Jackson v. Carroll

1922 OK 61, 207 P. 735, 86 Okla. 230, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 21, 1922
Docket10360
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1922 OK 61 (Jackson v. Carroll) 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
Jackson v. Carroll, 1922 OK 61, 207 P. 735, 86 Okla. 230, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 162 (Okla. 1922).

Opinions

ELTING, J.

This suit was commenced in the district court of Carter county, Okla., by Riley Jackson against J. S. Carroll and others, setting up that he was the owner and entitled to immediate possession of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 29, township 3 south, range 1 west.

There are three counts in his petition : First, an action for ejectment. Second, in the nature of an action to quiet title. Third, for recovery of rents for the wrongful dispossession of said lands for a period of six years at $100 per year. In his petition, Riley Jackson alleges, in substance, that he is a Chickasaw freedman, and that said lands were his distributive share as an allottee of the Chickasaw Nation, and sets 'fo-rth a copy .A his patent to said lands.

J. S. Carroll, defendant, filed answer, denying the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, and sets up by way of affirmative defense that he, Ji S. Carroll, is the owner in fee simple title of the lands sued for by plaintiff, and claims said title by reason of a guardian’s deed dated July 8, 1912, from Ben Wright, the duly appointed, qualified, and acting guardian of Riley Jackson, Lidia O. Jackson, and Andrew Butler. Then alleges the due recordation of the said deed, and that he had collected the rents and profits, paid the taxes, and made valuable improvements thereon by greater buildings, cultivation, and otherwise reclaiming said land to the amount of $2,000. Asking thát title be quieted in him, and for all necessary relief, and attached as an exhibit to his answer a copy of the guardian’s deed.

To this answer Riley Jackson filed a reply, denying each and every allegation of defendant’s answer in so far as the same does not admit the allegations of his petition; denying that Ben Wright was ever the guardian of the plaintiff, denying that the court had authorized Ben Wright to sell the land mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and denying that any of the matters were ever authorized by a court having jurisdiction of said matter.

Plaintiff alleged, further, that he was informed and believed that a purported order appointing Ben Wright as a guardian was made in the county court of Carter county, and that said order was void and of no effect. That at the time of said purported appointment the plaintiff was in the penitentiary at McAlester, Okla. That he never signed a waiver and never nominated Ben Wright as a guardian, and no notice was ever served upon him of said proceeding, and that *232 the same was without his knowledge or consent, and that Carroll had entered into a conspiracy with Ben Wright, the purported guardian, to cheat and defraud this plaintiff out of his property, and that Carroll had Wright appointed with a vie,w of purchasing said lands at fraudulent sale. That he never paid the guardian the consideration for said lands except through a fraudulent devise and a purchase by the guardian of worthless property from the defendant Carroll. That Carroll had signed the bonds necessary for Wright to make, and Carroll had Wright, immediately upon his appointment, to institute proceedings with a view to carrying out said fraudulent sale. Alleging, furthermore, that the plaintiff, at the time of the purported appointment of Ben Wright as his guardian, was more than 15 years of age, and that he was entitled to notice of said proceeding and entitled to nominate his own guardian. In substance, alleging that said sale was void, first, for fraud perpetrated by the purchaser in securing the appointment and the sale; and, second, because the appointment of the guardian~was void by reason of failure to give the notice as required by law to the plaintiff.

A jury was waived and the cause proceeded to trial before the court. The court, after hearing the evidence, rendered a judgment in favor of the defendant J. S. Carroll, quieting title in him and removing cloud from title and enjoining Riley Jackson from claiming or asserting any right, title, or interest in said estate. Motion for a new trial was filed, and the same overruled by the court, and appeal lodged in this court by Riley Jackson, plaintiff below, plaintiff in error herein.

There is attached to the evidence in the case-made a copy of the petition of the appointment of the guardian; the waiver of the mother of the plaintiff; a written nomination by Andrew Butler of Ben Wright to be his guardian; order appointing Ben Wright as the joint guardian of Riley Jackson, Lidia O. Jackson, and Andrew Butler; oath- of guardian; guardian’s bond, signed by Ben Wright, Clyde Johnson, and J. S. Carroll; letters of guardianship; petition to sell real estate; order for hearing petition to sell real estate; an appraisal of the lands of the three minors; the bid of J. S. Carroll in writing; return of sale; order confirming sale; guardian’s deed by Ben Wright -to J. S. Carroll; an order of the county judge directing guardian to buy a team for $225 and credit the same on the purchase of the land, and an order directing Ben Wright to loan J. S. Carroll $200 on a first real estate mortgage.

An examination of the record in this case leads this court to conclude that this sale is void absolutely upon the face of the proceeding, and for reasons other than the fraud alleged and contended for by plaintiff in error and other than upon the grounds of the voidness of the proceedings by reason of failure to give the plaintiff fn error notice oftthe proceeding for the appointment of a guardian; these last two -being the questions specifically raised by the plaintiff in error in liis motion for new trial, and the overruling of which contentions by the trial court is assigned as error in this court. It is true that the grounds upon which we reverse this ease and direct judgment for the plaintiff in error were not raised by the plaintiff in error in this court, but we hold that this '’ourt has authority to review this record and either direct or render judgment such as the record discloses that the trial court sh raid have rendered in the first instance.

In the case of First Nat. Bank of Soper v. Beecher, 62 Okla. 36, 161 Pac. 327, the syllabus, par. 3, reads as follows:

“Where it appears’ that the court committed prejudicial error in directing and •rendering the judgment rendered,’and only questions of unmixed law are involved, and the record of the court discloses what judgment should have been rendered, this court will not reverse and remand said cause for another trial, but will reverse and remand said cause with instructions to the trial court to render judgment which it properly should have rendered.”

To the same effect is Andrew v. Thayer, 69 Oklahoma, 171 Pac. 1117, and numerous other decisions by this court.

We will now -proceed to set forth our reasons why this record discloses that the sale is void upon its face and that the guardian’s deed is an.absolute nullity.

The petition for the appointment of a guardian, signed by Ben Wright, asks that he be appointed the guardian of Riley Jackson, Lidia O. Jackson, and Andrew Butler, minors, in Carter county, Okla., and that they are of the ages of 17, 12, and 15 years, respectively. The petition for appointment further alleges that, as Chickasaw freedmen, the said minors had lands allotted to them as follows: To Riley Jackson, the lands heretofore

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 61, 207 P. 735, 86 Okla. 230, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-carroll-okla-1922.