Goldfeder v. Johnson

1964 OK 105, 392 P.2d 351, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1964
DocketNo. 40362
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1964 OK 105 (Goldfeder v. Johnson) 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
Goldfeder v. Johnson, 1964 OK 105, 392 P.2d 351, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 328 (Okla. 1964).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Chief Justice.

The principal issue involved in this action is whether a White man, named “Nudy White”, or a full blood Indian, named “Johnson”, inherited, as her surviving husband, an undivided one-half interest in the 160 acres of land allotted to a woman enrolled as a full blood member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians, under the name of “Flora Homma”, when she died, or was murdered, on December 1, 19S7, at the home of one George Tishka, or Tisha, near Golden, in McCurtain County.

The marriage ceremony in which Flora and White were the principals was performed November 7, 1956, under a marriage license issued at Hugo, setting forth her address as Eagletown in McCurtain County.

Soon after Flora’s death, White executed and delivered a deed, dated December 11, 1957, covering the 160 acres, to IT. Gold-fed er, one of the plaintiffs in error, who thereafter deeded one-half of his claimed interest to the other plaintiff in error, M. L. Lagoni.

When Goldfeder thereafter instituted this action in August, 1958, to quiet his title on the basis of his deed from White, he named Flora’s mother, Jincy Bunnup, as a defendant, alleging that she inherited the other undivided one-half interest in Flora’s allotted 160 acres, and sought a determination of said allottee’s heirs, as well as a partition of the acreage. As there is no issue between Goldfeder and Lagoni, our use of the term “plaintiffs” will refer to both.

In December, 1958, before the case was at issue, Edward R. LeForce, who later was to become attorney for John Johnson, one of the defendants in error herein, was appointed guardian ad litem for Jincy Bun-nup, and, during the same month, he filed, in that capacity, an answer denying that Flora was married to Nudy White, or to any other person, and alleging, among other things, that she left Jincy as her sole and only heir.

Thereafter, Jincy Bunnup died on March 21st, 1959, and on September 21st of the same year, her former guardian at litem, attorney LeForce, obtained leave of court, as attorney for John Johnson, for the said Johnson’s intervention in the action.

Thereafter, Johnson, hereinafter referred to as “intervenor”, filed in October, 1960, an answer and cross petition in which he alleged, among other things, that he had married Flora on September 6, 1952, at DeQueen, Arkansas. He attached to his petition a certified copy of a marriage license issued the same date in Sevier County, Arkansas, for the marriage of a “Mrs. Flora Sampson” of Eagletown, Oklahoma, and a “John Johnson”. Intervenor further alleged that he and Flora remained husband and wife until her death, whereupon title to her land vested jointly in him and her mother, Jincy, as her sole surviving heirs. Intervenor also alleged, among other things, in substance, that any purported marriage Nudy White had entered into with Flora (while she was the wife of In-tervenor) was bigamous and v@id, and that White’s deed to Goldfeder, after her death, was consequently null and void. Inter-venor’s pleading prayed, among other [353]*353things, that said deed and Lagoni’s he can-celled, and that Intervenor and Jincy be adjudged Flora’s only heirs, and that each inherited, upon Flora’s death, an undivided one-half interest in the subject land.

Thereafter, Goldfeder and/or his attorneys obtained information that the Inter-venor had been previously married in Mc-Curtain County to one Dovie Brannan, on August 20, 1927, under a marriage license naming him as “J. J. Johnson”. When the Intervenor’s deposition was taken in Idabel, on April 1, 1960, he stated that he and Dovie were divorced in the District Court of Choctaw County, before his claimed marriage to Flora.

Thereafter, on May 10, 1961, the day the trial commenced, Goldfeder and Lagoni, filed a pleading entitled “JOINT REPLY AND ANSWER * * * ”, in which they denied, among other allegations, that Johnson and Dovie Brannan were divorced by the District Court of Choctaw County. At the May, 1961, hearing, Dovie Bran-nan Johnson, now Phillips, testified, among other things, in substance, that she obtained the divorce from Intervenor in the District Court of Oklahoma County (instead of in Choctaw County, at Hugo) after she had lived with him as his wife “ * * * around the Choctaw Lumber Company camps, Clebert and Alikchi” in McCurtain County for about five years, had then separated from him and moved to McAlester, and had moved from there to Oklahoma City in 1933. One of the other subjects dealt with in her testimony was the service by publication obtained in that divorce action upon its named defendant “John M. Johnson”, upon the filing of an affidavit for such service over the purported signature of a “Dovie Johnson” and stating, among other things, that “ * * * if he (the defendant, John M. Johnson) has any place of residence * * * (same) * * would be in the City of Cooper, State of Texas.” On cross-examination, Mrs. Phillips was also interrogated concerning the identity of an “M. Johnson”, whose name appeared on the above-mentioned marriage certificate as a witness to her marriage to “J- J. Johnson”.

Nudy White did not appear at the hearing, it being explained that he was incompetent and in a rest home. However, Mr. Goldfeder testified in his own behalf that he had obtained his deed from White before he became incompetent. This witness also testified, among other things, that at that time, and for many years previous thereto, he had been in the mercantile business at Hugo, and that, at the time of Flora’s death, he was in possession of the subject 160 acres, under a five-year Indian Departmental Grazing Lease.

It was established during Goldfeder’s testimony that Flora Homma had married an Oscar Sampson, at Ardmore, on December 21, 1936, and that, in a divorce action he thereafter filed in the District Court of Marshall County, Sampson had- obtained a divorce from her on September 24, 1951, at which time she did not appear.

Wesley Hudson testified on'behalf of the Intervenor, among other things, that he lives in a little community called Mountain Fork, about three miles from Eagletown; that he had lived in that vicinity all his life; that from 1948 to 1956, he resided across the road from Jincy Bunnup’s two-room house and that Flora resided there with her mother. It may be inferred from Hudson’s testimony that Jincy was aged and infirm, and that he helped care for her, especially when Flora was away from home. Hudson further testified he was living there the day Flora married Johnson and accompanied him in a taxi, with an Arkansas license on it, to Jincy’s home and that she then pointed him out to the witness as the man she had just married. Hudson further testified that Flora was never a resident any place other than in McCurtain County, and “in the past twenty years” she had not lived in any other county, though he named places in other counties where she had gone for short, or temporary, stays. This witness further testified that Johnson continued to live with Flora and her mother across the road from him about two years, [354]

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK 105, 392 P.2d 351, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldfeder-v-johnson-okla-1964.