Leflore v. Hansen

1930 OK 378, 291 P. 542, 144 Okla. 227, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 711
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 9, 1930
Docket19304
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1930 OK 378 (Leflore v. Hansen) 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
Leflore v. Hansen, 1930 OK 378, 291 P. 542, 144 Okla. 227, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 711 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

BENNETT, O.

This was an action in the district court of Jefferson county by Louie Fudge LeFlore to set aside a guardianship sale of lands allotted to him as a member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians. Plaintiff was of one-thirty-second degree of Indian blood, and his father, Louie LeFlore, was his guardian until the arrival at majority of said ward September 11, 1924. Plaintiff and his guardian were men of fair education and intelligence. The father had been for years a business man and had occupied places of responsibility.

*228 Plaintiff alleged that he was the owner and entitled to possession of the land in controversy, which was detained by the defendants; that the defendants claimed title uhder conveyances of the nature of which he was ignorant, but he alleges that they are void, and ashed that they be canceled.

April 4, 1927, Martin Hansen and J. W. Clark filed answers and cross-petitions, the former setting up a general denial and his chain of title, and praying that his title to the land be quieted; the latter, in addition to a general denial, set up his mortgage alleged to be a first lien, and each pleaded that he was a purchaser in good faith, for value, and without notice, of any infirmity in the title. They also pleaded the 2-3-5 and 15 year statutes of limitations. September 13, 1927, by an amended reply, plaintiff pleaded that the sale of said lands to one A. J. Wal-dock by plaintiff’s guardiah was void because the purchase money was not paid and the deed was not delivered, and because said sale was made without appraisement.

It was stipulated that defendant Martin Hansen had been in possession of the land sued for since the date of his deed,, January 21, 1909, and that John W. Clark held a mortgage thereon, executed by Hansen, and that neither Hansen nor Clark had any notice of the claim of plaintiff, or of any infirmity in the title to said land except only such as was imparted by the face of the probate record; that Martin Hanseh paid to A. J. Waldock for said land $4,000. cash. Considerable improvements seem to have been placed thereon.

The defendants relied upon the correctness of the proceeding in the county court of Haskell county, authorizing the sale of such lands to A. J. Waldock and the deed made in pursuance thereof. The plaintiff contends that such guardianship proceeding and the conveyance made thereunder to said Waldock were absolutely void upon the grounds hereinbefore set out. The parties waived a jury and tried the case to the court, who found for defendants, and plaintiff appealed.

There was evidence of a contradictory nature as to the payment of the consideration for the conveyance authorized under the probate proceeding; the guardian testified in behalf of his son, the plaintiff, to the effect that not all of the purchase money was paid; that probably $1,400 or $1,700 was actually paid; that he attached a draft for the purchase money to the deed after it was signed, and presented the same through the Farmers National Bank at Oklahoma City to the purchaser, who-, in some way, secured possession of the deed without paying the draft, but, that, a few weeks later,, he did receive a part of the money as above indicated ; that he never sued for the balance, but did mention the matter to the banks through which he dealt, but without avail. He, however, admitted filing guardian’s reports showing between $2,000 and $3,000 .cash on hand belonging to plaintiff, and later applied for an order to invest, and did invest over $1,400 of his ward’s money in other real estate about that time; that his. ward had no money except the proceeds of the sale of land to said Waldock.

Evidence of the purchaser, on the other hand, is clean-cut to the effect that he paid the full purchase price. Some evidence tending to impeach the purchaser is introduced, but it is not needful that we should consider that here.

The court found generally for the defendants, and that, we assume, included a finding that the purchase money for this property had been fully paid. We think the evidence clearly supports that finding. The guardian’s evidence is ehtirely unsatisfactory; he admits that he does not know how much was paid him on the price of the land; he made no effort to collect any more, and it is stipulated that the attorney who conducted the guardianship proceedings for him had an office in the same building with the guardian, and, if present, would testify that he had at ho time ever heard any complaint from the guardian or any one else to the effect that the purchase money had not been paid.

There is left for us the main point in the controversy: Was the guardianship deed void by reason of a lack of jurisdiction of the court to order the sale? Plaintiff contends that it was void for that no appraisement of the land was had. The record shows without questioh that the county court of Haskell county made the order of sale covering said real estate in controversy on November 7, 1908; that the lands were sold under this order to said purchaser, Waldock, on January 2, 1909, and that, on the 25th of January, 1909, an order, after proper notice, was filed in the cause confirming said sale and directing conveyance to be executed to purchaser, and that a deed was executed on January 26, 1909, conveying to him the lands in conformity to said order, which deed was promptly recorded. The record discloses that, on November 24, 1908, a formal order was made by the county judge of *229 Haskell county appointing Sam Rose, Henry Cooper, and J. L. Eriar of Haskell county, appraisers of the estate of Louie Eudge Le-Elore within the couhty of Jefferson in said state, with directions that they view and appraise the* said estate and make return thereof according to law. The appraisers, after taking the proper oath, filed in the said prohate proceeding, on December 1, 1908, an instrument entitled “Appraisal of land before sale at private sale,” wherein J. L. Eriar and Henry Cooper, as appraisers, appraised each of these parcels of land by setting down opposite the description of each tract its value. This appraisal is regular in every respect, and on the reverse side thereof there appears a verified statement showing their charge for three days’ service at $2 per day each. The verification indicates that the bill is correct and just, and that the services have been duly rendered and expense incurred as therein set forth.

Plaintiff introduces Louie LeElore as a witness, who said that he knew Hehry Cooper, J. L. Eriar, and Sam Rose in , 1908; that they lived at Stigler in Haskell county, Okla.; that they were appointed appraisers ; that witness went into court to have the sale of these lands confirmed, and discovered that there had been no appraisement, and that Mr. Caldwell, the court clerk, went out and secured appraisers; that the court clerk, Mr. Caldwell, is now dead; that the appraisers did not view the lands. "Witness waited at the courthouse half an hour until the appraisement was made and signed; that Sam Rose worked in the bank; Friar was a real estate man and Mr. Cooper was a cattleman; all lived at Stigler; that this was perhaps 200 miles from where the land lies; that Mr. Cooper was and is a high-class business mata. Witness does not remember the date of filing of the appraisement, but thinks the confirmation was made in January, 1909. Henry Cooper was a cousin of witness and is an Indian citizen and United States marshal. Witness had taever seen the land until the day before giving his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 378, 291 P. 542, 144 Okla. 227, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leflore-v-hansen-okla-1930.