McMaster v. Goss

1923 OK 28, 212 P. 304, 88 Okla. 115, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 559
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1923
Docket10626
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1923 OK 28 (McMaster v. Goss) 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
McMaster v. Goss, 1923 OK 28, 212 P. 304, 88 Okla. 115, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 559 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

KANE, J.

This is an action for the recovery of land and to set aside a sheriffs *116 deed, commenced by the defendant in error, plaintiff below, against' plaintiff in error, defendant below.

Upon trial to tbe court there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff, to reverse which this proceeding in error was commenced. Hereafter, for convenience, the parties will ,be designated “plaintiff” and “defendant,” respectively, as they appeared in the trial court.

It appears from the record that the plaintiff claims the ten-acre tract of land involved by separate purchases from one S. P. lies and the Lost Horse Mining Com.pany, the conveyance in each case being by oral agreement coupled with immediate possession and lasting improvements, while •the defendant claims the land by virtue of a sheriff’s deed issued to him as purchaser at a judicial sale to satisfy a judgment in his favor in an action between himself and said S. P. lies.

At the outset it is conceded by the parties that the applicable principles of law are correctly stated in Purcell v. Corder, 33 Okla. 68, 124 Pac. 457, and Fulkerson v. Mara, 68 Okla. 272, 173 Pac. 811, as follows:

“An oral contract for the purchase of real estate, where payment of the purchase price has been made, and the vendee goes into possession of said property in good faith and makes valuable improvements thereon, takes the contract out of the statute of frauds, and is such a part performance of contract as to warrant a court in decreeing specific performance of the contract.”

Therefore the principal question presented for review is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff.

It is contended on the part of the defendant that there is no evidence whatever that the plaintiff ever had a specific contract of purchase for said land or any part thereof from either Mr. lies or the Lost Horse Mining Company. On this point it ’is sufficient to say that we have -examined the evidence adduced at the trial as it appears in the record before us, and are convinced that it sufficiently supports the findings and judgment of the trial court.

The facts necessary to a decision of the next question raised may be briefly summarized as follows: The entire ten-acre tract of land involved originally belonged to Mr. lies. Sometime before either of the parties to this action claimed to acquire any interest therein, lies made a deed conveying two and one-half acres in fee simple and the mineral right in two and one-half acres thereof to the‘Lost Horse Mining Company, a corporation, the plaintiff herein, Mr. lies, and one Thompson being the. directors and sole owners of all the stock of the company. Th© plaintiff, who was engaged in the grocery business close to the place where Mr. lies lived and the mining venture was being cai’ried on by the corporation, furnished both Mr. lies and the corporation with money and merchandise amounting to several thousand dollars’ value. The mining venture proving unsuccessful, and neither the mining company nor Mr. lies being able to pay the plaintiff, the .entire tract of land was turned over to him separately by Mr. lies and the directors and stockholders of the Lost Hor§e Mining Company for the purpose of extinguishing so far as possible the debt owing to him. Whereupon he immediately took actual possession of the entire tract, following this up with valuable improvements, etc.

Counsel for defendant say that, inasmuch as the deed of lies to the mining company purported to convey title in fee simple to only two and one-half acres and a bare mineral interest in two and one-half .acres, then the Lost Horse Mining Company never had any title to convey to the plaintiff as to the two and one-half acres covered by the mineral claim; and in this connection they further maintained that title to real estate can only be transferred by a corporation by deed in writing and signed and acknowledged by the proper officers.

We are unable to perceive how, in the circumstances found to exist in the case at bar, the defendant’s case would be helped by so holding.

The defendant, as we have seen, is claiming the land by a sheriff’s deed issued to satisfy a judgment against lies. The evidence shows that the plaintiff acquired his title to all the land owned by both lies and the corporation before the judgment of the defendant in the action against lies became a lien thereon. As the defendant herein does not claim title through the Lost Horse Mining Company, he is not, it seems to us, in a position to question whatever title the plaintiff derived from that source.

The deed from lies to the Lost Horse Mining Company having been made more than two years before the defendant obtained his judgment against lies, obviously the judgment never became a lien against any part of the land conveyed, because the fee had passed out of the judgment debtor except, as the defendant contends, the two and one-half acres in which lies deeded only the *117 mjneral rights. In other words, all the interest in the ten aeres that lies owned was .transferred either to the plaintiff or the Lost Horse Mining Company before the defendant’s judgment lien attached, so whether the transfer from the Lost Horse Mining Company to the plaintiff is valid or not is not material to the defendant. The defendant must recover on the strength of his own title, and as he claims no title from the Lost Horse Mining Company, to cloud the title of the plaintiff from that source would in no way inure to his benefit.

Finally, it is contended that the court committed error in admitting in evidence certain conversations between the plaintiff and S. P. lies, which he claims were incompetent under the provision of section 5049, Rev. Laws 1910, which provides in part as follows :

“No party to a civil action shall be allowed to testify in his own behalf, in respect to any transaction or communication had personally by such party with a deceased person, when the adverse party is the * * * assignee of such deceased person. * * *”

Counsel contends that the evidence objected to was inadmissible on the theory that the defendant, by virtue of his sheriff’s deed, became the assignee of lies, the judgment debtor, and lies being deceased at the time of the trial, the plaintiff could not testify to any transaction or communication had with such deceased person.

The authorities do not seem to sustain this contention. In the case of Burlington Nat. Bank v. Beard, 42 Pac. 320, the Spreme Court of Kansas says:

“Neither a sheriff who has levied a writ of attachment upon chattels nor the attachment creditor is an ‘assignee’ of the attachment debtor within the meaning of section S22 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and a vendee of such attachment debtor, although a party to the action, may testify in his own behalf to the transaction whereby be claims title from the attachment debtor, who has died in the meantime.”

In construing the statute, the learned Justice who delivered the opinion said:

“We think that the common acceptation of the word ‘assignee’ is limited to an as-signee in fact, and does not comprehend an assignee by mere operation of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 28, 212 P. 304, 88 Okla. 115, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmaster-v-goss-okla-1923.