintiff at the time of the execution of the lease or any time thereafter. It alleges that an action *186 for divorce was instituted in the district ■court of Caddo county' by plaintiff,’ John W. Fletcher, against Birdine Fletcher, his wife, being case No. 3310, and attached to said answer is a co^y of the journal emtry of judgment in, said divorce action, which, omitting the formal parts, reads as follows:

“Now on this the 26th day of September, 1916, -both parties being present, this cause comes on for final judgment, and the court being fully advised in the premises, is of the opinion that under the evidence neither the plaintiff nor the defendant should be granted a divorce, and therefore the court order, that plaintiff’s petition be dismissed and that the defendant’s cross-petition so far as it seeks a divorce should he dismissed.
“Upon the question of the defendant’s cross-petition to a division of the plaintiff’s property, the court finds that neither of the parties will -again live with the other, and that the court should at this time settle the property righs of the parties.
“The court finds that the 'defendant should have as her part of the property owned by the plaintiff, and which has advanced in value, and- been accumulated since the marriage, the sum of $800, and that such sum shall he in full satisfaction of all her rights, title, and interest in and to any of the property which at this time belongs to the plaintiff or be held by him in 'his name, but further finds that the payments of such sum to the defendant should be deferred, as herein provided.
“It is therefore ordered, decreed, and adjudged by the court that the defendant herein, Birdine Fletcher, have and recover of the plaintiff herein, John W. Fletcher, the sum of $200 on the 1st day >of November, 1917, and the. remaining $300 on the first day of November, 1918, and that the plaintiff pay the cost of the action.
“It is further adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff herein shall have the right, use, occupance, ownership, and control of all his real estate, and personal property, free from the control of the defendant, and that he may use, lease for farm purposes, and enjoy same without the signature or con-, sent of the defendant, but it is further ordered that in the event the plaintiff should lease the said lands for oil and gas purposes, before the payments become due as shown above, then and1 in that event, the sum of next deferred payment herein shall become .due, and payable, and the court further orders” and adjudges that upon the satisfaction of this judgment the plaintiff may sell and convey the said lands, free from the defendant joining in any conveyance, and that he .may lease and let. the said lands for oil and gas purposes, upon complying with the order as above set out to pay to the defendant the next deferred payment of the judgment, and-that such oil lease or gas lease, or. sale of the said lands, thi'S judgment being complied with, shall' be binding upon tbe defendant the same as if the defendant has .joined in such lease or sale.
“Will Linn, Judge.”

The petition of the plaintiff in the divorce action and the answer and cross-petition of ■the defendant, Birdine Fletcher, in the divorce action were offered in evidence on the trial of this case. The petition was filed May 1, 1916, and alleges that plaintiff and defendant were married on July 10, 1898, and they lived on the land in controversy until on or about the 15th day of April, 1916. The defendant’s answer and cross-petition for divorce was filed May 26, 1916. .'She alleges that in the year 1901 'they took up their domicile on the land in controversy in Oaddo county, and that she was still a resident of Caddo county. She further alleges 'that, on account of the cruel treatment of the plaintiff, she left his place of .residence and was then running a restaurant in Lawton, Comanche county, Okla.

In the case at bar the plaintiff testified that the land was still his homestead. That late in the fall of 1916 he rented the land until sometime in June, 1917. That he had not acquired a homestead elsewhere. He had been out of the state working in a powder mill prior to the trial of this case, which was commenced on the 24th day of September, 1918. Tbe lease in controversy was executed November 9, 1916. Notwithstanding this testimony and the record evidence contained in the petition, answer and1 cross-petition, and journal entry in the divorce case, the court made the following finding:

“* * * cimi't further finds that the judgment in cause No. 3310, entitled Birdine Fletcher v. John W. Fletcher, is a valid judgment and that -said judgment divested said Birdine Fletcher 'of her homestead -rights in and to the northwest quarter of section 34, township 6 north, range 10, W. I.

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 746, 209 P. 746, 87 Okla. 185, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-popejoy-okla-1922.