Jonas v. Dunn

1928 OK 438, 270 P. 46, 132 Okla. 204, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 730
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 26, 1928
Docket18320
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1928 OK 438 (Jonas v. Dunn) 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
Jonas v. Dunn, 1928 OK 438, 270 P. 46, 132 Okla. 204, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 730 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

DIFFENDAFFER, C.

The parties will be- *205 referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court. Plaintiff in error was plaintiff below and defendants in error were defendants below.

The amended petition, upon which the cause was tried, alleged substantially that plaintiff is a member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians, being enrolled as a new born opposite roll No. _, and that as such member there was allotted to her as her surplus allotment the N. E. 14, sec. 26, twp. 2 S., R. 4 W.; that she was the owner in fee simple thereof; that defendants were each and all claiming some right, title, or interest therein, but that none of the defendants have any right, title, or interest in or to said land; that plaintiff is not in the possession of the land, but is entitled to the right of possession; that none of the defend ants are in possession of said lands or any part thereof, except E. T. Dunn, but that his possession is wrongful; the prayer was for judgment for possession and quieting title in plaintiff.

After separate demurrers to the amended petition were filed and overruled, defendants N. E. Dunn, E. T. Dunn, Mattie Kim-brell, W. A. Dunn, and Clarence Dunn answered separately from defendant 6. C. Jones, first, by general denial and in substance that H. S. Dunn purchased the west half of the quarter section in controversy from one Fannie G. Jones and Ase Jones, her husband; that H. S. Dunn died and these defendants as his heirs inherited their respective interests in the west 80 from him, and are the owners thereof; and that on March 1, 1910, Joseph R. Moore, the father of plaintiff, then her guardian, filed a petition in the county court of Stephens county to sell the above described quarter section; that on April 2, 1910, said county court by decree directed J. R. Moore, as guardian of plaintiff, to sell the same; that in pursuance of said decree and order of sale. Joseph R. Moore, under regular proceedings, sold said land to one S. G. Moore, and upon due hearing the sale was confirmed and a guardian’s deed regularly executed and delivered to S. G. Moore; that thereafter, S. G. Moore, by warranty deed, conveyed the west 80 acres to J. R. Moore; that J. R. Moore thereafter by warranty deed conveyed the west 80 acres to Fannie S. Jones; that thereafter said Fannie S. Jones, by warranty deed, conveyed said west 80 acres to said H. S. Dunn, now deceased, who was the husband of defendant, Mrs. N. E. Dunn, and father of the other answering defendants, and that defendants inherited said west 80 acres from said H. 8. Dunn; that H. S. Dunn was an innocent purchaser in good faith thereof, without notice of any claim of the plaintiff of any interest or estate in said land; that H. S. Dunn and not these answering defendants have been in possession thereof, openly and notoriously, since October 2, 1911. The answer further alleges that defendant E. T. Dunn is the owner of the east half of the N. E. % of said section 26, and in the possession of the same, and has been in the open and notorious possession thereof for more than 15 years and paying the taxes thereon; that he is a bona fide purchaser for value in good faith, without notice of the claim of plaintiff.

The answer further alleges that said guardian sale divested plaintiff of all her right, title, interest, and estate in and to said land, and since said sale was consummated and completed she has not owned, and has not since acquired, any interest therein.

Defendant George Jones, Jr., answers separately, alleging that he is the owner of the N. E. % of the N. W. % of the N. E. of sec. 26, relying upon a warranty deed from the other defendants, heirs of said H. S. Dunn.

All the defendants allege that the respective deeds under which they claim are of record in Stephens county, setting out the respective books and pages where same will be found.

Plaintiff by reply denies the validity of the guardian’s deed and says that the lands of plaintiff involved in the action were sold together with the lands of Douglas H. Moore, but the .attempted sale was “whait is known in law as a ‘hotchpotch sale’ and was a wholly void sale, and that the sale of plaintiff’s land was without consideration.”

She further alleges that her guardian, J. R. Moore, attempted to sell her said land to S. G. Moore and caused to be placed of record the guardian’s deed conveying the land of plaintiff, together with the land of Douglas H. Moore, to the said S. G. Moore, but that S. G. Moore paid no consideration for the conveyance of the lands belonging to plaintiff; that thereafter S. G. Moore, at the instance and request of J. R. Moore and E. T. Dunn, conveyed to E. T. Dunn the east 80 acres, but that said E. T. Dunn paid no consideration therefor to S. G. Moore, and that he knew that S. G. Moore had not paid the consideration to J. R. Moore, *206 as guardian; that on the same date, October IS, 1910, at the request of J. R. Moore, the said S. G. Moore conveyed to said J. R. Moore the west 80 acres, but that J. R. Moore paid no consideration for said deed, and that he (J. R. Moore) could not take title in himself to said land, because he was the guardian of plaintiff: at that time and her father, and that she was only about 6 years of age at that time, and for the further reason that no consideration had been paid for the guardian’s deed; that on November 10, 1910, J. R. Moore and Lizzie Moore conveyed to Nannie S. Jones the west 80 acres; that no title passed by said deed, because J. R. Moore had no title; that Fannie S. Jones was a relative of J. R. Moore and Lizzie Moore, and had actual and constructive notice of the lack of title in J. R. Moore; the reply further alleges that both E. T. Dunn and H. S. Dunn at all times had actual and constructive notice of the facts alleged and complained of at the time they took deeds to the lands as set out, and that George Jones, Jr., had “record notice” of the imperfection in the title at the time he took the deed to the 10 acres claimed by him. The reply denies the affirmative allegations in defendants’ answer.

The pleadings show that this action was commenced on the 4th day of October, 1923, and the pleadings and evidence show that plaintiff became 18 years of age on the 13th day of December, 1922.

The issues as thus joined were tried to the court on the 8th day of November, 1926, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence a demurrer thereto was sustained by the court, and on the same day motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and judgment entered for defendants. From this order and judgment, plaintiff brings this appeal.

It was stipulated that plaintiff is the original allottee of the lands involved; that she was enrolled under the head of final rolls as a “new born” Choctaw Indian, enrolled as follows: “Robbie A. Moore, Roll No. 1333 — Age. on March 4, 1905 — 1 year— Female — Blood 1/32 Census Card No. 554.” The original allotment patent was introduced in evidence.

The petition of Joseph R. Moore, as guardian of Robbie A. Moore and Johnson Douglas Moore, to sell the land shows the ownership of separate tracts by Robbie A. and Johnlson Douglas Moore, minors, that of Robbie A. Moore, being the land in controversy, the N. E. % of sec. 26, and that of Johnson Douglas Moore being the N. W. Vt, of sec. 26, twp. 2 S., R. 4 W.

The appraisement fixes the v.alue of the two tracts separately, the N. E. % at $960, and the N. W. % at $1,120.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 438, 270 P. 46, 132 Okla. 204, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonas-v-dunn-okla-1928.