Kirsch v. Tracy

1935 OK 1075, 55 P.2d 428, 174 Okla. 489, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1282
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
DocketNo. 24012.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1075 (Kirsch v. Tracy) 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
Kirsch v. Tracy, 1935 OK 1075, 55 P.2d 428, 174 Okla. 489, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1282 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Ollie Tracy and Eva Stutsman brought an action in the district court of Oklahoma county against John Kirsch and J. C. Davis, for the purpose of quieting title to lots 1 and 2 -in block 11 of South Park addition to Oklahoma City, Okla. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs that plaintiffs’ title to and possession of said real estate be fully quieted and perfected in said plaintiffs, and fully and totally barring the defendants from claiming or setting" up any right, title or interest in, to or upon said real estate, or any part thereof, and chnceling all deeds conveyances, and muniments of title under which the defendants claim, and these were thereby declared to be of no force and effect. Motion *490 for a new trial was overruled on March 2, 1932, and defendants have appealed. The parties will be referred to- as they appeared in the trial court.

Prom the record it appears that defendant John Kirsch was the original owner of the lands involved, he having acquired title to the same by warranty deed from one Jacob Kirsch, dated and filed for record on January 8, 1913; that one B. M. McMullen secured a resale tax deed dated January 27, 1920, and filed same for record on April 10, 1920; that by mesne conveyances from Mc-Mullen, ending in a deed from E. J. Rogers and wife to C. R. Donart and wife, dated July 27, 1920, and filed for record on August 19, 1922, said C. R. Donart and Martha L. Donart, his wife, became the record owners of the land in controversy, and that the Donarts did not attempt to convey the same until they executed a deed to the defendant, J. O. Davis, dated September 22, 1931. On June 21, 1929, plaintiff Eva Stutsman procured an ordinary or treasurer’s tax deed to the land and filed it for record on the same day, dhd later conveyed the same to plaintiff Ollie Tracy, who later reconveyed a one-half interest to the said Eva Stuts-man; that the plaintiffs went into possession of the land about August 2, 1929, and have been in possession ever since, collecting rents continually, and having fenced the property more than two years before trial, and the property being improved by three houses and occupied by tenants paying rent to the plaintiffs. Oll'ie Tracy, at the time the title was entirely in her, on January 3, 1930, brought a suit in the district court of Oklahoma county, numbered 61610, against John Kirsch, O. R. Donart and his wife, Martha L. Donart, and other persons of no importance here, and took judgment against both John Kirsch and the Donarts on February 27, 1930., That judgment was taken upon personal service upon the Donarts. On June 2, 1931," that judgment was vacated as to John Kirsch only, with the consent of Ollie Tracy, plaintiff therein. On February 12, 1931, John J. Kirsch executed' a quitclaim. deed to J. O. Davis, which was filed for record on February 13, 1931, and on Feb-r-utify 12, 1931, J. 0. Davis executed an assignment of one-half of all oil and gas royal-, ties from said real estate to John J. Kirsch, and on September 22, 1931, the Donarts executed a deed to J. O. Davis. The present suit was filpd on June 3, 1931, plaintiffs’ petition alleging. that they are the owners of the legal and equitable estate in fee simple, and are in the actual possession of said real estate; that the defendants claim some right, title or interest therein, the exact nature of which is to the plaintiffs unknown, but that said defendants, and each of them, have no right, title or interest in and to said real estate, or any part thereof; and that any right, title or interest therein or thereto, If any the defendants or either of them ever had, has been barred by the statute of limitations of the state of Oklahoma ; and that the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title are in open, notorious, adverse, and complete actual possession of said real estate, and have so been in open, notorious, adverse, and complete possession thereof, under claim of right and title to said real estate, and claiming same by prescription and adverse possession for such length of time as bars any pretended claim of right or title thereto on the part of defendants, or either of them, under and by virtue of said statute of limitations of the state of Oklahoma; that, nevertheless, the pretended claims of the defendants, and each of them, cloud the title of the plaintiffs to said real estate, and the plaintiffs are, therefore, entitled to have their title to said real estate quieted as to the defendants ’and each of them.

The defendant John Kirsch filed answer for himself and grantee, Davis; also an amended answer, setting forth: (1) a denial; (2) admission of claiming an interest in the real estate, and alleging an ownership thereof by virtue of a deed from one J. H. Hamil to one Jacob Kirsch; a deed from Jacob Kirsch to John J. Kirsch, and alleging that thereafter he conveyed said real estate to J. O. Davis, and that he maintains such defense and prayer for affirmative relief on behalf of and for the benefit of his grantee, J. 0. Davis; (3) .execution and delivery of the McMullen resale tax deed; 'acquisition of the title by the Donarts by mesne conveyances from McMullen, and the conveyance - by the Donarts to J. O. Davis; (4) that the only interest plaintiffs have in said lands is under the Stutsman, tax deed, and ’alleging that it is void and voidable for reasons therein set forth; (5) defendant tenders to plaintiffs all costs, taxes, penalties, interest and charges to which they may be entitled, and prays that said tax deed be canceled, and for judgment quieting title of defendants against all titles, claims and demands of plaintiffs and all persons claiming under, by and through them and against all codefendants and ail persons claiming by, through ’and under them and for costs.

*491 To such amended answer the plaintiffs filed their reply containing: (1) Denial; (2) alleging that the deeds relied upon by defendants as sources of title were champer-tous and void, and were taken subject to the rights of plaintiffs, and since the pendency of this action, and that the title involved has already been adjudicated between the plaintiffs and the defendants and their grantors, and that the irregularities, if any, set up in the tax deed executed June 21, 1929, to Stutsman, cannot, because of the statute of limitations of the state of Oklahoma, be set up by the defendants as a defense herein.

Upon trial, plaintiffs admit that the tax deed issued to the plaintiff Stutsman is void upon its face, and relied upon their possession, the statute of prescription, 'and their judgment against the Donarts, who de-raigned title from the McMullen tax deed. The defendants withdrew the allegations of the third paragraph of their amended, answer, but later attacked the validity of the McMullen tax deed, and the regularity and validity of that tax deed was gone into in detail.

Defendants, in their brief, present three propositions: (1) The plaintiffs in a quiet title action must show a paramount title before they can recover; (2) a judgment quieting title does not transfer the title of defendant to plaintiff; and (3) the McMul-len (or Donart) tax deed is void and voidable.

Plaintiffs claim under two sources of title: (a) The judgment quieting title against Donart, holder of the record title by mesne conveyances from McMullen, holder of the resale tax deed against Kirsch; and (b) title by prescription.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1075, 55 P.2d 428, 174 Okla. 489, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirsch-v-tracy-okla-1935.