Lewis v. Allen

1914 OK 355, 142 P. 384, 42 Okla. 584, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 28, 1914
Docket3460
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1914 OK 355 (Lewis v. Allen) 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
Lewis v. Allen, 1914 OK 355, 142 P. 384, 42 Okla. 584, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 402 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

The plaintiff in error, Maudie M. Lewis (nee Bunch), a duly enrolled member of the Chicka *585 saw Indian Nation, commenced this action to cancel a deed which she and her husband joined in executing to the defendant in error Chas. R. Allen on the 27th day of July, 1908, whereby her entire allotment, embracing 210 acres of land, was attempted to be conveyed. It is charged that the deed was void because it was executed during her minority and before she attained the age of •eighteen years. All of the defendants, except Chas. R. Allen, .answered and disclaimed any interest in the title to the land, alleging that they were tenants and holding under Allen. Allen answered and set out that he purchased the land from the real estate agent with whom the plaintiff and her husband had listed the same for sale; that he did not deal with Mrs. Lewis, and had no knowledge of her minority at the time, and was acting in good faith, and believed that he was getting a good title to the land, and paid the sum of $4,400 therefor, which was the full value thereof; and that he immediately thereafter entered upon the land, and had since held the same, and had placed permanent and valuable improvements thereon. It was further averred that after the said Mrs. Lewis reached her majority, as shown by the rolls kept by the government authorities, to wit, on the 26th day qf September, 1910, he obtained another deed from her by which a full and complete title to the land was vested in him, and set out this deed as a defense to the action. A reply was filed in which it was charged that the deed of September 26, 1910, was void for the reason that it was procured to supplement a void deed, and for an inadequate consideration, namely, $500, which was less than the appraised value of said land, the deed having been executed during the existence of the tribal government of said Chickasaw Nation, and that the land could not be sold at that time for less than its appraised value, which was in excess of $1,000.

The court called a jury and submitted to them for determination six special questions of fact:

First. Whether the plaintiff was eighteen years of age on the 27th day of July, 1908, when the first deed was executed. The jury answered to this question that “she was not.”

*586 Second. What, if any, part of the consideration paid for the deed of July 27, 1908, did she have in her possession on April 13, 1910, this being the date she became eighteen years of age, according to the testimony of her father? To this the jury answered, “None.”

■ Third. What was the total consideration received by the plaintiff for the deed of September 26, 1910? To this the jury answered, “$500.”

Fourth. What was the fair rental value of the premises in controversy for the years 1908, 1909, and 1910? To which the jury returned an answer, “$475 for each of said years."

Fifth. Was the consideration paid by Allen to the plaintiff, at the time of the making of the deed of September 26, 1910, adequate or inadequate in law ? To which the jury answered “Adequate.”

Sixth. What was the fair, reasonable market value of the improvements placed on the premises by Chas. R. Allen while the same were in his possession? To which the jury answered, “$450.”

A motion was filed on behalf of the plaintiff for judgment upon special findings Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, and. 6, and she also presented a motion to set aside finding No. 5. Each of these motions were denied by the court and exceptions saved, and the court approved these several findings and rendered judgment on them in favor of the plaintiff for the rental value of the land as found by the jury for the years 1908 and 1909, and against the defendant Chas. R. Allen in the sum of $950 and interest and. costs, and further decreed that Chas. R. Allen had a better title to the land in controversy than did the plaintiff. Exceptions were saved to this decree, and after the denial of a new trial, an appeal was duly perfected to this court.

The court, having approved the answer returned by the jury to question No. 1, thereby found the fact to be that Maudie M. Lewis was a minor at the time of making the deed of July 27,' 1908. There is no controversy as to the law arising upon this *587 finding, and that thereunder such deed was void. The correctness of this conclusion and finding is not disputed by any of the parties to the cause.

It is insisted on behalf of the defendant in error that the .assignments urged against the validity of the deed of September 26, 1910, cannot be considered by the court on this appeal, since the same require an examination of the evidence taken at the trial, and that there is no affirmative recital in the case-made that it contains all of the evidence offered and received. In reply to this position, attention is called to the fact that there is in the case-made a stipulation signed by all of the counsel, in which it is recited that the record contains “all the evidence offered and introduced,” and that, on account of this stipulation, the counsel for the defendant in error are estopped from now denying that the case-made does contain all the evidence, notwithstanding the absence of the positive recital therein of that fact. This contention is correct both in law and in morals. It has been held by this court that such a stipulation cures the defect of the ab■sence of such recital in the case-made, or at least prevents counsel, who signed the stipulation, from taking advantage of the .absence of the proper recital in the case-made.

In Northcutt et al. v. Bastable, 39 Okla. 124, at page 131, 134 Pac. 423, at page 426, it is said:

“There was also a motion to dismiss the appeal for that the ■case-made contained no averment by way of recital that it contained all the evidence introduced at the trial. This motion would have been sustained but for the fact that on page 52 of the case-made there is a stipulation, signed by counsel for both parties, that ‘the foregoing case-made contains a full, true, correct and ■complete copy [of] all pleadings filed, all the evidence offered .and introduced. * * * ’ This stipulation cures the defect complained of so far as this case is concerned, and estops defendant in error to urge further consideration thereof.”

It is admitted that this deed of September 26, 1910, was not •executed until after this suit had been instituted, and that, al'though a cash consideration of $4,900 was recited therein, only .$500 was actually paid for the execution of that deed. This sum, .it is contended, is so grossly inadequate that same should be *588 canceled on that account; that the jury found, and the court approved such finding, that the rental value of the land was $475 per year, only $25 less than the total consideration paid for this deed. It is argued that this, taken in connection with the fact that Maudie M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 355, 142 P. 384, 42 Okla. 584, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-allen-okla-1914.