Fontenot v. White

1925 OK 936, 242 P. 854, 115 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1925
Docket14845
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1925 OK 936 (Fontenot v. White) 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
Fontenot v. White, 1925 OK 936, 242 P. 854, 115 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 324 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

Plaintiffs allege they are man and wife, and that Florence Fontenot is a citizen of the Creek Nation, duly enrolled as such, and was allotted certain lands in the Creek Nation, and defendants White, Casteel, and Thompson conspired with one Joe Howard, Fannie Acey, a woman by the name of “James,” and two persons, to plaintiff unknown, to deprive her of her lands by fraud; that plaintiff was prior to March 23, 1921, a minor; that defendants sent Joe Howard to plaintiff’s home in an automobile, and Howard stated defendants wanted to buy a part of the royalties on plaintiff’s land, but she informed them she would not do anything with the lands until she had consulted her father, Lewis Rentie, who lived at Oktaha, Muskogee county; that Howard and a stranger took the plaintiffs in an automobile to the home of Fannie Acey, where Howard said his auto would not go any farther, and after a private conversation with Fannie Acey, Howard suggested the husband, Ofeast Fontenot, go with him to see Lewis Rentie, and that Florence wait their return; that that they departed on the train for Muskogee, and after spending the night, Howard, after he had taken Ofeast to the M. O. & G. depot, pretended he was very sick and could not. go to Wainwright, which was near Rentie’s home, and sent Ofeast on alone; that shortly thereafter, Fannie Acey’s husband told Fannie she had a long distance telephone call, and upon returning from answering the long distance call, Fannie Acey told plaintiff it was from Joe Howard; that Howard and Ofeast had seen Rentie, and Rentie had said White and Casteel had been down to Oktaha to see plaintiff’s father about buying part of the royalties, and that Florence should go to Sapulpa and let them have it; that Fannie Acey put Florence on the train and took her to Sapulpa to a rooming house run by the woman “James.” This was on March 22nd. About three o’clock on the *249 morning of the 23rd, being the day Florence attained her majority, the James woman and Fannie Acey came to Florence’s room and awakened her, and the James woman announced she had just come from Muskogee, and at three in the morning these women took Florence to the office of White and Casteel, and introduced her to these two defendants, who already had a writing prepared and had her sign the same, and she returned to the hotel; that on the same afternoon, the women took Florence to the office of White and Casteel, and White, Casteel, Fannie Acey, and the James woman retired to a private room, and when they returned Fannie Acey counted out $1,600, of which she gave Florence $100, and said she was going to put the balance in the bank at Muskogee. They then took plaintiff back to the house of the James woman, where they said Howard and Ofeast were waiting. Howard was there, but Ofeast was not, as Howard had come to Sapulpa after pretending to be sick, and Ofeast, after seeing Florence’s father, had to walk to Yahola, the home of Fannie Acey, and the two plaintiffs never met until four days after their parting at Yahola, each looking for the other over that section of the country. Plaintiff then alleges that instead of the instrument she signed being a bill of sale for a part of the royalties, it was a warranty deed to her land; that the land was a homestead and the deed was not signed by her husband and is void under section 1143, Rev. Laws 1910, and that the mortgage executed by Casteel ■to Thompson on March 24, 1920, was void, and she prays cancellation of these instruments.

Plaintiffs filed their action on May 10, 1921, less than two months after the execution of the deed, and on June 8, 1921, defendants filed their general demurrer, which was by the court overruled. The journal entry of judgment recited the cause came on to be heard on demurrer on September 19, 1921, with counsel for both plaintiffs and defendants present, and the court after argument overruled the demurrer and gave defendants 20 days to answer, and on October 12, 1921, the defendants were adjudged in default, and the journal entry then recites as follows:

“And the court after considering the evidence finds that plaintiff Florence Fontenot is a Creek citizen enrolled opposite No. 764 on the newborn freedman roll as Florence Rentie.”

The court then finds Ofeast and Florence were husband and wife on March 1, 1921, that the land was their homestead, that they were deprived of their land by fraud and collusion, and vacated the deed and mortgage, and quieted title in plaintiffs.

Although defendants were in court on September 19, 1921, and knew they had but until October 9, 1921, to answer, they did nothing further in the matter until February 13, 1922, when they filed a motion to set aside the judgment, in which, motion they insist their demurrer should be sustained; that they were too busy in this (district court) and the superior court in the same county to answer, and one of the attorneys was ill; that they were not three times called in open court, and the judgment purports to be a default judgment; that the judgment was filed November 5, 1921, and they had no notice of this fact until February 11, 1922; that there was no allegation or proof that plaintiffs were in possession of the land, “in order that the action might be in ejectment.”

Plaintiffs appeared specially and moved to strike the motion to set aside the judgment for that the court had no jurisdiction to consider the motion and set aside the judgment. The court, however, by Lucien B. Wright, judge, vacated the judgment of November 5, 1921, and on April 10, 1921, defendant Thompson filed his answer setting up that he was an innocent mortgagee; that on March 24, 1921, he loaned W. R. Casteel, $2,250, and took Casteel’s note and a mortgage on the land, and prays that defendants’ and plaintiffs’ interests be decreed inferior to his mortgage lien. On the same day the defendants White and Casteel filed their answer consisting of general denial, and further answering, state they purchased the lands for $2,500 subject to about $1,200 taxes due and unpaid; deny conspiracy with Joe Howard, Fannie Acey, and the James woman, and allege the day after they secured the deed from Florence Fontenot, they borrowed $2,250 from Thompson and gave a mortgage on the land, and pray judgment. After reply filed, the cause was tried to the court, and judgment rendered for defendants, from which plaintiffs appealed to this court.

The first error assigned is leveled against the action of the court in vaca’.tng the judgment rendered in this case and filed November 5, 1921, and also leveled against the judgment of the trial court in holding the court had jurisdiction, under the pleadings and motion filed, to vacate the judgment. Defendants claim it was a default judgment and no evidence was introduced, but the journal entry of judgment recites “that the court after hearing all the evidence,” etc., *250 but we do not deem it necessary to discuss or determine this question.

The plaintiffs allege .fraud and collusion and the case reeks with the. most palpable fraud and collusion imaginable. Here is a Creek Indian girl, who has an allotment to. tribal lands; she does not know just what day she will be 18 years of age; she had never been on a railroad train alone, in her life; and never purchased a railroad ticket; never even bought her own clothing; her husband did not know the date she would attain her majority; her father and guardian knew she would be 18 in March, 1921, but did not know the date.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 936, 242 P. 854, 115 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-v-white-okla-1925.