McKeever v. Parker

1950 OK 344, 226 P.2d 425, 204 Okla. 1, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 563
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 26, 1950
Docket33924
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1950 OK 344 (McKeever v. Parker) 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
McKeever v. Parker, 1950 OK 344, 226 P.2d 425, 204 Okla. 1, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 563 (Okla. 1950).

Opinion

HALLEY, J.

This is an action by Douglas McKeever, as administrator of the estate of Fred C. Parker, deceased, against Alma H. Parker and others, to quiet title to certain real estate in the city of Enid, Oklahoma. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the defendants demurred or moved for judgment on plaintiff’s evidence. This motion was sustained and judgment rendered for defendants. Plaintiff has appealed, and we shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court.

Fred C. Parker was first married to Nora M. Parker, who died in 1902, leaving as her sole heirs her husband, Fred C. Parker, and one daughter, Naomi Parker (now Hanbery), to whom the estate of Nora M. Parker was distributed in equal shares. Fred C. Parker then married Alma H. Parker, who joined with her husband and Naomi Parker in conveying the real estate so distributed to Fred C. Parker and Naomi Parker for a consideration of $10,000. Naomi Parker received one-half of this sum and Fred C. Parker the remaining one-half. With the cash so received for his interest, he appears to have purchased, in January, 1917, the land involved in this action, which was occupied by him and his wife and daughter as a homestead until 1922, when Naomi Parker married a Mr. Hanbery and moved to California, where she has since resided.

On July 31, 1917, Fred C. Parker executed a deed to his second wife, Alma H. Parker, conveying to her the land involved, which was then being occupied as their homestead. On November 13, 1933, this deed was filed *2 for record. This was some sixteen years after the date of its execution. It is not shown definitely who filed the deed for record. Fred C. Parker had become-ill in July, 1933. His condition became very serious in November, and he died on November 19, 1933. His mental faculties were impaired and the testimony as to his competency to transact business on November 13, 1933, the date the deed in question was filed for record, is not very definite. Dr. Mc-Evoy, who treated him in his last illness, refused to testify definitely that he was incompetent to transact business on November 13 and November 14, 1933.

While there is no proof in the record to show that the deed was delivered to the grantee at the time of its execution, July 31, 1917, plaintiff claims that it was never in fact delivered. This contention was based principally upon the fact that it was not filed for record until almost sixteen years after its execution, and the alleged mental incompetency of the grantor at the time it was filed for record.

It is well established that delivery of a deed is an essential requirement to pass title. If the deed of Fred C. Parker was not in fact delivered to Alma H. Parker, she acquired no title to the land in controversy, and the daughter, Naomi Hanbery, inherited an undivided one-half interest therein, subject to the homestead rights of Alma H. Parker. If the deed was in fact delivered, then Alma H. Parker acquired thereby title to the land. If the deed was delivered at the time of its execution, then the mental condition of Fred C. Parker at the time of its recordation is immaterial.

The records of the county treasurer showed that from 1917 to 1933, the ad valorem taxes were assessed in the name of Fred C. Parker, or “Parkes”, or “Parks”, and the insurance on the improvements was likewise carried in his name until the deed to Alma H. Parker was recorded in 1933. He and his wife executed two mortgages on the land in question prior to the recording of the deed, and it is argued that because his name appears first in these instruments, he did not intend to deliver the deed in question to Alma H. Parker or to vest title thereby in her. We see no merit in this contention. We know of no rule of law which places any significance upon the question of whose name appears first in the body of or at the end of a written instrument, where the grantors are husband and wife. These mortgages were executed to C. E. Gannon, who as notary public took the acknowledgment to the deed of Fred C. Parker to Alma H. Parker in 1917.

In 1937, Alma H. Parker mortgaged the land in controversy to Garfield County Building & Loan Association, and she later contracted to sell the land to H. B. Van Scyoc, which caused these parties to be made parties defendant in the present action.

Alma H. Parker filed an action to quiet title on February 8, 1947, against any claim of Naomi Parker Hanbery. That action was later dismissed. The present action was commenced by Douglas McKeever as administrator of the estate of Fred C. Parker, deceased, on July 17, 1947, upon the direction and authority of the county court, under section 252, 58 O. S. 1941. It should be kept in mind that the burden of proving that the deed in question was never in fact delivered is here assumed by ne rests squarely upon the plaintiff, and that such proof must be by clear and convincing evidence.

Alma H. Parker alleges in her answer that the deed was “made, executed and delivered” on July 31, 1917. It was dated and acknowledged by the grantor on that date. It is not disputed that it was filed for record on November 13, 1933, and that the clerk was instructed that the party filing the deed would “call” for it instead of having it mailed. In his brief, the plaintiff speaks of Alma H. Parker’s having filed the deed, which might be construed as an admission against inter *3 est, but there is no evidence that she herself filed the deed. It will be noted that this action was not commenced until 1947. The court held that Mrs. Hanbery had waited too long to begin her action to have the deed set aside, and that her claim was “stale in equity”. The court further found that Mrs. Hanbery was chargeable with notice of the recordation of the deed in 1933.

Plaintiff contends that the findings and judgment of the trial court are not sustained by the evidence, but are against the weight of the evidence and contrary to law. He also complains of the order of the court overruling his motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff admits that the due execution and recordation of a deed is “prima facie evidence of its delivery” as stated in section 187, 26 C.J.S., Deeds, p. 598, but calls attention to that same section, wherein it is also said:

“ . . . There is, however, no presumption of the delivery of a deed where it is not recorded until long after its date.”

The only case cited in support of the last-quoted sentence is Larrison v. Taylor, 83 Colo. 430, 266 P. 217. The facts in that case are so .different from those here under consideration that we do not deem it as an authority sustaining the statement that the presumption of delivery is destroyed by the failure to record a deed for a long period of time after the date of its execution.

We think the above-quoted statement was not intended to mean that delay in recording completely negatives delivery at date of execution where grantee is shown to have possession and to have filed the deed for record, even after a long delay, in the absence of any evidence showing that the deed was not delivered to the grantee and not intended to be delivered to the grantee. We conclude that the facts and circumstances in the record before us clearly support the presumption that the deed was delivered to Alma H. Parker, and that plaintiffs evidence fails to overcome such presumption. See Yarbrough et al. v. Bellamy, 197 Okla. 493, 172 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1950 OK 344, 226 P.2d 425, 204 Okla. 1, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckeever-v-parker-okla-1950.