Hull v. Teafatiller

1930 OK 86, 286 P. 799, 142 Okla. 265, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1930
Docket18741
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1930 OK 86 (Hull v. Teafatiller) 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
Hull v. Teafatiller, 1930 OK 86, 286 P. 799, 142 Okla. 265, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 123 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

November 3, 1921, J. L. Hull and W. M. Janes brought suit in district court of Seminole county, Okla., against J. W. Teafatiller and W. S. Allen, as defendants, for partition of S. E. ¾ of S. E-¼ of sec. 10, twp. 9 north, range 7 E., containing 40 acres. The petition, in the usual form, in effect, sets out that plaintiffs and defendants each own an undivided one-fourth interest in said lands. The prayer is for partition in kind, or if impracticable, for a sale of the lands for division. A return, on summons directed to sheriff of Johnston county showed service upon J. IV. Teafatil-ler, but that W. S. Allen -was dead. On December 3, 1921, J. w. Teafatiller answered 'by general denial except it is admitted that the interest of the respective parties in said lands is correctly disclosed in the petition and the prayer is that the lands be partitioned and that defendant’s i>art be set apart to him.

On March 2S, 1924, ifiaintiffs amended their petition, but only to the extent of alleging the death of W. S. Allen and that his one-fourth of the land devolved upon his widow, Lillie, and their three children, who were made parties. A copy of such amended petition - was forthwith furnished Tea-fatiller’s attorneys.

After a return of process purporting to show service of summons on the said Allen heirs, including Carlton Allen, a minor, the court, on June 17, 1924, and upon proper application, appointed a guardian ad litem for said minor. Upon the last-named date, an answer consisting of a general denial was filed for said infant by his guardian ad litem. June 23, 1924, the court entered a decree correctly determining the interests of the respective parties in said land and appointing commissioners to partition same accordingly, and report their action to the next term of court. In the said order there is a recital that J. D. Teafatiller was present by his attorneys at the time the order was made. But from the proof this was incorrect.

The said commissioners subscribed and filed oath June 24, 1924, and on the same day made their report setting out that notice had been given all persons interested in said land of the time and place of hearing, and that at such time and place, and after actually viewing the land, they found same could not be fairly divided in kind, and they therefore recommended that it be sold and proceeds divided among the owners.

The lands were appraised atj£25 per acre. This report was verified June 24, 1924, and was filed June 20, 1924, at which time J. L, Hull, one of plaintiffs, by. his attorney, filed his election to take the land at the valuation fixed in said report, and prayed the court for. a decree in accordance with such election.

*267 On June 27, 192-1, the court made a formal order showing an examination and approval of the report filed by the commissioners and ordering- the sale of the said lands for division; also fixing a fee of S50 for' the attorney for the guardian ad litem of the minor, and a fee of $25 for the attorneys for J. IV. Teafatiller. The order also directed delivery of said deed to said land to the purchaser, Hull, upon payment of its appraised value to the sheriff.^

The issues in this suit are solely between Teafatiller on the one side and Hull on the other. They do not affect, nor are they to-be affected by, the rights of the Allen heirs, whose connection herewith up to this point has been detailed only to shed light upon certain contentions of Teafatiller in his motion to set aside the judgment, and they will be referred to briefly later for that purpose only.

On the day after the sale, one of plaintiffs gave Teafatiller a written summary -of the sale, and also a statement of the account incident thereto. And within 00 or 90 days thereafter, said Teafatiller received by mail from the court cleric and cashed a check for about $210, which he knew to be bis one-fourth of the proceeds of the land, less costs.

The amount of the appraised value was paid in and the deed delivered to the purchaser. From the record that was the end of the matter until about 2½ years thereafter, and on December 10, 1926, when said Teafatiller filed a petition in the cause seeking to set aside and vacate the judgments made and entered in the cause on June 23rd and June 27, 1924, and to cancel the sheriff's deed executed to Hull in pursuance of the judgment and order of confirmation. The original plaintiffs, Hull and Janes, filed answers to the petition. Whereupon, the court, upon hearing, denied the petition to vacate, and thereafter movant filed a motion for a new trial, which motion was heard by the court on March 28, 1927. At the conclusion of the hearing on such motion, the court announced that same would be sustained, and that the evidence offered in the trial on the petition on March 22, 1927, would be reconsidered, whereupon judgment was entered for Teafatiller, setting aside all proceedings therein affecting his title .and reinvesting him with his undivided one-fourth interest in said land.

To tins action of the court plaintiff excepted, filed motion for new trial, which was overruled, and the case is appealed here.

Since the case was lodged in this court, the death of Teafatiller has been suggested, and the action has been revived in the name of his heirs.

It is contended by plaintiffs that, at the time Teafatiller’s motion for new trial was sustained, there remained in the- court no authority to go further and reconsider the original evidence and enter judgment for defendant without introducing other evidence, or giving plaintiff right to do so, but we shall pass up this question, since upon this appeal, the entire record and evidence is before this court for examination and disposition. It is a very familiar rule that, when equity takes in hand the disposition of a case, it will deal conclusively with the whole subject. It would be idle for us to pass simply upon the correctness or incorrectness of the ruling of the trial court upon the motion for new trial where, subsequent to granting of such motion, the court passed upon the merits of. the controversy and made final disposition of the case. The final judgment and all the facts and circumstances upon which the same was predicated are before us for examination under proper challenge by the complaining party, and we shall deal with the merits of the controversy in its entirety.

Wo must view the question presented upon the record as it stands with the petition to vacate filed in the original action against plaintiffs; and our decision on the issue is not to be influenced by any question involved In the rights of the Allen heirs. The issue is simply one between the plaintiff', Hull, the purchaser of the property, and J. W. Tea-fatiller. it has been repeatedly held to be the rule that a petition to vacate a judgment is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court, and it has also been beld that the court listens somewhat more readily to an appeal from an order denying relief than to one granting such relief, where the issue arises upon a petition to set aside a judgment.

It must not be lost sight of, however, that sound public policy, the stability of solemn judgments of courts and the security of litigants demand that, where it is sought to vacate orders and judgment of the trial court, fair on their face, after the expiration of the term, under section 810, subd. 3, O. O. S. 1921, upon parol testimony, the evidence must be clear, cogent and convincing. Morrison v.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 86, 286 P. 799, 142 Okla. 265, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-teafatiller-okla-1930.