Posey v. Brixey

1928 OK 490, 271 P. 230, 133 Okla. 98, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1013
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1928
Docket18031
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1928 OK 490 (Posey v. Brixey) 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
Posey v. Brixey, 1928 OK 490, 271 P. 230, 133 Okla. 98, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1013 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

TEBHEE, O.

Nancy Posey, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, on August 10, 1926, filed suit against A. M. Brixey, defendant, to recover a balance of the purchase price for certain lands due and owing to her as grantor by the defendant as grantee, and to foreclose a vendor’s lien on the property sold. In her petition, plaintiff, in substance, alleged that on April 19, 1919, she sold and conveyed the property by deed to defendant for a consideration of $24,000; that upon delivery of the deed defendant paid her thereon the sum of $400 and was to deposit the balance of the consideration to her credit in the First National Bank of Mounds, Okla.; that the defendant thereafter deposited on divers dates an aggregate sum of $11,965, which left remaining due and unpaid the sum of $11,635, in which amount defendant was indebted to her; that because of being a full-blood degree Creek Indian, with a want, of understanding and knowledge of the English language, she was represented in the transaction by her son, who had informed her that the full consideration had been paid in accordance with her understanding of the transaction; that she did not know otherwise until she had her account at said bank investigated on May 29, 1926, when she discovered that the full consideration had not been paid, and that the defendant, without her authority, had as a part of the consideration, paid the sum of $7,500 to certain other parties: that though it was not necessary, as she was advised by defendant, yet he required that her deed be approved by the proper county court as in the case of the conveyance of inherited Indian lands by a full-blood Indian heir, the property having been acquired by her will; that on the date fixed for approval another party appeared to bid on the property, but was informed by her son that the sale had been confirmed and the deed to defendant approved; that the said proceedings in the county court were m furtherance of a plan to defraud plaintiff, which was thereafter consummated through and by the aforesaid acts of defendant, and his failure to pay the full consideration. She prayed judgment against defendant for the unpaid balance and the sale of the property in satisfaction thereof.

Defendant answered by general denial, admitted the purchase, and alleged payment of the purchase price in full, and interposed a further defense in that plaintiff’s alleged cause of action having accrued more than five years before the commencement of the suit, the same was barred by the statutes of limitation.

Plaintiff, by reply, denied the defense of repose and substantially reiterated her allegations of fraud, and, further, that in the transaction she confided in defendant’s honesty and integrity and relied on his representations that the full consideration would be paid, which she later learned were false, and that her action was begun within legal time after discovery of the fraud perpetrated upon her by the defendant.

Upon hearing by the court, without the intervention of a jury, the court found upon defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence that no fraud was established against the defendant, and that the action was barred by the statute of limitations, and thereupon entered judgment of dismissal of the suit at plaintiff’s costs. From the judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal, and alleges, as error of the trial court, the sustention of the demurrer.

As the demurrer admitted the truth of the facts shown by the evidence, our notice of the admitted facts is necessary to a determination of the alleged error of the court in sustaining the demurrer. These, together with admissions in the record, were substantially as follows:

Plaintiff was a full-blood Creek Indian woman who had lived her allotted time of three score years and ten. She was unlettered and unversed in the language of the defendant, who was a white man, and untutored in the practical understanding *100 thereof and of commercial transactions. In her own mind, she thought she had sold her land for $1,000 to provide compensation for her attorneys in prior litigation involving the property, rather than for the sum of $24,000, the admitted consideration. She signed the deed by thumb mart on April 19, 1919, and at that time was paid by defendant $500. She was told by her son that the balance would be deposited to her credit in the First National Bank of Mounds, Okla. She was also informed that the money consideration had been so deposited to her credit in the bank by the defendant. She had inherited the property by will and was living- thereon at the time of the sale. It was developed and productive of oil, from which she was then receiving oil royalty. As a precautionary measure, defendant had the deed approved by the proper county court, though he had informed plaintiff that this perhaps was not necessary. In the transaction, and in the county court, where she. did not appear, she was represented by her son. On the day fixed for hearing of the petition for approval of the deed, another party appeared to bid on the property, but was informed that the deed had been approved and confirmed to defendant. On April 30, 1919, eleven days after the deed was signed and ten days before the approval thereof by the county court, $4,500 was deposited to plaintiff’s credit in said bank, and on the day after the approval and to November 12, 1919, the date of the last deposit, $11,-965.92 had been so deposited, all of which, as shown by the exhibit of the account, had been drawn out by her son. The balance then unpaid was $7,034.08. After the sale, plaintiff moved into another county to live, where her son remained until about three years before the filing of the suit, when he left her home. She had not heard from him since. Her two daughters had entertained suspicions that the transaction had not been conducted fairly. After the son left, one of the daughters came to live with and care for plaintiff, and from discussions had with the daughters, investigation of the transaction followed in May, 1926. Immediately thereafter plaintiff wrote defendant relative to the sale,¡ but had ho response. Plaintiff had relied on the honesty and integrity of defendant in the transaction, and believed that he would complete the same by deposit of the full consideration at the time of delivery of her deed, and so acted on that belief and believed the statements made to her that the full consideration had been paid, and did not know of the true state of the transaction until investigation thereof in May, 1926. Within three months thereafter, plaintiff brought suit to recover the balance of the consideration and for foreclosure of her vendor’s lien on the property. These facts the trial court held did not show fraud in the transaction on the part of the defendant, and that defendant’s plea in bar of the action based on the statute of limitations was good.

Plaintiff’s chief contentions against the action of the trial court are to the

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Related

Mills v. Mills
305 P.2d 61 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Mothersead v. Harris
1931 OK 193 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)
Posey v. Brixey
1930 OK 389 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 490, 271 P. 230, 133 Okla. 98, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posey-v-brixey-okla-1928.