Jenson v. Ward

1935 OK 180, 41 P.2d 255, 171 Okla. 279, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 26, 1935
DocketNo. 23828.
StatusPublished

This text of 1935 OK 180 (Jenson v. Ward) 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
Jenson v. Ward, 1935 OK 180, 41 P.2d 255, 171 Okla. 279, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 182 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

J. D. Ward instituted this action in the district court of Tulsa county, Okla., on the 1st day of September, 1922, as plaintiff, against Henry A. Jenson, H. A. Jenson, Charles F. Runyan, J. W. Myers, and Gladys Stebbins. On motion of the defendant H. A. Jenson, the defendants O. K. Eysenbach, D. A. Skillen and J. E. Gentry were made defendants.

Gladys Stebbins files her answer as Gladys McClintock alleging certain facts and disclaiming any interest in the property described in the plaintiff’s petition. The defendants and J. W. Myers, D. A. Skillen, and J. E. Gentry disclaim any interest in the property, and thereafter it was brought to the attention of "the court that J. D. Ward had died and the cause was revived in the name of Sallie B. Ward and Sallie B. Ward as administratrix of the estate of J. D. Ward, deceased.

The parties will be referred to for convenience as they appeared in the court below ; that is, Sallie Ward, defendant in error, will be referred to as plaintiff, and II. A. Jenson and Bessie C. Eysenbach, administratrix of the estate of O. K. Eysenbach, deceased, plaintiffs in error, will be referred to as defendants.

In the course of the trial (he evidence substantially follows the allegations contained in the pleadings. The evidence of the plaintiff showed that the land described in the plaintiff’s petition, to wit, the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 35, township 19 north and range 12 east of the Indian Base and Meridian, was allotted to Riley Fulsom, who was a freedman citizen of the Creek Nation of the Indians, and that this was set aside by the Creek Nation to the said Riley Fulsom as his homestead allotment and homestead patent issued therefor. That Riley Fulsom had two names; he went by the name of Harry Fulsom and Riley Fulsom and the land was patented to him as Riley Fulsom. That the 40 acres of land above described was wild, unimproved lands; that the allottee of said land was imprisoned at Ft. Smith, Ark., under the name of Harry Fulsom, convicted by the district court of Sebastian county, Ark., and sent to the Arkansas Penitentiary at Little Rock; that the allottee died in the penitentiary at Little Rock on thei 22nd day of February, 1908, as Harry Fulsom. No question, however, was raised as to the variance in name, it being-conceded by all parties to the action that the party who died in the penitentiary was the allottee mentioned in the patent introduced in the evidence. The aliottee, Riley Fulsom, left no wife or issue, and title to the lands described in the plaintiff’s petition on the death of the said Riley Fulsom passed to his father, Lewis Fulsom, and the various brothers and sisters, as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition.

On August 21, 1908, Lewis Fulsom and David R. Fulsom executed a deed to the plaintiff, J. D. Ward, for their interest in the lands above described, and on August 21st Lewis Fulsom. Jr., executed a deed for his interest in the land. On October 7, 1908. Elzora Lewis executed a deed to the plaintiff for her interest in the land, and on the 16th day of January, 1911, Thomas Fulsom executed a deed to the plaintiff for his interest in the land above described. On May 25, 1912, the plaintiff deeded the land described in plaintiff’s petition to C. E. Brown and E. R. Brown. On the 2lst *281 day of November, 1913, E. R. Brown and C. E. Brown conveyed tbe land described in plaintiffs petition back to the plaintiff.

The testimony of the plaintiff shows that he went out and looked at the land some time before he bought it and some time after he bought it; that there were no improvements whatever on the land; that the plaintiff gaye an oil and gas lease on this land to a man by the name of Noble on the 20th day of July, 1911. The plaintiff testifies that there were no improvements on the land at the time this oil lease was given. There is no further evidence to show that the plaintiff ever went into possession of the land or put any improvements on it. There is some testimony as to the plaintiff leasing the land, but never showed whether the naan he leased it to ever went into possession or not. On August-4, 1908, a deed was taken from Riley Fulsom to B. A. Skillen and J. E. Gentry. It was afterwards shown that this deed was executed by Thomas Fulsom and that same was a forgery, and that Riley Fulsom was dead at the time said deed was taken.

The evidence on the part of the defendant shows that Eysenbach got a deed from Skillen and Gentry to the land dated August 15, 1908, and that Eysenbach immediately went into possession of the land by renting the land to a man by the name of L. R. Cummins for grazing purposes, and that Cummins put a wire fence on two sides of the land and fenced it in with other acreage which he was using for grazing purposes; that Eysenbach and his grantee continued in uninterrupted possession of the land until at the time this suit was brought.

There is some evidence to show that Noble drilled a well on this land in 1912 or the latter part of 1911, and that Eysenbach never occupied the land after that time fox-grazing purposes or for agricultural purposes and never lived on the land.

Evidence further shows that Eysenbach made an oil and gas lease to Noble, who took the lease also from the plaintiff, and that the defendant H. A. Jenson went into possession of the land under Noble as pumper first, and that he occupied part of the land for grazing purposes but never-lived on the land, and afterwards purchased Eysenbaeh’s interest in the surface and later purchased his mineral rights, and that H. A. Jenson was in possession of the land at the time this suit was broxxght. The plaintiff never received any rents or profits from the land except the consideration of the oil and gas lease above referred to, which was $250. He never demanded any rents from any one or possession from any one, and that Eysenbach and his grantees had collected the rents, profits, and royalties accruing from said land up until this suit was brought.

The defendants in their petition in error set out several reasons why the judgment of the lower court should be reversed and a new trial granted, but in their brief the grounds are consolidated and they, argue one proposition of law which is as follows;

“A conveyance of real property in the adverse possession of another, where the grantor has not been in possession within a year and has not within that time taken the rents and profits, is void as against the person in possession.”

The defendant opens his argument on that question by saying:

“The facts out of which this appeal arises are not disputed. For the purpose of this argument we shall admit that the deed upon which the defendants base their title was a forgery.”

It must also be admitted by the plaintiff that he was never in possession and that the defendants were in possession on the date that plaintiff obtained his deed to the property from the allottee’s heirs. The defendant asks that his case be reversed on account of the provision of section 1940 of the Statutes of Oklahoma, 1931, which provides :

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Related

State v. Underwood
1920 OK CR 108 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1920)
Ashton v. Noble
1915 OK 295 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
Hammett v. Montgomery
1918 OK 46 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)
Murrow Indian Orphans' Home v. McClendon
1917 OK 275 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 180, 41 P.2d 255, 171 Okla. 279, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenson-v-ward-okla-1935.