Phillips v. Keysaw

1899 OK 36, 56 P. 695, 7 Okla. 674, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 11, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1899 OK 36 (Phillips v. Keysaw) 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
Phillips v. Keysaw, 1899 OK 36, 56 P. 695, 7 Okla. 674, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 1 (Okla. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

TaRSnby, J.:

On September 16, 1893, Henry H. Key-saw. settled upon the southwest quarter of section 14, township 27 north, range 1 east, I. M., and claimed the same as a homestead under the homestead laws. On September 21, 1893, he established his residence upon said tract of land, and continued to reside upon and cultivate the same until the commecement of this suit. On September 29, 1893, he filed his homestead entry at the Perry land office thereon. October 13, 1893, plaintiff in *676 error, William A. Phillips, contested his entry for prior settlement. Upon hearing, the local land office decided in favor of Keysaw. Upon appeal this decision was, by the commissioner of the general land office, affirmed; but on appeal to the secretary of the interior the decisions of the commissioner and of the local land office were reversed, and the land awarded to Phillips. Final decision of the secretary was made on a motion for review on March 25, 1898, and Phillips filed on the land on April 9, 1898. Pending the contest, Phillips had the possession of the north 90 acres of the land, and Keysaw had the possession of the south 70 acres. In the fall of 1897, J. B. Manns, one of the defendants in error, as tenant for Keysaw, put in 65 acres of wheat upon the 70 acres of ground in the possession of Keysaw. On June 20, 1898, the cutting of this wheat was commenced. On June 16,1898, this action was commenced by issuing summons, but no application for a temporary injunction was presented, or order of injunction issued, until June 27, 1898, at which time the wheat in controversy had all been cut, and was in the shock on the premises where grown. On said day the court made a temporary order enjoining the defendants from in any manner interfering with the exclusive possession of the plaintiff to the 70 acres of land in controversy, except 3 acres thereof, for a period of 15 days from the date of the order, and from in any way interfering with the exclusive possession of the plaintiff to the whole of the 70 acres, after the expiration of the said 15 days, until a final hearing of the cause should be had. The court also- found that Manns, as tenant of Keysaw, was entitled to the posses-son of two-thirds of the wheat then in shock on said land, and enjoined Keysaw from the selling or disposing *677 of the other one-third of said wheat until the trial of the case upon its merits in the court.

Afterwards, in the proceedings in the cause in court, upon motion of the defendant, the plaintiff was required to separately state and number his causes of action contained in his petition, whereupon the plaintiff filed his amended petition, setting forth in the first count his cause of action for the possession of the land, and, in the second count, in addition to the matters alleged in the first, alleged the sowing of the wheat by Keysaw while the 70 acres were in his possession, and the harvesting of the same; that after the decision of the secretary of the interior, rendered July 15, 1897, to wit, on August 16, 1897, before any steps had been taken by Manns or Key-saw to sow any part of said land to wheat for another year, plaintiff notified said defendant, in writing, to the effect that said decision had been rendered in his favor, awarding the land to him, and that the plaintiff was entitled to the possession thereof, and notifying said defendant to refrain from planting said lands to crops, or in any way exercising control thereon; that, notwithstanding such decision and notice, defendant did sow about 60 acres of said tract in wheat. The petition further alleged that the value of the use of said land by said defendants is at least $1,000; that the defendants were insolvent; that the only property owned by defendants out of which any judgment for the value of the use of said land could be made is the crop of wheat upon said land; that the plaintiff was deprived of the opportunity to cultivate said land, and that by reason of the premises he was entitled to the crop of wheat then on the land, as well as the possession of the land; that defc-udanis were about to sell the entire crop of wheat, *678 and, if so sold, plaintiff would be without remedy at law whereby to recover either the crop itself or the value of the use of the land during that and the prior years the said land had been held by the defendant Keysaw; and praying an injunction against the disposal of said wheat, as in the original petition. To this count of the petition the defendants demurred for the reasons (1) that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for; (2) because the plaintiff has a plain, adequate, and simple remedy at law to recover the crop of wheat, if he is the owner thereof; and (3) because said paragraph of said petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. On September 13, 1898, the court sustained said demurrer to the second count of the plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff duly excepted, and, electing to stand upon his said petition, and refusing to further plead, the said second cause of action was by the court dismissed, and the' •temporary order of injunction, in so far as it enjoined the defendant from selling or otherwise disposing of any of the wheat grown upon said land during the season of 1897 and 1898, was dissolved, and from this order plaintiff appealed.

The simple question involved in this case is, who was the owner of the wheat in question when the temporary order of injunction was granted? The fact that the defendant Keysaw was, at the time of the issuing of the injunction, liable to Phillips, or might thereafter become liable, for the mesne profits of the land withheld by him from the possession of Phillips during the pend-ency of the contest proceedings, or for any other debt, would not give jurisdiction to the court or judge by injunction to prevent him from selling or disposing of the *679 ■same, unless Phillips was the owner oí said wheat, or had sonm legal property interest therein.

The injunctional powers of a court oí chancery, con-cededly broad, and, by respectable authority, claimed to be sufficiently latitudinous to authorize its writ to he substituted for the ordinary writ of ejectment, or an order of restitution in forcible entry and detainer, has not yet received judicial sanction as a substitute for the writ of replevin, or to accomplish the purpose of a writ of attachment; and therefore, if the wheat in question was not the property of Phillips, or if he had no legal property interest therein, although Keysaw may have been insolvent, and had no other property out of which a judgment for mesne profits could have been made, a court of equity had no jurisdiction by injunction to attach, or in any manner sequester, the same, in order that it might be applied to the satisfaction of any judgment at law for mesne profits thereafter to be obtained. Was Phillips, then, the owner, or did he have a legal property interest in the wheat in question, which justified invoking the injunctional powers of the court for its protection? The common law relating to the ownership of growing crops is in force in this Territory, unmodified by statute, except in one particular, which is not involved in this case. At the common law, growing crops, produced by annual labor and cultivation, which are called “fructus industriales,”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1899 OK 36, 56 P. 695, 7 Okla. 674, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-keysaw-okla-1899.