Mansfield, Brunson, Kemp & Ahrens v. King

1932 OK 498, 16 P.2d 87, 160 Okla. 243, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 754
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1932
Docket20290
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1932 OK 498 (Mansfield, Brunson, Kemp & Ahrens v. King) 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
Mansfield, Brunson, Kemp & Ahrens v. King, 1932 OK 498, 16 P.2d 87, 160 Okla. 243, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 754 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

HEFNER, J.

On the 2'2nd day of August, 1928, Lucy Harjo, a full-blood Chickasaw Indian, entered into a written contract with Mansfield, Brunson, Kemp & Ahrens whereby she employed them to recover certain land located to Pontotoc county, and to consideration for such service conveyed to them under the contract an undivided one-half interest in the premises. The contract was placed of record September 20, 1928. It was not approved by the county court. The record title to the land was at that time in Edna E. King. On the 25th day of September, 1928, she brought an action to the district court of POntotoc county to cancel the contract and to quiet title. She joined Lucy Harjo as a party defendant in that action.

Defendants Mansfield, B'Tunson, Kemp & Ahrens filed their separate answer, in which *244 they admitted the execution of the contract, and further pleaded that the contract was entered into in good faith; that they were employed by defendant to file an action in the United States Court to recover the land, and that they intended to do so and would have' done soi had it not been for the filing of this suit. Thereafter, and in response to a motion to make) more definite and certain, plaintiff amended her petition. Defendants Mansfield, Brunson, Kemp & Ahrens failed to plead to the amended petition and apparently abandoned; their contract.

Defendant Lucy Harjo filed her separate answer and cross-petition to plaintiff’s amended petition, wherein she alleged that l>laintiff procured title to the land through fraud, and prayed that title be quieted in her. She alleged that she was a full-blood Chickasaw Indian; that she acquired title to the premises by inheritance from her sons, who were also full-blood Chickasaws; that she had information through various sources that certain persons were claiming the land and she was not advised and did not know the nature of their claims. She alleges that, in November, 1913, R., P. Ford and B. C. King, who was a lawyer and plaintiff’s husband, entered into a conspiracy to cheat and defraud her out of the land; that upon solicitation of Ford she employed King as her attorney to bring suit to quiet title to the premises; that she at that time executed to King an instrument which she understood to be a lease, but which in truth and fact was an instrument conveying to him, for his services, an undivided one-half interest in the land; King went into possession of the premises1 under the instrument and collected the rents; he performed no services for her; he brought no suit to quiet title; the United States government, at the time she employed King and executed the instrument to him, was prosecuting numerous claims for various members of the Five Civilized Tribes for the purpose of recovering land which had been conveyed by them in violation of law; King had knowledge of the pen-dency of these suits and failed to advise her thereof; she had no knowledge of the pendency thereof, and that King and Ford entered into a conspiracy to conceal this fact from her, and upon the determination of these suits in favor of the government, King advised her that he had succeeded in clearing the title to the land and demanded a one-half interest therein as his fee. He also offered her $2,500 for the other one-half, which offer she accepted, and executed a deed to King conveying the land to him. King thereafter conveyed the land to his wife, plaintiff herein. She alleges that $2,500 was an inadequate consideration for a one-half interest in the land, which fact was known to King and not to her; that owing to the confidential relations existing between her and King, she relied upon his advice and statement as to the value of the land; that the actual value of a one-half interest in the land at that time was $4400; she did not discover the falsity of these representations until six or eight months prior to the filing of her cross-petition.

'Plaintiff demurred to the cross-petition on tlie ground that it did not state a cause of action, and on the further ground that the cause of action sought to be pleaded therein was barred by limitation. The trial court sustained the demurrer. Defendant declined to further plead and judgment was then entered in favor of plaintiff quieting title in her, canceling the contract as a cloud upon her title, and entering further judgment forever barring and enjoining defendants from claiming or asserting any right or title to» the land.

It appears from the briefs of counsel that the demurrer to the cross-petition was sustained on( the ground that the cause of action therein pleaded was barred by limitation. It is the contention of defendant that the statute did not run against her because she is a full-blood Indian and acquired title to the land by inheritance from full-blood Indians. On this .question it is sufficient to say that the Act of Congress of April 12, 192®, put in force the statute of limitations of the state against full-blood Indians, reserving, however, to them two years’ time in which to prosecute existing causes of action. The act became effective April 12, 1926. The action was not commenced until September 25', 1928. This disposes of the question that the statute is not applicable to defendant..

Defendant further urges that, if the statute can be invoked as against her, the 15-year statute should be applied; while plaintiff contends that the two-year statute applies. In our opinion plaintiff's contention is correct. The action pleaded in the cross-petition is not one primarily for the recovery of real estate, but is an action to cancel and set aside a deed procured by fraud.

In the case of Warner v. Coleman, 107 Okla. 292, 231 P. 1053, this court said:

“Subdivision 3 of section 4659,. Rev. Daws 11910, which in effect provides that civil actions other than for the recovery of real *245 property can only be maintained when brought within two years after discovery of fraud, is the applicable limitation statute where equitable remedy such as rescission is pursued to reinvest title in complainant conveyed by deed, where the right to rescind is based on allegations of fraud in the procurement of the deed.”

The case of Tomlin v. Roberts, 126 Okla. 165, 258 P. 1041, followed the rule announced in the Warner-Coleman Case, and there said:

“Under our statutes, an action for the recovery of land based upon the cancellation of a deed procured by fraud, and for recovery of possession, may be brought in the same cause, but the deed must first be canceled, and when the deed is canceled judgment for possession of the property follows as a necessary incident. In such cases the two-year statute of limitations is applicable. * * *
“The decisions of our court have not been harmonious as to what statute of limitations should apply in cases of this character. * * * Notwithstanding -the conflict in the decisions of this court before the Warner-Coleman Case was written, there can be no doubt as to what the law is since it was written, and all former cases in conflict therewith are hereby overruled.”

These cases definitely establish the rule in this state that in actions for the recovery of land based upon the cancellation of a deed procured by fraud, the two-year statute of limitation is applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 498, 16 P.2d 87, 160 Okla. 243, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansfield-brunson-kemp-ahrens-v-king-okla-1932.