McDonald v. Miller

1919 OK 337, 186 P. 957, 77 Okla. 97, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1919
Docket10569
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1919 OK 337 (McDonald v. Miller) 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
McDonald v. Miller, 1919 OK 337, 186 P. 957, 77 Okla. 97, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 267 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

MeNEILL, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Kingfisher county in May, 1914, by James McDonald filing suit against Cecelia Miller and Charles Miller to cancel a certain contract entered into between James McDonald and the Millers wherein McDonald contracted to convey forty acres of land to the Millers, and for damages for wrongful detention of premises. The petition alleged the Millers had failed to comply with the terms of the contract in making certain payments due thereon, and had forfeited their rights, under the contract. Upon the trial of the case judgment was rendered in favor of James McDonald. The court cancelled the contract and quieted title in James McDonald. The Millers appealed to this court and on appeal the case was reversed, being reported as Miller v. McDonald, 63 Oklahoma, 163 Pac. 533.

After the reversal, Lilia McDonald asked permission to be made a party plaintiff in the case, and filed an amended petition alleging that the land in question was the homestead of herself and James McDonald and that she had never signed the contract or relinquished her homestead interest in said premises, and for that reason the contract executed by James McDonald, to the Millers was null and void. The Millers answered setting up numerous defenses, by way of estoppel. The ease was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned in favor of the Millers, and judgment was rendered by the court in favor of the Millers for their costs. Erom said judgment the plaintiffs McDonalds have appealed.

The material facts as we gather from the evidence are that the McDonalds prior to the time of purchasing this land owned 160 acres of land in Pawnee county. That they moved from Pawnee county to Grady county and while living in Grady county purchased '33 acres of land in Kingfisher county, being in the same section as the forty acres involved in this case, and thereafter purchased the forty acres. These purchases were made in 1909. The lands, while in the same section, are more than one-half mile apart, and are not connected in any way. About the year 1911 the McDonalds moved from Grady county to Kingfisher county and built a home on the thirty-three-acre tract, where they have lived and occupied the same as a home until about a year before the trial of this case in 1918. They never lived upon the forty-acre tract, but always rented the same.

On December 13, 1912, James McDonald entered into a written contract to sell said land to the Millers, the consideration being the payment of $100 down and $400 to be paid on the 1st of March, 1913, at which time a deed should be executed by McDonald and the Millers to execute a note for $2,000.00 due in ten years, secured by a mortgage on the land. At the date of the contract the land in question was occupied by a' third party. The Miller boys worked at times for the McDonalds during the year 1912. In March of 1913 the Millers moved on the place, but did not pay the $400 due, but paid $150 and it was agreed in writing that the payment of the $250 might be extended to March 1, 1914. There is some controversy over the money being tendered in 1914, and that James McDonald brought suit to cancel the contract. The amended petition of Mrs. McDonald upon which this case was tried was filed in April, 1918. Upon the trial of the case McDonald and his wife both testified that when they purchased this forty acres of land in 1909, they purchased it for a home and intended the forty acres and the thirty-three acres to constitute their homestead, and such was their intention when they built their home on the thirty-three acres in 1911. Mrs. McDonald testified that she had no knowledge of the contract being executed by Mr. McDonald to sell the land and never knew that McDonald had entered into said contract with Millers until the controversy arose over the payment of the money in the spring of 1914. The Miller boys had occupied the land since March, 1913. The Miller boys testified that one of them worked for the McDonalds in 1912 and 1913 and both were at the McDonald home often and had talked to Mrs. McDonald about the purchasing of the land, before and after the purchase of the same, and she stated she was glad they had purchased it, that the property belonged to Mr. McDonald and that he was getting no benefit from the same as the rent amounted to practically nothing: that he was old and could not take care of it. They further testified that she knew at the time they had purchased it, and that she ’acquiesced in the sale and she knew they had built improvements on the place, and knew all of these facts, but always remained silent about same being a homestead.

The plaintiffs in error for reversal argue: Eirst, that the court erred in overruling *99 plaintiffs’ motion for a directed verdict; second, the giving of instruction No. 10; and third, that the judgment of the court is clearly against the weight of the evidence. All of these questions are argued together as one • proposition.

Section 3343, Revised Laws 1910, is as follows :

“The homestead of any family in this state, not within any city or town, shall consist of not more than one hundred and sixty acres of land, which may be in one or more parcels, to be selected by the owner. * *

Plaintiffs in error admit that they never lived on the premises in question, but testified they intended the same for a part of their homestead, and used and occupied the same as a part of their homestead. A rural homestead in this state may consist of one hundred sixty acres of land, which may be in one or more parcels to be selected by the owner. As to what is necessary to constitute a selection or -how a selection may be made or how separate parcels of land may be selected or designated as a homestead, where the parties do not actually reside upon said, land, is a question that is not regulated by statute. While the statute provides that the owner may select several parcels as his homestead, yet as to how said selection should be made or when the same should be made, the statute is silent. So each case must be governed to a certain extent by the facts in that particular case.

The question of rural homestead is elaborately discussed by Justice Rainey in the case of McCray v. Miller, decided October 14, 1919 (not yet officially reported). While the exact question involved in the case at bar was not involved in the case of McOray v. Miller, yet the same principle is involved.

This court has held that unoccupied lands may be designated or selected as a homestead. This rule is announced in the case of Illinois Life Insurance Co. v. Rogers, 61 Oklahoma, 160 Pac. 56. The court in that opinion quoting from the case of Foley v. Holtkamp, 28 Tex. Civ App. 123, 66 S. W. 891, stated as follows:

. “A homestead may be created by intention prior to actual occupancy, when it appears that the owner is entitled to the exemption as the head of a family, and that this intention has been manifest by such acts as amount to reasonably sufficient notice of that intention; the purpose of the law being to require such open evidence of this intention as will prevent the use of this right as a shield for fraud.”

And, again, quoting from the case of Cameron v. Gebhart, 85 Tex. 610, 22 S. W. 1033, 34 Am. St. Rep. 832, stated as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 337, 186 P. 957, 77 Okla. 97, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-miller-okla-1919.