Kunauntubbee v. Greer

1958 OK 76, 323 P.2d 725, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 25, 1958
Docket36970
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1958 OK 76 (Kunauntubbee v. Greer) 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
Kunauntubbee v. Greer, 1958 OK 76, 323 P.2d 725, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 357 (Okla. 1958).

Opinions

JOHNSON, Justice.

Plaintiffs in error, Joseph Kunauntubbee et ux., appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Murray County, Oklahoma, in a quiet title action (which action was filed March 9, 1953), wherein the court found that the lands involved did not constitute the homestead of the plaintiffs therein and held valid deeds executed by Joseph Kunauntubbee, as sole owner and sole grantor, in which he, without being joined by his wife, conveyed the fee-simple title to one hundred acres of land to the defendant in error, M. S. Greer. It was contended in the trial court and is contended herein, among other things, that the deeds were void because the lands so conveyed constituted the homestead of plaintiffs and required the signature of Mrs. Kunaun-tubbee. The defendant in error denied that the lands constituted the homestead of plaintiffs in error, and alleged that if said property ever constituted their homestead that same had been abandoned before the execution of the deeds to the defendant in error.

No one questions the invalidity of the deeds if the lands thereby conveyed constituted the homestead of plaintiffs in error. On the other hand, the validity of the conveyances was clearly established if the property, when conveyed, was not a homestead.

The record discloses that the property involved was the homestead allotment of Joseph Kunauntubbee, a full-blood Chickasaw Indian, and that his wife was a white woman.

The record further discloses that plaintiffs were married in 1910; that they built a home on the one hundred acres in controversy, approximately two miles east of Davis, Oklahoma, and established their residence there in 1911. Four of their five-children were born there prior to 1919,. when they moved to the home of Joseph’smother adjacent to Davis. The farm was then rented. In 1927 the renter left the farm, and the plaintiffs returned. Joseph’s, mother died in 1928, and he thereupon became the owner of her home place, sixty acres near Davis, to which the family again, moved in 1929. Their last child was bom at this residence. The allotment was again, rented. They resided at this home until1 1944 when they moved to Texarkana, Texas, where Joseph worked at the Red River Arsenal. The plaintiffs lived in an apartment during this two years. In 1945 they returned to Davis and lived in the home inherited from his mother until December,. [727]*7271946, when they decided to return to Tex-arkana, Texas. Having already sold parts of his inherited land, they then sold the remainder of the inherited home place and moved to Texarkana, Texas, where they jointly purchased a home. Soon after purchasing this new home they made major improvements on it, consisting of a new room, a front porch and shrubbery and lawn work. They lived there until December, 1950, when they also sold this home and thereafter lived with their children.

In July, 1946, Joseph executed a five-year agricultural lease on his allotment (1947-1951) to one McBride, who thereafter assigned his interest to the defendant. In June, 1950, the defendant paid Joseph $1,000 for an agreement to execute an additional five-year lease upon the expiration of the existing one. This agreement recited that the lessor needed “immediate funds with which to make a purchase of a home.” Joseph initiated action, and on September 25, 1951, secured a removal of restrictions on this land, which was effective thirty days thereafter. On October 9, 1951, Joseph executed an unapproved five-year lease to the defendant. On October 26, 1951, Joseph executed a warranty deed purporting to convey this property to the defendant. On November 8, 1951, he executed a second warranty deed conveying this property to the defendant. Joseph admittedly received a total of $4,000 for these deeds but never offered to refund any of it to the purchaser. These instruments were not signed by his wife. This in substance constitutes a chronological ■statement of the undisputed facts.

The plaintiffs testified that their move nearer Davis was to make it easier for their children to attend school. They also testified that their second move to Tex-arkana was for employment, and that they •never at any time intended to abandon the farm as their homestead. It appears that Joseph’s work in and around Texarkana after the second move there was not constant. He was not employed at the Arsenal, Tut worked as a common laborer or as a woodcutter. The person from whom they purchased their Texas home testified that on separate occasions they individually stated that they “wasn’t going back to Oklahoma.” Mrs. Kunauntubbee was quoted as saying “they wasn’t going back to Oklahoma.” Her reason seemed to be that “there was too much drinking up there in Oklahoma.” She said if she had to sell the home in Texarkana, Texas, that they were going to move to Dallas. This intention to sell the property and move to Dallas (and not return to Oklahoma) is shown by the letter plaintiffs adduced in evidence from Joseph, Jr., to Joseph, Sr., at a time when he was having difficulty in making the payments on the place, and before they sold the place to Tommie Whi-seant and his wife, Jaunita Whiseant.

The testimony of the assistant county assessors of Bowie County, Texas, and the assessments in exhibit for 1949 and 1950 show that homestead tax exemptions were claimed on the Texas property by the plaintiffs, Joseph making the claim one year (1949) and his wife for another (1950). One deputy tax assessor testified in substance that he knew Mrs. Joseph (Malinda) Kunauntubbee, and that he went to their house as deputy tax assessor and found her there; that he asked her if they wanted to designate their property as the homestead; that he remembered talking to her, and that he asked her about the homestead and if she wanted to claim it as a homestead, and she answered and said she did. He further stated that he explained to her (as they always did when they assessed real property) that she could not have a homestead elsewhere, and that she said she understood that, and that she stated to him that she did not have any other homestead.

Joseph Kunauntubbee signed under oath the same form of tax assessment in 1949 as was signed and sworn to by his wife for 1950, and both assessments included the same property, but he claims that he was assessing the property for his [728]*728son, Joseph, Jr. However, he executed an affidavit attached to his tax assessment on which he swore that it was his property. The inventory or assessment and affidavit admittedly signed by Joseph, Sr., reads as follows:

“Defendant’s Exhibit ‘D-l’
Inventory of Property Owner Joseph Cunningtubby Jr.
Address Rt 6 Bx 836 Texa
and rendered for assessment of Taxes for the year 1949 by-to W. N. McDuffie, Assessor and Collector of Bowie County, State of Texas.
Real Estate
Abstract Cert. or Tractor Lot No. Block 1-2-3 4 Survey Original Grantee Value Designate Division City or Town Home- or Out Lot stead (checked) Sunny Slope 4.00 H.S.
Supl 48
fceiB Joseph Cunningtubby §⅜ (Written in pencil and lined out)
Poll- Total Value of Real Estate 4.00
Value of Personal Property Grand Total of All Property 4.00 Total Value for State Tax
(Note value of property is admittedly $400, not $4.00)
List of Personal Property

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Kunauntubbee v. Greer
1958 OK 76 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 76, 323 P.2d 725, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunauntubbee-v-greer-okla-1958.