Harjo v. Chilcoat

1930 OK 516, 294 P. 119, 146 Okla. 62, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1930
Docket19848
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1930 OK 516 (Harjo v. Chilcoat) 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
Harjo v. Chilcoat, 1930 OK 516, 294 P. 119, 146 Okla. 62, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 260 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

DIFFENDAFFER, C.

Two of the defendants in error, AValter D. Chilcoat and Harry H. Diamond, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, commenced this action in the district court of Seminole county, against, Benny Harjo, Lownie Harjo, Maggie Harjo, Homer Neece, the Texas Company, the Continental Oil Company, Amerada Petroleum Company, and the Marland Oil Company of Oklahoma, to quiet their title to a certain tract of land, and cancel of record a certain attorney’s contract between the defendants Harjo and Homer Neece, which plaintiffs claimed was a cloud upon their title. The land involved is what was formerly the surplus allotment of Scipio, a full-blood Seminole Indian.

The pleadings are somewhat voluminous, covering some 233 pages of the case-made. The plaintiffs alleged, in substance, that Walter D. Chilcoat was the owner in fee simple of the land and in the actual and peaceable possession thereof, less an undivided one-half interest in that oil and gas royalty or mineral rights of 40 acres' of the land, which was owned by plaintiff, Harry Diamond, which had been sold and conveyed to him by plaintiff, Chilcoat. They deraighed their title as follows: That the land was allotted to Scipio, a full-blood Seminole Indian, Roll No. 1310, as his surplus portion of the Seminole lands; that Scipio died intestate in 1909, seized and possessed of the land in fee simple, leaving surviving him as his sole and only heirs at law, his wife, Elora Fish, who inherited one-third, and four children, Benny Harjo, Lownie Harjo, Maggie Harjo, and Billie Harjo; that Billie Harjo died while a minor leaving no issue, never having been married, and that his interest in the land descended to his brothers and sister above named; that plaintiff Chilcoat acquired the interest of said heirs, as follows: Warranty deed from Flora Fish to R. F. Jackson, dated May 18, 1915; warranty deed from R. F. Jackson and wife to N. G. Poteet; guardian’s deed *64 from Chili Eish, guardian of Lownie Harjo and Benny Harjo, minors to N. G. Poteet, dated May 1, 1919; guardian’s deed from E. C. Aldridge, as guardian of Maggie Piar jo, a minor, to N. G. Poteet, dated July 16, 1919; warranty deed from Poteet and wife to Chilcoat; also, warranty deed from Benny Harjo and Lowine Harjo to plaintiff, Chil-coat, dated July 18, 1925, and quitclaim deed from Maggie Harjo to Chilcoat, dated January 24, 1927; all of which were duly recorded in Seminole county. The petition then alleges that the Texas Company is the owner of an oil and gas mining lease, covering a part of the allotment, and that the Continental Oil Company is the owner of an oil and gas mining lease covering another part of the land; the Amerada Petroleum Company is the owner of an oil and gas lease covering another part; and the Marland Oil Company of Oklahoma is the owner of an oil and gas lease covering another part. All of which leases, plaintiffs acknowledge as valid oil and gas leases.

It is then alleged, in substance: That defendants Benny Harjo, Lownie Harjo, Maggie Harjo, and Homer Neece, all claimed some interest in said land, the exact nature of which is unknown to plaintiffs. But that said "claimants asserted an attorney’s contract between them and Homer Neece, purporting to he approved by the county court, 'which contract purports to be one whereby the defendants Harjo employed defendant Neece to take whatever steps he deems necessary in the courts and elsewhere to assert and protect the interest and rights claimed by them in and to said lands, which contract is dated July 13, 1927, and filed of record in Seminole county August 22, 1927.

It is alleged that said contract and order approving same are of no force or effect and are void, for the reason that Benny, Lownie, and Maggie Harjo had no interest in said lauds, but that the instrument so placed of record casts a cloud upon the title of plaintiff, for the removal of which plaintiffs pray.

A second cause of action is then set up, wherein it is alleged that said contract was placed of record for the sole purpose of clouding the title of plaintiffs and with wanton, fraudulent, and malicious intent, and for the purpose of extorting money from plaintiffs commohly known as “blood money.’’ Actual damages in the sum of $1,000 and punitive damages in the sum of $1,000 are prayed for. Each of said oil companies appeared and filed their answers, in which they set up their respective interest substantially as alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, claiming their oil and gas leases directly, or through mesne conveyances, from Chilcoat, and each filed a cross-petition against defendants Homer Neece and the three Harjos, asking that title be quieted.

Defendant Neece, and the three defendants Benny, Lownie, and Maggie Harjo, filed their answer, wherein defendant Neece, in substance, pleaded that he was an attorney at law in good standing; that he had entered into the contract with his codefend-ants in good faith; that he believed that Lownie, Maggie, and Benny Harjo had a cause of action to assert their rights and protect their interest in and to said lairds, and specifically denied that he took the conti act, for the purpose of clouding plaintiffs’ title or damaging them in any way.

They all denied that the guardian’s deed mentioned in plaintiffs’ petition is valid or conveys any title whatever; pleaded that all the subsequent conveyances in the way of mineral grants, oil leases, and mortgages were likewise void and of no effect, and pray that they all be canceled.

Defendants Lownie and Benny Harjo, by way of cross-petition, attack the validity of the guardian’s deed executed by Chili Eish as their guardian, in that:

“Said land was advertised for sale first on the 5th day of April, 1919, and set for sale on April 19, 1919, and the sale, a public one, was held on that date. The law of this state relating to the sale of minor’s interest in land, such as this sale, requires at least 15 days shall intervene between the date of the first publication of the notice of sale and the day of sale. The statute required 15 days did not intervene between April 5th and April 19th, and this is mandatory and jurisdictional, and therefore the subsequent proceedings in the way of return of sale and order of confirmation and guardian’s deed are void and of no legal force or effect, and such guardian's deed is void, and all the instruments of writing accruing or arising therefrom are likewise void and of no legal force or effect, and are but clouds on the title of the defendants Lownie Harjo, Benny Harjo, and the possession thereunder is illegal.”

Defendant Maggie Harjo pleaded, in substance, that the guardian’s deed, whereby E. C. Aldridge, as her guardian, conveyed her interest in said land, was void, in that at the time said Aldridge was appointed as her guardian, she was a minor over age of 34 years, and that such appointment was made without notice to her, and that she knew nothing whatever of said appointment until after same was made, and that, when she did learn of it, she petitioned the coun *65 ty court for liis removal, which was done, and that said pretended appointment was wholly void as well as all acts done thereunder by the said Aldridge. She also alleged that Chilcoat and Aldridge had conspired together for the purpose of having Aldridge appointed as her guardian for the sole purpose of selling her interest in said land, which was not for her best interest.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 516, 294 P. 119, 146 Okla. 62, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harjo-v-chilcoat-okla-1930.