Grison Oil Corp. v. Lewis

1935 OK 1200, 54 P.2d 386, 175 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 935
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 25271.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1200 (Grison Oil Corp. v. Lewis) 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
Grison Oil Corp. v. Lewis, 1935 OK 1200, 54 P.2d 386, 175 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 935 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and decree, decreeing defendant in error to be the owner of an undivided one-half interest in lots 17 and 18, in block 24, in Phillips and Meads addition to Oklahoma City, except the east ten feet of lot 17. Herein, where lot 17 is described as such, we refer to lot 17, less ten feet off of the east end thereof.

In May, 1906, Guy Blackwelder, being the owner thereof, deeded lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 17, and 18 to James R. Lewis, who was then, and now is, the husband of defendant in error.

Block 24 contains 18 lots. Lots 1 to 16, inclusive, run north and south and face East First street on the north. Lots 17 and 18 run east and west, being divided from lots 1 to 19 by an alley running east and west, and just north of the right of way of the C., R. I. & P. Railway. Block 24 lies between Durland avenue on the east and Byers avenue on the. west.

The consideration for the deed was $900. $500 was in cash,' and $400 was by way of the assumption of a mortgage covering said lots.

May 5, 1906, James R. Lewis, joined by his wife, defendant in error, conveyed said lots to J. L. Wilkin.

On May 1, 1923, J. L. Wilkin conveyed lots 17 and 18 to F. B. Courtney.

On the_day of December, 1919, the county treasurer issued a resale tax deed purporting to convey to J. L. Wilkin lots 17 and 18, as having been sold to Oklahoma county at a tax sale held the first Monday in November, 1917. Said resale tax deed was filed for record February 4, 1920.

August 20, 1931, F. B. Courtney executed an oil and gas lease covering the property here involved to H. I. Grimes and A. R. Jameson, who later assigned the lease to the Grison Oil Company. Janies R. Lewis executed a deed conveying lots 17 and 18 to plaintiff, Sarah F. Lewis. This deed was dated September 7, 1912, and was filed for record January 20, 1914.

This action was commenced February 23, 1931, by Sarah F. Lewis, to establish her claim to ownership of an undivided one-half interest in and to lots 17 and IS, and to quiet her title thereto, and to cancel of record the deed from J. L. Wilkin to F. B. Courtney, the oil and gas lease above mentioned and the assignment thereof in so far as they affected her alleged one-half interest in and to said lots, and also to cancel the resale tax deed above mentioned.

She alleges in her petition in substance that the deed from James R. Lewis and herself to J. L. Wilkin was in fact a mortgage given to secure the repayment of the sum of $500, which Wilkin furnished for the purchase of the lots from Guy Black-welder; that said indebtedness was all paid from the proceeds of the sale of lots 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, except about $85; that thereupon J. L. Wilkin and James R. Lewis entered into an agreement whereby Wilkin was to and did cancel the balance due on the note, and to pay said James R. Lewis the sum of $100 for an undivided one-half interest in said lots 17 and 18. That said note was surrendered and the $100 was paid, but that Wilkin had never executed a deed back to Lewis, for said one-half interest. That plaintiff believed at the time *599 that Wilkin had executed and did convey said interest, but the record reveals that no such deed had been placed of record; that at the time Wilkin executed the deed to Courtney, he, Wilkin, was the owner of an undivided one-half interest therein, and that plaintiff was the owner of the other one-half interest; that she had continuously, after September 7, 1912, been in the open and notorious possession of the undivided one-half interest in said lots claimed by her; that the resale tax deed is void, among other reasons, because of the fact that said deed was taken by Wilkin at a time when he and plaintiff were owners in common of said lots 17 and 18.

She prays for a reformation of the deed from Wilkin to Courtney so as to make it convey only the one-half interest which she claims Wilkin owned.

Defendant Courtney answered expressly denying the execution of all instruments under which plaintiff claims title, and expressly denies the allegations of agency and authority contained in plaintiff’s petition, and affirmatively alleged in substance that he was in fact the purchaser of lots 17 and 18 at the resale mentioned, and that he went into possession of said premises immediately after the issuance of said resale tax deed, and had remained in possession ever since. He further alleges that for convenience he made the bid upon which the resale deed was based in the name of J. L. Wilkin; that thereafter he discovered that Wilkin was the owner of record at the time said resale tax deed was issued, whereupon he caused Wilkin to convey to him the title acquired by him, and also the record title, for which he paid a valuable consideration without notice of any claim of plaintiff; and that he is an innocent purchaser in reliance upon the records of the county clerk and was without actual or constructive notice of any right, title, claim, interest, ox-demand of plaintiff.

He then pleaded the statute of limitation as provided by section 9746, O. O. S. 1921, and by the same section as amended by chapter 158, S. L. 1923, and also as provided by subdivisions 3, 4, and 6 of section 183, O. O. S. 1921.

He further pleaded that he has paid all taxes on said premises during the time of his alleged occupancy, and that he had caused lasting, valuable, and expensive improvements, such as derricks, and other things used in drilling oil wells, to be placed upon said premises at an expense of approximately $125,000, all with the full knowledge of plaintiff, and without objection being made by her, whereby, he asserts, plaintiff is estopped by her laches and acquiescence in the premises.

The answer of defendant Grison Oil Company was substantially the same as that of Courtney. Both prayed that their respective titles be quieted.

Issues were joined by reply and amended reply.

During the trial it developed that F. B. Courtney had no actual interest in the matter whatever and that the record title he held was in trust for E. A. Barnes, who it appears was his uncle. Thereupon an amendment to the answer of F. B. Courtney was filed alleging in substance that at the 1919 resale for taxes the purchase of said lots was made by E. A. Barnes, and that he immediately went into possession of said lots; that the bid was made and the deed was taken in the name of J. L. Wilkin, and that on the 16th day of October, 1922, said E. A. Barnes paid to J. L, Wilkin a valuable consideration for the record title then standing in the name of J. L. Wilkin, and caused the conveyance to be made to defendant Courtney, who held the same in trust for E. A. Barnes.

Both parties requested the court to make separate findings of fact.

Nearly 1,000 pages of evidence was taken, and at the close thereof the trial court made findings of fact substantially sustaining all of the plaintiff’s allegations and claims, and entered a judgment and decree accordingly, from which judgment and decree defendants prosecute their appeal. .

The first proposition presented is that the resale tax deed was fair on its face, valid, and extinguished all other titles.

The trial court found as a fact, and the evidence shows, that at the resale Barnes was the actual bidder, bidding in the name of J. L. Wilkin; that when the resale deed was issued it was made to J. L. Wilkin.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1200, 54 P.2d 386, 175 Okla. 597, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grison-oil-corp-v-lewis-okla-1935.