Oliver v. Collins

1926 OK 1021, 251 P. 729, 123 Okla. 33, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 1926
Docket17498
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1926 OK 1021 (Oliver v. Collins) 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
Oliver v. Collins, 1926 OK 1021, 251 P. 729, 123 Okla. 33, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 474 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, O.

The parties will be referred, to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, instituted1 this action in the district court of Ok-fuskee county against the defendants in error, as defendants, to cancel a deed from the plaintiff to defendant O. L. Oollins, conveying the south half of the northwest quarter and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 8. township 13 N., range 7 E., 120 acres more or l'ess. ana vo cancel a deed to said land from defendant Collins to defendant M. A. Wilder, on the alleged ground of fraud and misrepresentations of defendants Collins and Wilder; and to quiet the title of plaintiff against the claims of defendants Collins and Wilder by reason of said deeds, and to quiet the title of plaintiff against the claims of defendant Roman Sarty, and that said defendants and each of them be enjoined from asserting any right, title, claim.- or interest in said ■land, adverse to the title of plaintiff.

The defendant Collins disclaimed any interest in the land, and defendant Roman Sarty was not served with summons. The *34 defendant M. A. Wilder filed his answer and cross-petition, in which it was alleged that on the 10th day of April, 1925, the plaintiff made., executed, and delivered to one O. L. Oollins his warranty deed wnere-by he conveyed the said land to the said O. L. Oollins for the use and benefit of the defendant Wilder, and thereafter the said O. L. Oollins made, executed, and delivered to the defendant Wilder his instrument in writing whereby he conveyed to' the defendant Wilder the record title to all of the said land, and that the defendant Wilder has ever since been and now is the ownei of this land in fee simple absolute; that the defendant Wilder paid to the plaintiff as consideration therefor the full sum of $4,-500. Defendant specifically denies that he or the said Oollins directly or indirectly made any fraudulent or false misrepresentation to the plaintiff, and further alleges that the consideration so paid to the plaintiff was and is a fair and reasonable consideration for said land, and further denies each and every other material allegation in said petition contained.

To this answer the plaintiff filed his reply. Later defendant Wilder filed an amendment to his answer and cross-petition, which amendment alleges that a part of the $4,500 paid by defendant M. A. Wilder to plaintiff as consideration for the land in controversy was a certain negotiable certificate of deposit No. 9,004, regularly issued to the order of plaintiff by the Citizens National Bank of Okmulgee, Okla., for the sum of $2,000, bearing interest at the rate of 4 per cent, annually, which said certificate was dated April IS, 1925, although it was purchased at said bank on April 11, 1925; that since this action was commented and on, to wit. July 28, 1925, the plaintiff, having full knowledge of the entire transaction that had gone before, voluntarily appeared at said bank in person and exchanged the said certificate of deposit for a negotiable cashier’s check drawn by said bank to plaintiff’s order in the sum of $2,000, and then and there collected from the said bank in cash the interest on said certificate. A copy of said' certificate and copy of said cashier’s check is attached to the defendant Wilder’s amendment. It is further alleged that thereby plaintiff recognized, ratified, and' confirmed the entire sale transaction in and upon said land and is now estopped from maintaining this action.

Plaintiff filed a trial reply to such amended answer and cross-petition.

The cause was tried' before the court without the intervention of a jury, and at the close of all the evidence the court found that fraud sufficient to' set aside the conveyance in question had not been established and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant M. A. Wilder.

Motion for new trial was overruled, with exceptions. Prom the judgment rendered and from the order of the court overruling the motion for a new trial the plaintiff has duly appealed to this court by petition in error and case-made attached.

All of the assignments of error are presented and discussed under the following proposition; “Did the defendants, Collins and Wilder, secure the deed to the land in question by false representations, or by fraud?”

It is admitted by the pleadings that the plaintiff is a one-half blood Creek Indian, and that the land in controversy was allotted to him as his surplus allotment.

The record further shows that the northwest 40 acres of plaintiff’s allotment was his homestead allotment and the remaining 120 acres his surplus allotment. About 40 to 45 acres of this land was in cultivation. The land for the most part was hilly and rocky and known in that vicinity as blackjack land, worth, according to' various witnesses, from $15 to $35 an aero agriculturally.

It appears that certain large oil companies had assembled a block of oil and gas leases in the vicinity of this land, and that one of these companies, the Amerada Petroleum Corporation, began a test a mile and a half west of the land involved in this action, but at the time of the trial the drilling for oil had not been started. It further appears that another oil company, the Roxana Petroleum Company, had an oil and gas lease on the 120-acre surplus land in question, which expires December 28, 1928, unless oil or gas is found -thereon.

It appears that the defendant Wilder learned from the records that acreage was being blocked by some large oil companies in this general locality and that it was his understanding that the oil and gas lease upon the 120-acre surplus expired upon the majority of the allottee.

The defendant Wilder sent the defendant Collins to the plaintiff’s home with a view to arrange to buy a lease on the 120-acre surplus when the plaintiff became of age. Eventually Oollins met the plaintiff and Roman Sarty and one Deere upon the street in Okmulgee and they all went to Mr. Wilder’s office. The defendant Wilder then of- *35 tered the plaintiff $100 an acre for a new oil and gas lease on this 120 acres and offered to go to Muskogee and bid $100 an acre for a departmental lease on the restricted 40-aere homestead when the plaintiff became of age.

During this conversation it developed th^t the plaintiff, some ten days or two weeks before he reached his majority, which, it is admitted, occurred on the 9th day of April, 1925, had left the school which he haa attended at Muskogee in company with a schoolmate and did not intend to return to school until after he became of age for the reason that he did not desire to execute a certain trust deed that the superintendent of his school suggested that he ought to sign, and that his then guardian. one Murphy, wanted him to execute to them or to one of them.

It was then arranged that the defendant Collins, the plaintiff, and his schoolmate, Deere, would go away and remain until after he had attained his majority. It further appears that Roman Sarty, an uncle of Hie plaintiff, also accompanied the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 1021, 251 P. 729, 123 Okla. 33, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-collins-okla-1926.