Noe v. Smith

1917 OK 567, 169 P. 1108, 67 Okla. 211, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 27, 1917
Docket6660
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1917 OK 567 (Noe v. Smith) 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
Noe v. Smith, 1917 OK 567, 169 P. 1108, 67 Okla. 211, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 388 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

BRETT, J.

This action was commenced in the' district court of -Seminole county by T. H. Smith, one of the defendants in error, as plaintiff, 'against Frank R. 'Noe and D. A. Marlow, as 'defendants, to quiet title in a IBO-acre tract of land described in the petition. The material facts are:

That the land was origin-ally owned by a Seminole freedman, who in 1911 deeded the land to D. A. Marlow by general warranty 'deed for a consideration of $800. Smith, 'however, furnished the purchase in-ice of the land. Marlow later filed suit in his own name, -to cancel an outstanding spurious deed, and quiet title to the land in himself.- In the summer of 1912, -S-niith requested Marlow to execute a quitclaim deed to him, which Marlow refused to do. In March, 1913, Marlow conveyed the land by warranty deed’ to the defendant Noe for a consideration of $1,000. Marlow owed Nee Bros., of which firm defendant Frank R. Noe was a member, $295.85, and the defendant Noe credited this account in. full, and paid Marlow the difference of $704.15 in cash. When Noe’s deed was placed of record, Smith immediately notified him that Marlow did not own the land, but only held it in trust for him. Also told Noe ‘that he bad better take steps to protect himself against Marlow’s fraud, since he intended to file suit at once to cancel the deed.

The suit was filed, and Smith’s petition alleges in substance that he furnished the full consideration for the purchase of said land, and that title was taken in the name of 'the. defendant Marlow, the defendant Marlow holding the legal title in said land fer the use and benefit of Smith, the *212 equitable owner, and that thereafter said' land was conveyed by said Marlow to Noe, at which time the said' (Noe well knew that said Smith was the owner of said land, and that said Noé was therefore not an innocent purchaser of same for value, and prays that the court decree bim the owner of said land and quiet the title thereto in him. Noe answered by general denial, and also that he was an innocent purchaser for value.

The only issue raised by the pleadings upon which there was any controversy is whether or not Noe was an innocent purchaser for value. The case was tried to the court and upon this controverted question the court, in his finding of facts, says:

“While there are a number of circumstances in this case that would justify the court in finding that the defendant was not an innocent purchaser, yet t'he said circumstances are susceptible of explanation, and, being so explained, the court concludes that the defendant Frank Noe was an innocent purchaser, to the extent of the amount of the money actually paid, to wit, $704.”

The court then proceeded to cancel the deed from Marlow to Noe, and quiet title in Smith, and gave Noe judgment against both Smith and Marlow for $704.15, which was the amount of the purchase price that Noe paid in cash. The case is brought here by Noe by petition in error and case-made, asking for a reversal, and that he be adjudged owner of the land in controversy. And Smith files his cross-petition, and asks that lire he relieved! of that part of the judgment requiring him to reimburse Noe for the cash Noe paid Marlow in the deal.

The one question in this case which must determine the. rights of the parties Is whether or not, under the law and facts, Noe was an innocent imrdbaser for value. There are a number of assignments of error in both the petition and cross-petition in error, but they all converge to the one question as to whether or not Noe was an innocent purchaser for value, and we will consider this question, hearing in mind the different angles from which this question is presented by the assignments and arguments of counsel.

Smith, the plaintiff below, insists .that Noe was not and could not, under the law, have been an innocent purchaser for value; that there were facts known ito Noe that under the law put him on inquiry. And if he had prosecuted this inquiry with ordinary diligence it would have led to actual knowledge of the fact that Marlow was only holding the legal title to said land for the- use and ■benefit of Smith, who was the equitable owner. And one fact that 'he says should have put Noe on inquiry, and which is argued most strenuously, 'is that Marlow sold Noe the land for $1,000, when the evidence showed it was worth from $2,000 to $3,000, and that this gross inadequacy of consideration was a circumstance that should have aroused suspicion and suggested inquiry.

But, under the facts in this ease, we fail to see the force of the argument For only about two years before Noe bought the land of Marlow, Marlow had purchased! it for only $800, and in his deal Noe was making a profit of $200 on an $800 investment. And there was certainly nothing in that transaction to arouse suspicion. Besides, the records showed the title to be in Marlow, and the district court, in a suit instituted by Marlow for that very purpose, had decreed Marlow to be the owner in fee of this land.

Smith sat by and permitted all this to he done without asserting any interest in the land, as he says, “because he entertained such confidence and trust in Marlow.” And yet he insists that Noe, and all the rest of the world., should have looked with suspicion upon every action of this very man in whom ■lie (had such great confidence, and should •have even questioned his title to and his light to convey a tract of land, which the records andi a solemn decree of the district court showed him to own in fee.

But it seems to us that even if Smith had “entertained such great confidence and trust in Marlow,” -that, as he says, “he had permitted him to carry his cheek book, and check upon his account, to deal in cattle and hogs for him, and to go to Texas and ■buy several carloads of cattle for him on ¡his own judgment, and to hold this land in trust for Mm,” yet when Marlow, in the summer of 1912, refused to give him a quitclaim deed to 'this land, which he was only ¡holding in trust for Mm, that should have aroused Smith’s suspicion, and led him to take steps .to protect himself and -the world against the possibility of the very thing that did occur, and of which he is complaining in this suit.

It was his negligence that made this fraud possible. He had. clothed Marlow with the indicia of title, and neglected to take steps to protect himself, when he had reason to believe that Marlow intended to use that in-dicia of title to defraud Mm. And in such eases, when an instrument wMch clothes another with the indicia of title to property is used by him, the equities of innocent parties must and will be considered. And there *213 is nothing in this record which, when viewed in the light of our common everyday experiences, wofild charge Noe with knowing that Smith had- any interest in this land, or put 'him upon inquiry as to the right of Marlow to convey it. And, under such circumstances, the rule established by the overwhelming weight of authority is that the equities of innocent purchasers are protected, even though the party who has been imposed upon or defrauded by his agent or trustee must suffer. As is forcefully said in McNeil v. Tenth National Bank, 46 N. Y. 326, 7 Am. Rep. 341:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 567, 169 P. 1108, 67 Okla. 211, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noe-v-smith-okla-1917.