McKinney v. Odom

1961 OK 169, 363 P.2d 272, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 27, 1961
Docket38851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1961 OK 169 (McKinney v. Odom) 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
McKinney v. Odom, 1961 OK 169, 363 P.2d 272, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 374 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This appeal involves an action to quiet title to between 900 and 1000 acres of land deeded to Mrs. Louie Collins Murray by her husband before his death more than 30 years ago. This realty is said to have been purchased by him, but part of it- — perhaps 240 acres — had been her allotment.

Mrs. Murray and her husband had five adult children, three of whom were living. On August 24, 1955 (before her death on November 26, of the same year) the said Mrs. Murray, while she was 86 years of age, and hospitalized, executed two deeds, covering all of the above mentioned property, to one daughter, the defendant in error, Mrs. Minnie Murray Odom, hereinafter referred to as defendant. It was to establish a claim, and quiet title, to an undivided 1/5 interest in this realty, that another of said defendant’s daughters, plaintiff in error, Mrs. Mildred McKinney (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff), instituted the present action about 3 years later, or on August 21, 1958.

In her petition, plaintiff also prayed the court — as an alternative to cancelling her mother’s said deeds to defendant — to decree that said grantee held an undivided 1/5 interest, in the property described therein, in trust for plaintiff.

Plaintiff pleaded that the deed in question was executed while her said mother was physically incapable of executing a valid conveyance; but at the trial, her counsel disavowed any contention that said grantor was incompetent; and attempted to show that the deeds were executed, either under the undue influence of defendant, or with the intention and understanding that, by said conveyances, plaintiff would obtain an undivided 1/5 interest in the property.

At the trial before the court (without a jury), it was established that the defendant was the only one of Mrs. Murray’s sons or daughters that had always lived with her; that when the old family home burned about 1942 or 1943, the defendant, her husband, and her son, all moved, with Mrs. Murray (who was then in her seventy’s), to the home of the latter’s sister, Miss Maud Collins, who was 10 years younger than Mrs. Murray, and is referred to throughout the testimony as: “Aunt Maud”.

About 5 years later, Miss Collins fell and broke her hip and had to be hospitalized. During this period of hospitalization, as well as later ones, and at almost all other times, defendant looked after both her mother and “Aunt Maud”. With her earnings as a school teacher, defendant purchased most of the furniture used in Aunt Maud’s home, which was located about one mile south of Colbert, between that town and Calera. She also had installed there, an electric water pump, and purchased the butane used as fuel in the home, as well as *274 most of the groceries. On some occasions when she was away from the home, defendant hired a woman to assist the two ladies; but she testified that, for 15 years, she had no vacation on account of her care of these two women. Also defendant used her automobile, in shopping for the home, and in transporting her mother to Denison, Texas, on shopping trips, and to a hospital there, and to one at Sherman, Texas.

The deeds in question here were executed in the latter city’s Wilson N. Jones Hospital, during Mrs. Murray’s next to the last period of hospitalization. The previous day, on August 23, 1955, while both plaintiff and defendant were visiting their mother’s hospital room, a will, drawn the same day by a Sherman law firm, was brought to her, and she signed it. Said will provided for the devise of the realty involved here (as the “residue” of her estate) to plaintiff, defendant, and Mrs. Murray’s only living son, Robert, in equal shares. It is this circumstance, contrasted with Mrs. Murray’s execution, on the next day, of the deeds, conveying all her said property to defendant only, that plaintiff emphasizes and strongly relies upon, to support her theory.

At the trial there was a conflict between plaintiff and defendant’s evidence as to some of the circumstances pertaining to the will. For instance, on the basis of plaintiff’s testimony, it would appear, that the will was defendant’s idea, or that she took the initiative in attempting to obtain its execution. That, and the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, a hospital nurse trainee, named Mrs. Vestal, was consistent with other testimony given by plaintiff concerning the two deeds, executed the next day, and conversations had thereafter. Plaintiff testified that, when, on August 25th, the next day after her mother’s execution of the deeds, plaintiff asked her, in her hospital room, and in the defendant’s presence, if she signed the deed “ * * * to beat me out of _ everything”, Mrs. Murray replied that she thought “ * * * it was made out to all of you.” When asked what defendant said on that occasion, plaintiff testified, in substance, that defendant said she thought that only part — not all — of the land “was put in her name”. Plaintiff further testified that defendant made the same, or similar, admissions on other subsequent occasions; and that she expressly recognized, in those conversations with her, that plaintiff had, and was entitled to, an interest in the property “ * * * the same as * * * ” she (defendant).

In her testimony, defendant admitted that she had never told anyone that she was claiming all of the real estate, to the exclusion of plaintiff and her brother; but she denied that her mother deeded it to her to divide with (or in trust for) the other two; and, among other things, testified that, while she was in Mrs. Murray’s hospital room on the day that plaintiff, with her husband and son, had gone from there to the law firm’s office to procure the drafting of the will, Mrs. Murray told her that she would “ * * * go on and sign * * * ” the will (when presented to her) “ * * * to keep a disturbance down”.

At the close of the evidence, the trial court rendered judgment for the defendant; and plaintiff has lodged the present appeal.

For reversal, plaintiff contends that the burden was on the defendant to overcome a presumption that the deeds were obtained from the parties’ mother, Mrs. Murray, through undue influence; that defendant made no effort, and wholly failed, to sustain such burden; and, that, therefore, the trial court’s judgment in her favor was contrary to both the law and the evidence.

The first of the above contentions is based on the premise that the evidence unquestionably shows that the relationship between defendant, the deed’s named grantee, and her mother, the grantor, was one of confidence and trust, and that defendant, because of her mother’s age and weakened physical and mental condition, was the dominant party in this relationship. Among other cases, plaintiff cites to support her position, she quotes the fourth editor’s headnote (referring to it as “the fourth paragraph of the syllabus”) in Antle v. Hartman, 193 Okl. 524, 145 P.2d 756, 757. *275 Said headnote was formulated from a certain portion of the opinion showing that the grantee of the deed involved was not the mother — grantor’s only daughter; that the deed covered all of the grantor’s property of substantial value; and that it was given for no other consideration than love and affection, and perhaps appreciation for care and filial attention. There this court said:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Presgrove v. Robbins
1969 OK 13 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1969)
McSpadden v. Mahoney
1967 OK 118 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1967)
Beck v. Beck
1963 OK 42 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 169, 363 P.2d 272, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-odom-okla-1961.