Mason v. Evans

1965 OK 173, 410 P.2d 534
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 2, 1965
Docket40579
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1965 OK 173 (Mason v. Evans) 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
Mason v. Evans, 1965 OK 173, 410 P.2d 534 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

IRWIN, Justice.

This action concerns the ownership of approximately 150 acres of accreted land. Record title is in the name of Clell E. Mason and Ruby C. Mason, plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs. Defendant Broneta Davis Evans, hereinafter referred to as Broneta, claims ownership of the land by reason of adverse possession by her predecessors in interest. Broneta’s husband, defendant Clyde R. Evans, claims no right, title or interest in the land. Defendant Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Company, claims that it has an existing oil and gas lease on the property which was executed by Broneta Davis Evans and Clyde R. Evans.

Plaintiffs commenced this proceeding to quiet title to the 150 acres of accreted land and to cancel Sunray’s oil and gas lease. Defendants denied plaintiffs’ ownership and by way of cross petition, sought to quiet title on the grounds that defendant Broneta’s predecessors in interest had acquired the legal and equitable fee simple title to the land by reason of adverse possession for the required prescriptive period.

The trial court, in its conclusion of law, found that Broneta’s predecessors in interest, had at all times since September, 1929, held the exclusive, hostile, open, notorious, adverse and uninterrupted possession of the land for more than 15 years and the same was not questioned by plaintiffs or their predecessors in interest and was sufficient in law to ripen into and vest in Broneta’s predecessors, a complete, legal, fee simple title on or about September 1, 1944.

Judgment was rendered for defendants and plaintiffs have appealed from the order overruling their motion for a new trial.

FACTS

Prior to 1929, plaintiffs’ and defendants’ predecessors in interest each owned lots on the south bank of the South Canadian River. Although these lots are described differently in the record before us, and are in fact in different sections, for clari *536 fication, we will refer to these original lots as Lots 1, 2, and 3, with Lot 1 being on the west side, Lot 2 in the middle, and Lot 3 on the east side. Plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest owned Lot 2 and defendants’ predecessors owned Lots 1 and 3.

By gradual movement of the South Canadian River to the north, and before 1929, certain lands accreted to all three lots to the north. Approximately 150 acres accreted to Lot 2, with a lesser amount ac-creting to Lots 1 and 3. By such accretion the south bank of the river forms an oval-like boundary on the west, north and east side of the accreted lands. We will refer to the accreted lands to the three lots respectively as Lot 1A, Lot 2A and 3A. The 150 acre tract in dispute will be referred to as Lot 2A, and it lies between Lot 1A and Lot 3A.

In 1946, plaintiffs acquired record title to Lot 2 and its accreted land. The accreted land has never been cultivated and has been used only for pasture. In 1951, Broneta inherited whatever right, title and interest her deceased husband, Tod Davis, had in the 150 acres of accreted land. In view of Broneta’s admissions on cross-examination that since the death of her husband in 1951, she had not pastured any cattle on the land; that she had seen plaintiffs’ cattle being pastured thereon from time to time; and other evidence herein set forth and the trial court’s conclusions that Broneta’s predecessors’ interest became fixed in September, 1944; it was incumbent upon Broneta to prove that her predecessors in interest had held the disputed tract adversely from September, 1929, to September, 1944.

Defendants do not contend that the 150 acres involved did not accrete to Lot 2. They contend, however, that their predecessors in interest, being the owners of the accreted lands on both sides of Lot 2A, began their adverse possession and claim to Lot 2A in September, 1929, and held the same adversely for the required prescriptive period. As heretofore stated, the trial court sustained this contention as it found that defendants’ predecessors in interest acquired the legal and fee simple title to the property in September, 1944, by holding such land adversely for the required prescriptive period.

To bring the precise facts and issue in focus, we will first consider the evidence adduced by defendants.

As heretofore pointed out, for clarification, we are not using the record legal description of the lots pertinent to this action but are calling them Lots 1, 2, and 3, with the accreted lands being referred to respectively as Lots 1A, 2A and 3A.

In 1929, Brad Davis, Broneta’s father-in-law, acquired title to Lots 1 and 3, and the accreted lands to these lots, the same being Lots 1A and 3A. A Mr. Lumpkin testified that in September, 1929, he worked for Brad; that he helped take care of his. cattle; that he helped to sow clover and grass on Lots 1A, 2A and 3A; that he-built a fence between the lots and the river; that there was a barbed wire fence between Lot 2 and the accreted land to-Lot 2; that he built a fence, running north and south, separating Lots 1A and 2A and another fence separating Lots 2A and 3A; that parts of Lot 1A and 3A were cultivated and used for growing crops and Lot 2A was used only for pasture purposes; that Brad’s cattle were pastured on Lot 2A; that he built a corral which was located partly on Lot 2A and Lot 3A and loaded cattle from it; that he worked for Brad until Brad died in 1936, and he continued to work for Brad’s son, Tod Davis (Broneta’s deceased husband who died in 1951); that he worked for Tod and Broneta until the fall of 1936 and from the time he started working for Brad in 1929, until he stopped working for Tod and Broneta in the fall of 1936, they pastured and were in possession of Lot 2A and nobody else used it or claimed it.

It is to be noted that Mr. Lumpkin’s testimony covers a period of time from September, 1929, to the fall of 1936. Although he went back on the land later to go fishing, his testimony does not tend to establish who *537 was in possession of or who was running cattle on Lot 2A from the fall of 1936 to September, 1944.

Mrs. Stella Davis Britton, the former wife of Brad Davis and Broneta’s mother-in-law, substantiated the testimony of Mr. Lumpkin concerning the building of fences and using Lot 2A for pasture purposes. She stated that Brad died in 1936, and that she and her son inherited the property; that Brad’s estate was probated and in an exchange of deeds in 1937, her son Tod obtained title to Lots 1A, 2A, 3 and 3A, and she obtained other land; and that she did not have occasion to observe the land after 1937 until the fall before the trial.

It is to be noted that Mrs. Britton’s testimony covers only the period of time beginning September, 1929 and ending in 1937.

A Mr. Conn testified that he had hunted on the 150 acre tract but his testimony does not tend to establish that Broneta’s predecessors in interest were in possession of the land between 1929 and 1944.

Mr. Rudy Maples testified that he rented land from Brad and Tod Davis (not the land in question) between 1933 to 1940; that during this time Brad and Tod ran cattle on Lot 2A: and that during this period he did not know of anybody else running cattle on the tract.

It is to be noted Mr. Maples’ testimony would not tend to establish any adverse possession by Broneta’s predecessors in interest after 1940.

Mr.

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1965 OK 173, 410 P.2d 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-evans-okla-1965.