Nunley v. Loftis

1923 OK 771, 220 P. 841, 100 Okla. 46, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 893
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 9, 1923
Docket11436
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1923 OK 771 (Nunley v. Loftis) 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
Nunley v. Loftis, 1923 OK 771, 220 P. 841, 100 Okla. 46, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 893 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, O.

This is an appeal from the judgment and decree of the district court of Beckham county, in favor of defendant in error, plaintiff below, James M. Loftis, and against plaintiff in error, defendant below, Thomas J. Nun-ley, in a proceeding for the partition of certain lands in Beckham county, for which joint certificates of purchase were alleged to have been issued by the Commissioners of the Land Office to the parties.

The lands in controversy consisted of two tracts containing about 100 acres each, and were school lands and formerly leased to one- Riggs, who sold or assigned his preference rights in one of ihe tracts to Loftis, and the other tract to B. M. Jackson, who subsequently sold or transferred same to plaintiff in error Nunley.

The tracts wer-e, by the ¡School Land Department, appraised separately,v and likewise the improvements situated on each tract when the lands were purchased from the state in 3016, at a sale of the school lands, each tract was purchased at the appraised value by the respective occupants, Loftis and Nunley, and for some reason, which is not explained by the records in this case, the School Land Commissioners, in issuing certificates of purchase for said lands, issued a joint certificate of purchase to each of the school land lessees, which is as follows:

“Certificate of Purchase.
“Commissioners of the Land Office of the
“State of Oklahoma.
“Know all Men by these Presents:
“That whereas, on the 31 day of March A. D. 1916, Thomas J. Nunley and James M. Loftis of Texola, in the state of Oklahoma, and a qualified person did at public auction held in the city of Sayre in the state of Oklahoma, enter into a contract of purchase from the Commissioners of the Land Office of the state of Oklahoma, acting for and on behalf of said state, all of the following school land state land, to wit:
“Lots one and two and the east half of the northeast quarter of section 36, in township 9 north of range 27 west of the Indian Meridian in Beckham county in said state upon the following terms and conditions:.
“First: That as a consideration for said sale and purchase the -said, purchaser would pay to the state of Oklahoma the sum of $1,800 at the following times and the following manner, to wit:
“Five per centum of the said purchase price to be paid on the execution and delivery of the contract of purchase, and the remainder to be paid, etc_
“Dated at Oklahoma City, in the state-of Oklahoma, on this the 31st day of May A. D., 1916.
“Commissioners of the Land Office of the State of Oklahoma.
“By M. B. Trapp,
“Acting Governor and Chairman.”

—and a like certificate was issued for the other tract.

There seems to have been considerable difference in the value of the two tracts of land, and the plaintiff in error, Nunley, contends that it was the understanding that he and Loftis were to own the lands jointly, while the defendant in error, Lof-tis, denies that there was any such understanding or agreement, and contends that it was agreed that each of the parties should own, control, and occupy separately and exclusively the tract he then occupied and that the certificates of pur~ chase were issued jointly because the lands; originally had been leased in one -body to, the original lessee, Riggs.

The evidence as disclosed by the record fails to show any specific contract or agreement sustaining the contention of plaintiff in error, and while he was a witness in the case, he does not pretend to say that any agreement was ever had between him and Loftis to the effect -that they should hold the lands jointly, and he is left ‘to rely entirely on the fact that the certificates of purchase .were issued to them jointly. The evidence discloses that in the purchase of the lease and preference right from the original lessee and his assigns, the plaintiff' in error, Nunley, purchased the tract upon which he resides and paid for same, and, likewise, the defendant in error, Loftis. purchased the tract upon which be resides and paid the consideration therefor. The same condition existed when the purchase from the state was made, each paying the amount required by the state for the particular *48 tract upon wliicli lie resided, and there is nothing to indicate from the evidence that there was ever any agreement to the effect that they were to hold the land jointly, and there were no acts or conduct on the part of either that would justify the implication of such an agreement. The evidence does disclose that the plaintiff in error, Nunley, at one time cultivated a small portion of the land occupied by Lof-tis, but it also discloses that on one occasion at least, he paid a cash rental of $2' per acre per annum for same.

Plaintiff in error contends that the judgment of the lower court should be reversed, the matter having been submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court having found that the litigants were entitled to hold and occupy the tracts separately, and the tracts upon which they had erected improvements and were occupying, and that no cotenancy or joint ownership existed.

Plaintiff in error raises (he question that the allegations of a specific agreement will not support the finding of an implied agreement, and if only an implied agreement is shown by the evidence, it constitutes a failure of proof and' is a material variance between the pleadings and proof and cites the case of Chambers v. Van Wagner, 32 Okla. 774, 123 Pac. 1117, and other authorities in support of this contention; but this is a question of fact submitted; to the court ,and determined adversely to plaintiff in error’s contention, and we think the facts proven justify the conclusion reached, and are sufficient to establish an implied or resulting trust, and. while a resulting trust is not specifically pleaded, the facts pleaded and proven are sufficient upon which to base same. The only fact upon which plaintiff in' error can rely is that the certificate of purchase was issued to them jointly. This alone would not, in our judgment, be sufficient to establish coten-ancy or joint ownership, and especially is this true in view of the provision of the Rev. Laws 1910, section 7160, Comp. Stat. 1921, section 9338:

•‘Affidavit of Purchase. Before any certificate of purchase is issued for any part or parcel of the public lands of this state, the purchaser thereof shall make an affidavit that the land purchased is for his own use and benefit and not either directly or indirectly for the use and benefit of any other person, firm, association, or corporation. In the event that such purchaser fails or refuses to fully comply with all the requirements of law and the rules and regulations of the commissioners of the land office, authorized by law, governing sales of the land sold under the provisions of this article and to make such affidavit, the deposit required in the second preceding section hereof shall be forfeited to the state for the benefit of the fund for which the land is sold.”

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 771, 220 P. 841, 100 Okla. 46, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunley-v-loftis-okla-1923.