Kirtley v. Dykes

1900 OK 29, 62 P. 808, 10 Okla. 16, 1900 Okla. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1900 OK 29 (Kirtley v. Dykes) 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
Kirtley v. Dykes, 1900 OK 29, 62 P. 808, 10 Okla. 16, 1900 Okla. LEXIS 1 (Okla. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Irwin, J.:

A reversal is urged upon two propositions, namely: first, that the injunction suit was pematurely brought for the reason that Kirtley, the defendant, never received from the land department any notice of the fact that his motion for review had been finally disposed of; second, that the court had no jurisdiction in this character of a case to determine the usable value of the forty-five acres which Kirtley had planted to wheat, neither had the court any jurisdiction to require Kirtley, in case Dykes failed to pay $2.50 per acre for the wheat land, to deliver to her one-third of the wheat in the half bushel.

We think the'first contention is untenable, for the reason that a notice of the final decision of the land department as to the disposition of defendant Kirtley’s motion for review was not a necessary condition precedent to plaintiff bringing this suit, when the matter was, as a matter of-fact, finally decided In the land department, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Her right to the possession of the premises in question was completed, and her action to recover possession thereof should not be delayed to wait the service of notice on the defend ■ ant by the department, she having no control over the action of the department in giviug or refusing to give notice of such determination of plaintiff’s motion for review. Her right to the possession of the property in question depended entirely upon the decision of the laud department, and not upon noticé of said decision to the defendant.

*19 As to the defendant’s right to notice of a decision of his case by the land department, it is a question between the defendant and the land department, and one which in our judgment in no way affects the right of the plaintiff to possession of the land in controversy, and plaintiff could not legally be kept out of possession simply because the land department had neglected or failed to give notice to the defendant.

The main fact to be considered is: Has the question in controversy between the parties to this suit, as to the title and right of possession to the land in question, been legally and fully determined by the proper tribunal ? If so, and the decision is in favor of the plaintiff, then she is entitled to take such legal proceedings as are necessary to recover possession of the premises in question, independent of the fact whether notice has or has not been given by the land department to the defendant in this action.

As to the second assignment of error, to-wit: that the judgment of the trial court was wrong as to the orders made in regard to the crops growing upon the premises in controversy, we think this proposition has been settled by this court in the case of Phillips v. Keysaw et al., reported in 7 Okla. 674, where the court say:

“Where there has been a recovery of the possession of the land held adversely, the successful plaintiff is entitled to the growing crops, as against the evicted defendant, who planted them; but until such possession has been terminated by ouster, the party so adversely holding is the owner, and entitled to the crops produced by his annual labor and cultivation, which were harvested before such ouster.”

This was a case brought by plaintiff against defendant for a mandatory injunction for possession of land and *20 a prohibitory injunction, restraining the removal of crops therefrom. Appeal was taken from an order dissolving the temporary injunction as to the removal of the crops, and such order dissolving the injunction was assigned by plaintiff as error. In that case Henry H. Keysaw settled upon the southwest quarter of section fourteen, township twenty-seven north, range one east, I. M., and claimed the «ame as a homestead under the homestead laws of September 21, 1893, and filed his homestead entry in the land ■office. Plaintiff in error, Phillips, afterwards contested his- entry for prior settlement. Upon hearing, the local land office decided in favor of Keysaw. Upon appeal to the commissioner of the general land office, this decision was affirmed, but upon appeal to the secretary of the interior, the decisions of the commissioner and of the local land office-were overruled, and the land awarded to Phillips. Pending the contest Phillips, had the possession of the north ninety acres of the land, and Keysaw had the possession of the south seventy acres. The final decision, of the secretary of the interior in this case was filed March 25, 1898. In the fall of 1897, a tenant of Keysaw put in sixty-five acres of wheat upon the seventy acres which Keysaw had possession of. On June 20, 1898, the cutting of wheat was commenced. This suit was begun on June 16, by issuing the summons, but no application for a tem. porary injunction was presented or order of injunction issued until June 27, 1898, at which time the wheat in controversy had all been cut, and was in the shock on the premises where grown. On said day the court made a temporary order enjoining the defendant from in any manner interfering with the exclusive possession of the plaintiff to the seventy acres of land in controversy, ex *21 cept three acres thereof, for a period of fifteen days from the date of the order, and from in any way interfering with the exclusive possession of the plaintiff to the whole of the seventy acres, after the expiration of the said fifteen days, until the final hearing of the case should be had. The court also found that the tenant of Keysaw was entitled to the possession of two-thirds of the wheat then in shock on said land, and enjoined Keysaw from selling or disposing of the other one-third of said wheat until the trial of the case upon its merits in the court.

In this case the court said:

“The simple question involved in this case is, who was ■ the owner of the wheat in question when the temporary order of injunction was granted? The fact that the defendant Keysaw was, at the time of the issuing of the injunction, liable to Phillips, or might thereafter become liable, for the mesne profits of the land withheld by him from the possession of Phillips, during the pendency of the contest proceedings, or for any other debt, would'not give jurisdiction to the court or judge by injunction to prevent him from selling or disposing of the same, unless Phillips wms the owner of said wheat, or had some legal property interest therein.
“The injunctional powers of a court of chancery, con-cededly broad, and by respectable authority, claimed to be sufficiently latitudinous to authorize its writ to be substituted for the ordinary writ of ejectment, or an order for restitution in forcible entry and detainer, has not yet received judicial sanction as a substitute for the writ of re-plevin, or to accomplish the purpose of a writ of attachment; and therefore, if the wheat in question was not the property of Phillips, or if he had no legal property interest therein, although Keysaw may have been insolvent, and had no other property out of which a judgment for mesne profits could have been made, a court of equity had no jurisdiction by injunction to attach, or in any manner seques *22 ter the same, in order that it might be applied to the satisfaction of anj judgment at law for

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1900 OK 29, 62 P. 808, 10 Okla. 16, 1900 Okla. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirtley-v-dykes-okla-1900.