Ingram v. Jones

47 F.2d 135, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 1931
Docket300
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 135 (Ingram v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingram v. Jones, 47 F.2d 135, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410 (10th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

Leonard Daniel Ingram brought this action against Minerva Jones, Robert Johnson as administrator of the estate of C. Jones, Polly Barnett, James Barnett, Richard Love and Charles G. Watts to recover judgment upon a certain promissory note dated December 30, 1920, due three years after date, made by Minerva Jones, C. Jones, Polly Barnett and James Barnett and payable to C. Jones and W. T. Wisdom as guardians of Ingram a minor, for the foreclosure of a mortgage securing sueh note upon 160 acres of land in Wagoner county, Oklahoma, formerly the homestead and surplus allotments of Grace Marshall, a Creek freedman, hereinafter also referred to as Grace Ayteh and Grace Love, for subrogation to the rights of J. B. Campbell as mortgagee under a prior mortgage upon sueh allotments, and for the foreclosure of the Campbell mortgage. This action was commenced on December 15,1926.

On May 9, 1919, Grace Ayteh executed and delivered to Watts a warranty deed for such allotments. It recited a consideration of $1,000. Sueh allotments were then of the value of about $16,000. On or about January 1, 1920, Grace Ayteh married Richard Love. About July 20, 1920, Grace Love employed J. B. Campbell, an attorney-at-law, to set aside the instrument which she had executed in favor of Watts. This instrument she then believed to he a will. Campbell discovered, upon investigation, that it was a deed instead of a will. He took the matter up with Watts and the latter offered to re-convey the land by a quit-claim deed, for $5,000. Watts claimed that he had advanced Grace Love $1,960.40 in cash and rendered her personal services to the value of $3,039.-60. Later Watts reduced his claim to $4,500. In order to pay the Watts claim and certain other indebtedness, Grace Love arranged for a temporary loan of $8,500 from Campbell on July 26, 1920. On that date, she and Richard Love executed and delivered to Campbell a mortgage deed upon such allotments. Campbell assigned this mortgage to the First National Bank of Muskogee and gave the bank his note for $8,500. He disbursed the proceeds of sueh loan in the following manner: $4,500 to Watts; $500 to Richard Love; $2,500 to Campbell, Leahy & Brewster for attorney’s fees; $833.33 in satisfaction of the principal and interest of a note secured by a prior mortgage on the allotments; $122.44 for taxes against the allotments, and the balance for an abstract on the allotments, for revenue stamps, for recording fees, and for other expenses incident to the matter. Before making such temporary loan, Campbell took np the matter of a permanent loan with the guardians of Ingram and-they agreed to take over the loan at the maturity of the note to the bank. But for this arrangement, Campbell would not have made the temporary loan.

Watts executed and delivered to Grace Love a quit-claim deed to the allotments on July 26,1920. On the same date, Grace and Richard Love executed and delivered to Polly, Barnett and Minerva Jones a warranty deed therefor, subject to the Campbell mortgage.

On July 22,1920, Grace Love made a will by which she devised her property in equal shares to Richard Love, her husband, Polly Barnett, her sister, and Minerva Jones, her cousin. The $500 was paid to Richard Love in lieu of his interest in the allotments and the deed to Barnett and Jones was made in aid of the will. Grace Love died about August 28, 1920, and on September 22, 1920, such will was duly admitted to probate by the county court of Wagoner county, Oklahoma.

On October 8, 1920, Richard Love commenced cause No. 4302 in the district court of Wagoner county, Oklahoma, seeking cancellation of such deed to Barnett and Jones. In his petition Love alleged that Polly Barnett and Minerva Jones falsely and fraudulently represented to him that it would be for ' the best interests of the beneficiaries under such will to divide the cash and other personal property of Grace Love before her death; that he was unable to read or write; that he believed and'relied upon sueh representations and was induced thereby to execute and acknowledge such deed under the belief that it was an acknowledgment of and a receipt for his one-third share in sueh cash and personal property.

*138 On December 30,1920, C. Jones and Wisdom as guardians of Ingram, in pursuance . of their prior agreement with Campbell as the agent of Grace 'Love, loaned $8,600 to Polly Barnett and Minerva Jones, took from them the note and mortgage first above referred to, and with the proceeds thereof paid and discharged the Campbell note to the First Nátional Bank of Muskogee. A release of the Campbell mortgage was filed for record January 8, 1921, at 9:55 a. m., and the Ingram mortgage was filed for record on the same day at 10:00 a. m.

On May 26, 1921, Richard Love filed an amended petition in No. 4302 in which he joined Campbell as a party defendant and alleged that the defendants in No. 4302 and C. Jones had represented to him that it was necessary to borrow $5,000 to pay off certain claims against such allotments in order to prevent them from being taken from him and Grace Love; that in the event of the death of Grace Love he would receive no interest in sueh allotments, and that they would pay him $500 in cash out of the proceeds of sueh $5,000 loan if he would join in sueh deed to Barnett and Jones and sueh mortgage to Campbell, and that by reason thereof he was deceived into executing sueh deed and mortgage.

On May 25, 1923, Raymond Nelson and Margaret C. Russell, as the alleged guardians of Ingram, commenced cause No. 5259 in the district court of Wagoner county against Polly and James Barnett, Minerva Jones, P. A. Lewis as the administrator of the estate of C. Jones, Richard Love and other persons to recover judgment upon the Ingram note, and for the foreclosure of the Ingram mortgage.

On June 13, 1923, Riehard Love filed his answer in No. 5259 in which he alleged that when he executed sueh deed to Barnett and Jones he had no knowledge of the will of Grace Love, and that Polly Barnett, Minerva Jones, Wisdom and C. Jones concealed from him the fact that Grace Love had made sueh a will. He also set up the same averments of fraud as were alleged in his amended petition in No. 4302, offered to return the $500 paid him from the proceeds of the Campbell loan, and prayed for cancellation of the Ingram mortgage.

On October 16, 1923, the'following stipulation was filed in No. 4302: •

“Stipulation and Dismissal
“It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the attorneys for the plaintiff, Messrs. Watts & Watts, and John C. Graves, attorney for Mary Dan, intervenor, and J. B. Campbell and Leahy & Brewster, that J. B. Campbell be dismissed as a party to .this cause, without prejudice to 'any parties herein.
“It is further agreed that the judgment rendered in this action shall not in any way affect the certain cause now pending on this . docket, entitled Leonard Ingram, a minor, by his guardians, vs. Minerva Jones, et al., being cause No. (5259), or the rights therein litigated.
“Dated and signed this 13th day of October, 1923.
“[Signed]
“Watts & Watts,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
“John C. Graves,
: Attorney for Intervenor,

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 135, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-jones-ca10-1931.