Hope v. Bourland

1908 OK 165, 98 P. 580, 21 Okla. 864, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 9, 1908
DocketNo. 813, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1908 OK 165 (Hope v. Bourland) 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
Hope v. Bourland, 1908 OK 165, 98 P. 580, 21 Okla. 864, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 182 (Okla. 1908).

Opinion

Turner, J.

(after stating the facts as above.) The question for us to determine is whether or not the court erred in setting aside the report of the special master, and in rendering judgment in accordance with the prayer -of the cross-complaint. This report was more than advisory to the court. It will be observed that the special master by consent was directed “to hear the evidence and decide on the issues between the parties , and make his report to the court, stating Ms finding, both of fact and of law.” Such a reference gives to the finding of fact in this case the same conclusiveness as the verdict of a jury, or the finding of fact by the court sitting as a jury. Greenhaw et al. v. Combs, 74 Ark. 336, 85 S. W. 768.

This reference is almost identical with that in the case of Kimberly v. Arms, 129 U. S. 512, 9 Sup. Ct. 355, 32 L. Ed. 764, where the court said:

“By the consent in the case at bar it was intended that the master should exercise power beyond that of a reporter of the testimony. If there had been such a limitation of his authority, there would have been no purpose in adding to his power Ho hear the evidence/ the power to ‘decide all the issues between the parties and make Ms report, to the court, separately stating Ms findings of law and of fact’ together with the evidence. * * * We are therefore constrained to hold that the learned court below failed to give to the findings of the master the weight to which they were entitled, and that they should have been treated, as sc far correct and binding as not to be disturbed, unless clearly in *868 conflict with the weight of the evidence upon which they were made.”

In Davis v. Schwartz, 155 U. S. 631, 15 Sup. Ct. 237, 39 L. Ed. 289, the court, in speaking of a report under a similar reference, said: “* * * But so far as it depends upon conflicting testimony, or upon the credibility of witnesses, or so far as there is any testimony consistent with the finding, it must be treated as unassailable” — citing authority.

The Supreme Court of Arkansas, under whose chancery practice this case was tried, it having originated and been tried in the Indian Territory prior to the adoption of the Constitution, in speaking of the weight and effect to be given to the report of a special master under a consent reference, as in this case, in Greenhaw v. Combs, 74 Ark. 336, 85 S. W. 769, after adopting the rule as laid down by the Supreme Court in the preceding case, said: “Where there is any testimony legally sufficient to support such findings, they will not be set aside.” The United States Court of Appeals for the Indian Territory laid down the rule in Rainwater, Bradford Hat Co. et al. v. McBride et al., 3 Ind. T. 621, 64 S. W. 556, in the syllabus to that case, in effect, that such a master’s report is to be regarded on appeal as the finding of a properly instructed jury.

Guided by these principles, we find, after a careful examination of the testimony, there was practically no conflict therein, and that the findings of fact by the referee are amply supported by the evidence. It then remains for us to determine whether the judgment of the lower court was proper upon those findings.

The findings disclose, in short, that on August 14, 1903, defendant, Frances Bourland, entered into a written contract with plaintiff and his associates, agreeing that for $4,250 she would, at such time as the approval of the Secretary of the Interior could be procured, convey to plaintiff 150 acres of her own allotment, and 50 acres allotted to her minor son (describing both tracts), except that out of the land allotted to her there was to be reserved to 'her, without reduction of the purchase price, 3 *869 acres to be selected by her, upon which was situated her dwelling-house and other improvements. In the meantime, and before the approval of the Secretary of the Interior was invoked, plaintiff and his associates laid off this land into lots and blocks, and platted the same, showing the 3 acres to be reserved to her, designated the same the “Bourland Reservation,” and sold off the major portion of the lots. Doubt having arisen in the minds of these parties as to their ability to secure approval of the Secretary of the Interior for her to alienate the 50 acres belonging to her minor son, a second contract in writing was made, and entered into between the parties on the 17th day of September, 1904, more than a year after the first agreement. The second agreement, in substance, provided that she would make application to the Secretary of the Interior to alienate her said lands and use her best efforts to procure his approval to sell the land of her minor son, but that, in the event said effort was unsuccessful, then Hope and his associates agreed to pay her, as soon as she conveyed to them by warranty deed certain lands set forth in the contract, which was a portion of her allotment mentioned in the first agreement embracing the “Bourland Reservation,” the sum of $950, in addition to the sum of $3,300, which she had theretofore agreed to accept from them for the same land. No reservation' or exception of any kind was made in this last agreement, and so far as the testimony discloses, nothing was said about her three-acre tract upon which she resided at the time of making the second agreement, and upon which she continued to reside until a short time before the commencement of this suit. About a month after making this second agreement the Secretary of the Interior granted her the required permission to alienate the land described in the second agreement belonging to her for said town-site purposes, but provided in his order that' the same should not be- sold for a sum less than $50 per acre. In application for this permission, she described the land exactly as set forth in this second contract, and shortly after receiving it went to Muskogee, where the deed sought to be reformed was prepared for her sig» *870 nature. It was read to her in the office of the attorney who prepared it, and read and examined by her codefendant, Little, who was then her agent, and whom she afterwards married. It was taken tó the office of the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, where it was again read to her by the chairman of the commission, who explained 4ts contents to her, and then and there received $6,744.50, the purchase price of the land, but in that deed no reservation of the three-acre tract was made, and nothing said about it.

Plaintiff intended that it should, and the deed did, contain a description of all the land for which he had contracted in the second agreement, and the report discloses that it “is not clear by any means that it was the intention of the defendant, Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1908 OK 165, 98 P. 580, 21 Okla. 864, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-bourland-okla-1908.