Reid v. Reid

1925 OK 516, 241 P. 797, 115 Okla. 58, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1925
Docket15380
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1925 OK 516 (Reid v. Reid) 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
Reid v. Reid, 1925 OK 516, 241 P. 797, 115 Okla. 58, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 253 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

On September 8, 1922, the plaintiffs, who were Sallie Reid and AY. C. Reid, brought their action against the defendant, AY. J. Reid, to recover possession of a 40-acre tract of land, being the S. AY. y¿ of S. E. % of section 16, T. 15 N., R. IS E., in Muskogee county. Plaintiffs, in their petition, set up their chain of title and state that the defendant iwas unlawfully withholding the possession of this land and that they were damaged thereby in the sum of $800. The defendant, by answer, made a general denial, and claimed that he was the owner of the land by gift from the plaintiffs; that the plaintiff W. C. Reid was his nephew; that he had raised him, and out of love and affection for him for services he had rendered them before and after their marriage, they had offered to give him a home, and that they placed him in possession of the premises in December, 1917, and that he had made valuable and lasting improvements on the place, and had lived on it since they placed him in possession, and they had promised to give a deed to it, and that the property was his by gift, and the plaintiffs had no interest in it, and he asked that the title be quieted in him. The cause was tried to a jury on October 22, 1923, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant, and the plaintiffs appealed. Before the appeal was perfected the plaintiff AY. C. Reid died, and the cause revived as to him in the name of the executrix, Sallie Reid.

1, The principal contention of plaintiffs is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment. The undisputed facts in the case are about as follows :

Sallie Reid was the wife of AY. G. Reid: they married about 1913, when Sallie was a minor 14 years of age, and under guardianship ; she was a Creek freedman and had an allotment of land in the Creek Nation, and her guardian bought for her other lands and oil properties and town property; her husband was of the African race, a young man of about 22 or 23 years of age at the time he took her in marriage. The defendant, W. J. Reid, was the uncle of AY. C. Reid and rearecj him from a child; they lived in Redbird, a neighborhood of colored people. The boy was enamored with the girl, iSallie Hodge, and the uncle favored the acquaintance. It became necessary for Sallie to make a trip to Texas, and the defendant, knowing her family and being a trusted friend, she was committed to his care for the trip sometime in the spring of that year, and the boy, Curtis, followed a short time thereafter, and in a few months the girl returned and they were married at Redbird and lived in the home of the defendant and his wife for about three months, then moved out into a home prepared by Sallie’s guardian in Redbird, and thereafter moved into a home prepared for them by the guardian in Muskogee. AYhile they lived in Redbird the uncle and the nephew were in the telephone business. After the nephew married and moved to Muskogee he gave up all his interest in the telephone business to his uncle. AY. J. Reid’s wife was a schoolteacher and was teaching in Texas at the time when her husband made the trip there with Sallie; thereafter, she returned to Redbird and taught school in that neighborhood. In February, 1919, Sallie’s guardian bought the 40 acres in controversy. The land was near Muskogee, where the plaintiffs then lived. It had a dwelling house and other improvements on it and was fit for farming. On November 15, 1917, Sallie became 18 years of age ;- at the time she became of age there was some talk of having her adjudged an incompetent and placed under guardianship as such, as she had acquired a large estate about 1,900 acres of land as well as other valuable property, and she and her husband went to Kansas City, and on November 17, 1917, she executed a deed of trust placing all her property in the hands of H. C. House, AY. C. Reid, her husband, and J. J. Ragsdale, her stepfather, as trustees, to hold and manage for her, her property, and to protect her from “grafters.”

On September 7. 1918, the trustees conveyed all the property back to Sallie Reid they had taken by the trust deed, and November 4, 1918, Sallie conveyed, by warranty deed, the 40 acres in controversy to her husband. AY. C. Reid. She explained in her testimony that she gave this deed as a trust deed for the purpose of having him protect her and the property, but that in fact the land was still hers, although her *60 husband had the right to do anything he wanted to do with her property, and they alleged in their petition that the title to this 40 acres was in them both. In December, 1917, the defendant and his wife moved from their home in Redbird to this 40 acres of land. He claimed and testified that plaintiffs induced him to move on to the place by offering to give it to him; that his nephew, Curtis, had often talked of giving him a home and providing, for him, and his nephew's wife, Sallie, often assented to what her husband said; he had raised the boy and had been good to them after their marriage and they honored and loved him and offered to give him the place as a home and they came with their car and took him and his wife to see the place in December. 1917, after Sallie became of age, and put them in possession of it, and the defendant says he gave up his business in Redbird and moved on to this place on their terms, accepting it as a gift, and had made valuable improvements and paid taxes on it, and they gave him money to assist him, and bought furniture for the house, and said they were going to fix him up good, and never asked him for rent, or for the return of the money they gave him, and he never knew they meant to take the place from him until after he had some trouble with his nephew about the nephew drinking, and when he tried to admonish him in his office his nephew drove him out, telling him that he was no longer a boy, that he was now a man and able to talk to him as a man, and told him he wouldn’t do anything for him. The testimony as to the gift and as to the time when he was placed in possession and as to the plaintiffs’ buying furniture for him and as to giving the property to him to be his own, ■was corroborated by several disinterested witnesses. The plaintiffs denied these material facts and said they only placed him in possession of the property as a tenant, but they were contradicted by the witnesses that corroborated the evidence of the defendant. The testimony of W. C. Reid was of such a character in denying the facts proved by defendant and corroborated by tbe witnesses that tbe jury were warranted in disregarding his testimony altogether.

We have read all the testimony offered in the case, and are of the opinion that the same is sufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment of the court.

2. The plaintiffs further contend that the court erred in instructing the jury that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiffs instead of instructing the jury that, where the defendant claims title to property by parol gift, the burden of proof is on the one who asserts the gift to prove all the essential elements to consummate the gift.

The record shows that the court’s instruction No. 1 was as follows:

“You are instructed that the burden is upon the plaintiffs to prove each and every material allegation of their petition by a fair, preponderance of the evidence, and if they fail to do this yoiir verdict shall be for the defendant.” • •

Under the issues in the ease this instruction was correct.

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Related

Schulte v. Starritt
1940 OK 479 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
Johnson v. Kimmell
1935 OK 311 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 516, 241 P. 797, 115 Okla. 58, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-reid-okla-1925.