Gill v. Giacomo

1971 OK 87, 487 P.2d 1171, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 6, 1971
DocketNo. 42779
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1971 OK 87 (Gill v. Giacomo) 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
Gill v. Giacomo, 1971 OK 87, 487 P.2d 1171, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 295 (Okla. 1971).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice:

This appeal involves an action in ejectment brought by Ames L. Gill, plaintiff, against defendants, Dominic Giacomo and The Texas Company (Texaco). The trial court (1) overruled plaintiff’s motion to make the State of Oklahoma and the City of McAlester additional party defendants, (2) rendered judgment for defendants, Giacomo and Texaco on the pleadings, and (3) overruled plaintiff’s motion for new trial and (4) motion to amend his pleadings filed subsequent to judgment. Plaintiff appeals and asserts that the trial court erred in overruling his motions and entering judgment for defendants. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

It is necessary that the pleadings be stated in chronological order and in substantial detail in order to clarify the issues.

The pleadings show that plaintiff Gill acquired title to Blocks 505 and 554 in the City of McAlester in 1948. Blocks 505 and 554 are adjacent to and east of 19th Street in McAlester which runs generally north and south.

In 1955 Gill executed a “Dedication Deed” to the State of Oklahoma covering all of the west end of Block 505 which abutted upon 19th Street. This deed also conveyed a portion of Block 554 which is south of Block 505. The deed recites that the land was conveyed to the State “for the purpose of establishing thereon a public highway or facilities necessary and incidental thereto.”

When the new highway (U.S. 69) was constructed it ran generally north and south (curving to the southeast) across the west end of Block 505 and occupied a portion of 19th Street which had been vacated by the City of McAlester after the State had acquired its deed.

In plaintiff Gill’s petition in ejectment he alleged that he was the owner of that portion of the East one-half of 19th Street west of the Highway’s west boundary (adjacent to the west end of Block 505) and the defendants, Giacomo and Texaco, were in possession of the portion claimed by him and were using it for their own purposes without his consent.

Giacomo and Texaco filed separate answers, attaching copies of the State’s “Dedication Deed” and alleged in substance that when the City of McAlester vacated 19th Street the fee title to the east half of 19th Street reverted to the adjacent land owner, the State of Oklahoma. Defendants did not deny that they were occupying a portion of the east half of 19th Street and using it in connection with their service station.

Plaintiff Gill filed replies to defendants’ answers and admitted that he executed the deed to the State as set forth in their answers, but denied that he in fact had deeded away all of his title to the east half of 19th Street, and denied defendants’ interpretation of his deed to the State.

Texaco filed motion for judgment on the pleadings asserting that plaintiff’s reply admitting his deed to the State constituted an admission that plaintiff Gill did not own the East half of 19th Street. Texaco and Giacomo filed motions for summary judgments, asserting in substance that the pleadings show no substantial controversy as to any material facts as between the parties.

Two days before the case came on for jury waived trial plaintiff Gill filed a motion to make the State and the City of McAlester additional parties defendants, asserting: (1) defendants allege title in the State of Oklahoma; (2) the City of McAlester is claiming an interest in the vacated 19th Street (Ordinance No. 1028 attached); and (3) that this is a controversy in which the rights of all of the parties may be adjudicated in one proceeding. He prayed that the State and the City of McAlester be made defendants and “be required to show what interest, if any, they have in the said real property in question.”

The Journal Entry of Judgment recites that Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, Motions for Summary Judgments, and Motion to Make Additional Parties [1173]*1173Defendant, had been filed in that chronological order. It recites that the Court ruled that the motions would be taken up in the order in which they were filed. It then shows that, after hearing counsel, Texaco’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings was sustained in its entirety as to both defendants. Motions for Summary Judgments were not passed upon because the court stated it had already rendered judgment on the pleadings for both defendants. Plaintiff Gill’s motion to make the State and City of McAlester parties defendants was overruled. The concluding sentence of the Journal Entry of Judgment states: “The State of Oklahoma is the fee title owner of the surface of the disputed property in question.” We have no record of the trial proceedings, other than as reflected in the Journal Entry of Judgment. The Journal Entry of Judgment makes no reference to an affidavit signed by Gill and filed with the clerk of the court on the same day the court rendered its judgment. The affidavit states that plaintiff Gill was led to believe, by letter, that he was conveying an easement to the State rather than a fee title, and that he had no intention of granting any interest in the property other than for use as a highway. The letter from the State’s right-of-way agent, attached to Gill’s affidavit, explains the need for “the acquisition of a part of your property” ; explains how “the amount offered in the claims and deeds were arrived at”; and requested that “the enclosed claims and easements be completed with the proper acknowledged signatures and returned at your earliest convenience” (emphasis supplied)

The day after judgment was rendered against him, plaintiff Gill filed motions for new trial and for permission to amend his petition and his reply. At the same time Gill filed an amendment to his petition alleging in effect that the defendants had erected in (vacated) 19th Street a nuisance which impaired access to his property in Block 554. In his amended reply, filed after judgment, Gill alleged it was his intention and that of the State for him to convey merely an easement, and that he was led to believe by the State’s right-of-way agent that the only easement to be conveyed by him (in the Dedication Deed) was the area between the boundary lines of Highway 69.

The post-judgment motions and pleadings were considered by the court two months subsequent to the rendition of judgment, and we have a record of the arguments of counsel and the remarks and decision of the court. Plaintiff Gill renewed his motion to make the State and the City of McAlester additional parties defendants, and stated to the court “We would like to get out of this law suit and bring another law suit and then come back and bring another law suit against him.” We assume the plaintiff wanted the court to vacate its judgment and permit him to bring a quiet title action against the State and City, and ejectment against Giacomo and Texaco. In Texaco’s argument (not repudiated by Giacomo) it was said on two occasions that an order overruling motion for new trial and denying the other relief requested by Mr. Gill “will not affect his rights to file a petition in this Court against the State Department of Highways asking this court to reform the deed, and then when he gets his deed reformed, then he can come against us with this type of law suit.”

We hold that the trial court on its own motion or on motion of plaintiff Gill, could have ordered the State Highway Department and the City of McAlester brought in as defendants and permitted Gill to amend his pleadings for reformation of his Dedication Deed to the State of Oklahoma.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matthews v. Matthews
1998 OK 66 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1971 OK 87, 487 P.2d 1171, 1971 Okla. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-giacomo-okla-1971.