Lowery v. Westheimer

1916 OK 856, 160 P. 496, 58 Okla. 560, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1916
Docket7009
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1916 OK 856 (Lowery v. Westheimer) 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
Lowery v. Westheimer, 1916 OK 856, 160 P. 496, 58 Okla. 560, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 75 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On May 25, 1914, in the district court of Carter county, Florence Lowery and Thomas M. Lowery, Jr., sued Max Westheimer, David Daube, David Gunsburg, and Southwestern Petroleum Company, and in their petition alleged that they were the owners and entitled to the immediate possession of a certain tract of 250 acres of land (describing it), 110 acres of which was her homestead allotment as an intermarried Choctaw, and 140 acres of which was his homested allotment as a Choctaw by blood. They further alleged that defendants' West-heimer and Daube were in possession of the land, claiming title thereto by virtue of a certain warranty deed dated November 26, 1910, purporting to be their conveyance of said land to defendants, but which, they say, is fraudulent and not their deed, and, as to her 110 acres, they specifically alleged that Florence Lowery does not ap *562 pear as grantor therein, and that the deed does not attempt to convey and does not convey to defendants any right, title, or interest in said 110 acres of land; but nevertheless, they say, defendants are asserting' title thereto by reason thereof, and that said deed constitutes a cloud upon her title, and, further, that she received no consideration therefor. They also allege that since said pretended conveyance the defendants (the grantees therein) have executed an oil and gas lease on 60 acres of land in controversy to the defendants Gunsburg and Southwestern Petroleum Company, who were in possession operating oil and gas wells thereon, and converting the proceeds of the oil and gas produced to their own use, and prayed judgment for immediate possession of the property and for rents and profits, and for the concellation of said deed and lease and, in effect, for general relief.

Later, Thomas M. Lowery, Jr., passed out of the case, and the case proceeded as to Florence Lowery, leaving here involved the title to her 110 acres only. For answer, defendants Westheimer and Daube denied the allegations of fraud and want of consideration contained in the petition and stood on their deed, which they alleged was her deed and conveyed to them the title of Florence Lowery to the land. 1 They also admitted the execution of an oil and gas lease to Gunsburg and Southwestern Petroleum Company, as alleged, and stated, as to the remainder of the land, that they were also operating thereon for oil and gas and had erected thereon valuable improvements. Among other things, they also pleaded that plaintiff was estopped, for reasons stated, to deny the validity of her deed and asked for a reformation thereof, should the court hold the same insufficient to pass her title to the land. For answer,- Guns-burg and Southwestern Petroleum Company, in effect, set up that their lease covered only 20 acres of the Florence *563 Lowery land in controversy and that they were innocent purchasers from Westheimer and Daube for value and without notice. After issue joined by reply, in which Florence Lowery pleaded mental incapacity to make the deed, there was trial to the court, who, by agreement of all parties in interest, submitted to the jury certain special interrogatories, answering which they found that Lowery and his wife; on November 26, 1910, executed the deed in controversy; that at the time she did so, she had sufficient mind to understand the nature and consequences of her act; and that she received a part of the consideration of $350 mentioned in the deed. “It being also agreed in open court that all other issues of fact, not embodied in the special interrogatories submitted to the jury, be reserved for finding by the court without further intervention by jury.” Pursuant to which, the court thereafter found the same to be that Thomas M. Lowery, Jr., and his wife, Florence Lowery, were, at that time and all other times mentioned in the pleadings, husband and wife and living together as such; that the 110 acres in controversy was a part of the homestead of the family and patented to her, as stated in the petition; that the 140 acres therein set forth was likewise patented to her husband, Thomas M. Lowery, Jr.; that he then found that prior to the deed in controversy, that is, on March 30, 1910, they executed a mortgage on their land described in the petition for $2,700, payable to the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company, and another on the same day on the same land for $1,066, payable to the same company; that no part of the proceeds of those mortgages was paid to Florence, but shortly after their execution $500 of the proceeds thereof was paid to Westheimer and Daube in full settlement of a prior mortgage which they held on 180 acres of the land; that about November 1, 1910,' Thomas M. Lowery, Jr., for both himself and his wife *564 Florence, and with her knowledge and consent, opened negotiations with defendants Westheimer and Daube for the sale to them of the 250 acres covered by said mortgage, but neither of defendants ever spoke to Florence concerning the matter up to the time of the execution of the deed.

Pending negotiations, said defendants,' through an agent, viewed the land, and later an understanding was reached between the parties in which the Lowerys agreed to convey to Westheimer and Daube the 250 acres covered by those mortgages in consideration that Westheimer and Daube assume and pay the same, and also pay the Lowerys $350 in cash. Accordingly, on November 26, 1910, in the store of Westheimer and Daube in Ardmore, and in the presence of said defendants and each of them, the Lowerys made, executed, and delivered to said defendants the deed in question, which, however, before delivery, was then and there read over and explained to them. Soon thereafter the deed was recorded and immediate actual possession of the land yielded to the grantees, save the 110 acres in controversy, for which the tenant of the grantors in possession thereafter attorned to Westheimer and Daube, and has since continued so to do. It was also found by the court that defendants have since remained in- possession, without notice of any claim of defect in said deed; that about September, 1913, the land in controversy became valuable for oil and gas, and in February, 1914, said defendants let contracts thereon to Gunsburg and he to the Petroleum Company for the purpose of development, and they themselves thereon expended large sums of money, so much so that the 110 acres in controversy is now worth $100,000; that the consideration of $4,116 paid for the land was, at the time of the execution of the deed, full, fair, and adequate; that said deferred payment of $350 has been paid, a part by check for $77.56,, made payable to Florence Lowery, which *565 has since been paid on her indorsement. The court further found, as to her 110 acres in controversy, that the Lowerys were in possession by their tenant at the time of the execution of the deed and claimed the same, together with 50 acres of the allotted homestead of Thomas M. Lowery, as the homestead.of the family up to September, 1910, since which time they have resided on no part of the 250 acres described in the deed, but have traveled to regain her health. Upon the facts thus found, the court, in effect, held that the deed was the deed of Florence. Lowery, and, as such, was valid and binding as a conveyance of her title to 110 acres of her allotted homestead and the homestead of the family therein described, and rendered and entered judgment accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 856, 160 P. 496, 58 Okla. 560, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowery-v-westheimer-okla-1916.