North v. Coffey

1948 OK 67, 191 P.2d 220, 200 Okla. 44, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 16, 1948
DocketNo. 32732
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1948 OK 67 (North v. Coffey) 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
North v. Coffey, 1948 OK 67, 191 P.2d 220, 200 Okla. 44, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 315 (Okla. 1948).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

This is an action for the partition of real property, brought by plaintiff, A. V. Coffey, against defendant, S. N. North. The case was tried to the court as one of equitable cognizance without a jury, and the trial court decreed partition and appointed commissioners. Defendant appeals.

The property is described as lots 23 and 24, block 12, of Campbell’s addition to the city of Wewoka. Each of the two lots is 25 feet in width and upon them, sometime during the year 1928, the owner erected a seven-room one story frame dwelling house, which rested upon brick and concrete foundations. About two-thirds of this house was upon lot 24 and one-third upon lot 23. The lots appear to have been separately assessed for taxation, and lot 23 was purchased by defendant at the 1945 resale. At the same resale plaintiff purchased lot 24. Plaintiff set up these facts in his petition, alleged that certain persons, also made parties defendant in the action, were in possession and were not paying any rent; that the property was being mismanaged and the value thereof diminishing; that there was an irreconcilable difference between plaintiff and defendant as to the handling of the property and the collection of rents; that the property was not susceptible of division in kind and should be sold. Defendant demurred to plaintiff’s petition on the ground that the facts stated therein did not give the court jurisdiction to partition lot 23, and upon his demurrer being overruled, answered, stating that he was the owner of lot 23 and that portion of the house located on said lot, and that the property was not subject to partition for the reason that the ownership of the parties was entirely separate.

The trial court found that the residence on the property was a part of each and both of said lots; that therefore the two lots and said improvements constituted one piece of real estate, and that same was subject to partition. It adjudged that plaintiff and defendant each owned one-half of the two lots involved, and that each, upon partition, should receive “a fair, equitable, and pro rata share and distribution thereof, to be determined by the commissioners and approved by the court, same to be determined by ascertaining what portion or percentage of said house is on the lot owned by the two respective parties, and as to the commissioners seems just.”

The sole question presented for determination is whether, under the facts above stated, the property is subject to partition by a judicial proceeding. Defendant contends that it is not for the reason that there is no joint ownership of the property, defendant owning lot 23 and that part of the house upon it, and plaintiff owning lot 24 and that part of the house upon it. Plaintiff contends that while the two [46]*46lots are separately owned, the house, which is real estate because attached to the lots, is undivided and not separated in any way along the property line dividing the two lots, and therefore is not owned in severalty by the two parties, and that it follows logically that the construction of such a building on two or more city lots has the effect of creating one piece of realty. Plaintiff further alleges that when he and defendant bought at resale they bought and acquired the same ownership that the former single owner of both lots had and owned. That together they stepped into the shoes of the former owner; that the property was not divided or separated up until the time they acquired it and is not separate now, but that both parties must and did take the property as it was.

We are unable to agree with the contentions made by plaintiff, and think that made by the defendant must be sustained. This for the reason that when the parties acquired the property at resale they did not step into the shoes of the former owner, or acquire his title, or take the land subject to any burdens placed upon it by him. The resale tax deed created a new or virgin title. Taylor v. Lawrence, 176 Okla. 75, 54 P. 2d 634; Cook v. Hammett, 192 Okla. 298, 135 P. 2d 962. The resale tax deeds vested in plaintiff fee-simple title to lot 24, and in defendant fee-simple title to lot 23. This fee-simple title vested in the owner of each lot the right to the surface of said lot and to everything permanently situated beneath or above it. 60 O.S. 1941 §64. The fact that the house was not divided along the property line between the two lots by any partition wall or division line of any kind did not destroy the separate ownership of each lot owner in that portion of the house situated upon his lot. The same argument might be made in relation to the two lots since there was no visible line between them. The fact of such ownership by the parties of the respective portions of the house located upon their lots was recognized by the trial court in that portion of his decree above quoted.

As pointed out in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) vol. 5, §§2124, 2125, at common law the writ of partition lay only in cases of lands held in coparcency. It was extended by statute to joint tenancy and tenancy in common, but even as so extended the remedy was imperfect, in that it made no allowance for the fact that one co-tenant might have erected valuable improvements on the land or expended large sums of money thereon, and that it made no provision for cases where the undivided interests were incapable of exact apportionment. The equitable jurisdiction at first was invoked only in situations where the legal remedy was inadequate, but owing to the advantage possessed by courts of equity over the common law courts in their freedom from restraint and power to deal with the various situations involved, the jurisdiction of equity became almost exclusive. In the same work (section 2125) the author states that all of the states in this country have provided a statutory remedy for partition which in substance are enactments of both the common law and equitable remedies, and partake of the nature of both.

Our statute was adopted from Kansas (Hargis v. Hargis, 181 Okla. 377, 73 P. 2d 1129; and as construed by the Kansas courts it conferred jurisdiction upon the courts in the partition of estates only when there was cotenancy between the parties. Love v. Blauw (Kan.) 59 P. 1059, 48 L.R.A. 257, 78 Am. St. Rep. 334; Bartram v. Kemp (Kan.) 214 P. 96. The statute is procedural only, and was intended to apply to situations to which partition would be applied under the common law and equitable rules existing prior to its adoption.

Partition under the modern practice, combining both the equitable and common law remedies, is defined as follows:

[47]*47. a division between two or more persons of real or personal property which they own as coparceners, joint tenants, or tenants in common, effected by the setting apart of such interests so that they may enjoy and possess the same in severalty, . . 47 C.J. p. 266, §1; 40 Am. Jur. p. 4, §2; Sweeney v. Bay State Oil & Gas Co., 192 Okla. 28, 133 P. 2d 538.

Under this modern doctrine it is applicable only to cases in which the property is held in cotenancy.

As said in 47 C.J. 295, paragraph 73:

“Partition can be had only of property which is held in cotenancy, and there can be no judgment or decree for partition where the parties to the proceeding are neither coparceners, joint tenants, nor tenants in common. Plaintiff in the proceeding must fail, no matter what his interest in the property may be, if that interest is not the interest of a cotenant.”

The statement so made is supported by a vast number of authorities.

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

Related

De Mik v. Cargill
1971 OK 61 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1971)
Prusa v. Cermak
1966 OK 89 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1948 OK 67, 191 P.2d 220, 200 Okla. 44, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-v-coffey-okla-1948.