Mercer v. McKeel

1940 OK 425, 108 P.2d 138, 188 Okla. 280, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1940
DocketNo. 29172.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1940 OK 425 (Mercer v. McKeel) 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
Mercer v. McKeel, 1940 OK 425, 108 P.2d 138, 188 Okla. 280, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 448 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is the fourth appeal to this court growing out of an action commenced in the district court of Seminole county in 1921, by J. F. Mc-Keel against J. W. Mercer.

The action was numbered 5074, in the trial court, and is referred to in the briefs herein as case No. 5074.

Cause No. 5074 was an action in ejectment, and found its way to this court as McKeel v. Mercer, 118 Okla. 66, 246 P. 619. The nature of the controversy out of which the action arose is briefly stated therein. It is stated therein that Mercer was in possession of the 80 acres of land purchased by him in 1921, at guardian’s sale. This is error as to the date of purchase. Mercer purchased at guardian’s sale in 1912.

The controversy between Mercer and McKeel arose in 1921. Up to that time the land had comparatively little value and no one had questioned Mercer’s title. In 1921, when oil was discovered in the vicinity, the value rose temporarily. Mercer had an opportunity to sell an oil and gas lease covering the land for a bonus of $4,000. McKeel sent his brother to Kansas City and obtained deeds from the allottees conveying the land to McKeel. McKeel paid $1,000 for the deeds and incurred $232.60 expenses.

McKeel placed the deeds of record and he and Mercer could not agree upon conveying the title to Mercer. In the meantime the oil boom passed and sale of the oil and gas lease was lost. Mc-Keel sued Mercer for possession and Mercer counterclaimed for damages for loss of sale of the oil and gas lease.

Trial was had, resulting in judgment in favor of Mercer for $1,177.20.

This judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded with directions. McKeel v. Mercer, supra.

On retrial judgment was rendered in favor of McKeel in the sum of $2,000, *282 without an interest in the mineral rights. On appeal this judgment was reversed as being contrary to the pleadings and evidence. McKeel v. Mercer, 167 Okla. 413, 29 P. 2d 939.

The cause was again tried. Specific findings of fact were made by a jury upholding in substance McKeel’s contentions as to the agreement. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of McKeel for $1,232.60, with interest, and awarding him an undivided one-half interest in the mineral rights. Mercer attempted to appeal to this court, and the appeal was dismissed for the reason that it was not perfected in time. Mercer v. McKeel et al., 177 Okla. 499, 61 P. 2d 191.

After the cause was remanded on the second appeal the pleadings were amended.

J. W. Mercer asked leave of court to file a third amended answer. Minnie Mercer, wife of J. W. Mercer, twice sought leave to intervene and set up her claim that the land involved was the constitutional homestead of J. W. and Minnie Mercer, and that she had never contracted or otherwise agreed in writing to give McKeel any interest in the mineral rights in said land, nor had she joined in any agreement to employ McKeel to acquire deeds from the allottees.

Both applications were denied and the judgment thereafter rendered against J. W. Mercer gave McKeel an undivided one-half interest in the mineral rights in the land, together with the right of ingress and egress, and made the judgment for $1,262.60, interest and costs, a lien upon the land, less the one-half mineral interests decreed to McKeel. That judgment and decree became final when J. W. Mercer’s appeal was dismissed. Minnie Mercer did not appeal from either order denying her application to intervene.

July 13, 1936, Minnie Mercer commenced this action. In her petition she alleges in substance that she and J. W. Mercer were at all times mentioned in the petition husband and wife. That in 1912, J. W. Mercer purchased the land in question at guardian’s sale; that about the date of the purchase plaintiff and her husband, J. W. Mercer, with their family moved upon the land, and have ever since occupied said land as their homestead, and since said date have never claimed or occupied any other land as their homestead; that defendant J. W. McKeel is claiming some right, title, or interest in said land by reason of the judgment obtained by him against J. W. Mercer in said cause No. 5074, but that whatever right, title, or interest he has or claims in said land is inferior and subject to her homestead rights.

In a second cause of action she re-alleged her homestead interest in the land, and pleaded that the judgment obtained by defendant McKeel against J. W. Mercer in said cause No. 5074, for $1,262.60, with interest and costs, fixed a lien upon the land involved together with a transfer of an undivided one-half interest in and to the minerals in and under said land; that she did not consent to said judgment or the alienation of said mineral rghts and was not a party to said action, and that said judgment insofar as it affects her homestead rights in and to said property is void and should be canceled.

She prayed for cancellation of said judgment as to her homestead rights and that the homestead rights and right of possession as a homestead of plaintiff in and to said land be quieted in her as against any right, title, interest, or claim of defendant J. W. McKeel.

J. W. Mercer was made party plaintiff, and pleadings were amended in certain particulars.

Defendant McKeel, by answer and amended answer, alleged in substance that while J. W. Mercer did obtain a guardian’s deed for said land, he acquired no title whatever; that said deed was void for several alleged reasons, in that said land was ordered sold at private sale for cash, and was sold for *283 part cash and part credit; that the land involved was two separate tracts allotted to two separate allottees, and was sold for a lump sum; that the land was ordered sold at private sale and there was no appraisement filed in said proceedings for the consideration of the court in the approval of the sale; that no proper notice of sale was given as required by law; that the guardian was never legally appointed for the minors because no notice of petition for appointment of guardian was served on the parents of said minors. Other irregularities in the proceedings were alleged. He then alleged that said land was not and could not, under said sale, become the homestead of plaintiffs because said deed was void and plaintiffs acquired no title whatever thereunder.

As a further defense he alleged:

“Further answering this defendant says that all the questions involved in this case and all the contentions made by the plaintiffs in this case and all the legal questions and all the facts involved in this case have heretofore been fully and completely adjudicated by this Honorable Court and by the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma and that no question now presented in this case is open for further investigation, and this defendant pleads said adjudication as a final determination of all of said facts in bar of the right of plaintiffs, or either of them, to further litigate with this defendant, and defendant further alleges that said adjudications were made in cause No. 5074, in this Honorable Court, entitled J. F. McKeel et al., Plaintiffs, v. J. W. Mercer et al., Defendants; that the plaintiff herein, Minnie Mercer, intervened in said cause No. 5074 and set up and asserted the matters and things on which she now relies for recovery herein, and that the plaintiff, J. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 425, 108 P.2d 138, 188 Okla. 280, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-v-mckeel-okla-1940.