Reigel v. Wood

1924 OK 113, 229 P. 556, 110 Okla. 279, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 789
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1924
Docket14702
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1924 OK 113 (Reigel v. Wood) 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
Reigel v. Wood, 1924 OK 113, 229 P. 556, 110 Okla. 279, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 789 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEPHENSON, C.

Jacob O. Reigel was the owner of the real estate and premises involved in this action and by his warranty deed bearing date as of the 28th day of May, 1909, conveyed the same to his son, George E. Reigel. Thereafter, and on March 4, 1911, George E. Reigel, for the recited consideration of $1, conveyed the same land to Millie Reigel, his wife. On the 10th day of May, 1914, Millie Reigel. for the recited consideration of $1, recon-veyed the premises in question to George E. Reigel. her husband. Thereafter Lillie Rockhold and Ada Norris the daughters of Jacob B. Reigel, by quitclaim deed bearing date as of September 1, 1914, quitclaimed and conveyed all their rights and interest in the property to George E. Reigel for the recited consideration of $1. The deed further recited that it was the intention and purpose of the grantors to convey- such rights as they held in the property as heirs of Jacob C. Reigel. Thereafter and on the 4th day of September, 1914, Geo. E. Reigel and Millie Reigel, by their warranty deed. conveyed the premises herein involved to A. B. Rockhold and Lillie Rockhold for the recited consideration of $2,500. The latter deed was filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Pawnee county on the 5th day of May, 1915. The preceding deed was so filed fopr record on the 28th day of April, 1915. The said Jacob O. Reigel died intestate in the year 1910 and left surviving him as his next of kin, Mary Brown, nee Reigel, and Elsworth Reigel, the issue of a second marriage with the sister of Margaret E. Mc-Pheeters and George E. Reigel, Ada Norris, nee Reigel, and Lillie Rockhold, the wife of A. B. Rockhold, defendant herein children by the first maruiiage, and also A. J. Wood, R. C. Wood, -and Ethel LeRoy, Oora Myers, and Jimmie Venable, the issue of a deceased daughter of the first marriage. Immediately after the death of the second wife the husband, Jacob O. Reigel placed Mary Brown, nee Reigel, and Elsworth Reigel, his minor children, in the care and custody of Margaret E. McPheeters, his deceased wife’s sister. Thereafter, and in the year 1914, Margaret E. McPheeters commenced her action' in the district court of Pawnee county, for the use and benefit of Mary Brown, nee Reigel, and Elsworth Reigel against Geo. E. Reigel, who then held title to the premises herein involved in which action it was set forth that Jacob O. Reigel, at the time the plaintiffs were given to the custody of • Mrs. McPheeters, agreed with her that if she wiould take the care and custody of the children that he would cause the premises herein involved to be conveyed to the plaintiff at his death in order for the plaintiffs to have the use and benefit of the property, and apparently the purpose of the action was to recover the premises for the benefit of the two children on the promises as alleged. The plaintiffs further alleged that Geo. E. Reigel then held the property with notice of the agreement between Jacob O. Reigel and Mrs. McPheeters. This cause came on for trial on May 20, 1914, and the minutes of that date merely recite “judgment in favor of the defendants and against plaintiffs.” It appears that formal judgment was never entered in the cause or journal entry of judgment filed therein. Apparently the judgment is agmiimst thte plaintiffs’ right to recover the land on the agreement as set forth in the petition. On the 30th day of November, 1915, A. B. Rockhold and Lillie M. Rockhold his wife, executed and delivered their oil and gas lease to the Prairie Oil & Gas Company, herein named as one of the defendants, on the premises involved. Thereafter, and on the 17th day of Novem *281 ber, 1919, A. B. Bockhold, joined by Ms wife, executed and delivered their warranty deed to L. O. Shannon, whereby an undivided one-sixteenth interest in the premises herein involved was conveyed to the grantee. On November 17, 1919, A. B. Bockhold. joined by hjs wife, by their warranty deed conveyed an undivided l-32nd interest in the premises herein involved to L. O. Shannon. On the 17th day of November, 1919, A. B. Bockhold, joined by his wife, by their warranty deed conveyed an individed l-32nd interest in and to the premises' herein involved to David Sasser. Thereafter, and on the 17th day of April, 1922 the plaintiffs herein commenced their action against Geo. E. Beigel and his wife and A. B. Bockhold and his wife, Lillie Bockhold, for the recovery of an undivided interest in the real estate herein involved, and for an accounting for certain oil production brought in on the premises in the year 1919. The plaintiffs for their right of action against the defendants alleged that Jacob O. Beigel had become mentally impaired in the year 1909, and feared that Mrs. MePheeters would cause his children trouble and inconvenience in connection with his property after his death. The plaintiffs further alleged that a confidential relation existed between the father and Geo. E. Beigel and that the father intrusted his matters of business with the son and relied on the advice of his son in matters of business. The plaintiffs alleged that while in the impaired mental condition and desiring to so arrange his property that all of his children, and next of kin, might enjoy the benefit of the same equally after his death, he advised with Geo. E. Beigel fully in connection with these matters and advised his son that he desired to convey the property herein involved to Geo. E. Beigel for the use and benefit nf his children and next of kin af ler death, and with such aims and purposes in mind, the property in question were conveyed to said Geo. E. Beigel, and that A. B. Bobk-hold. who now owns the property, and Lillie Bockhold his wife whoi was a daughter of the deceased, well knew of all these matters and were not innocent purchasers for value from Geo. E. Beigel. The plaintiffs joined, as defendants in the action, David Sasser, L. 0. Shannon, L. O. Shannon, and the Praiyie Oil & Gas Company, and rested their right of recovery against these defendants on the notice of the - purpose of the grant from Jacob E. Beigel as imparted to these defendants by the ease filed in Pawnee county by Mrs, MePheeters and the deeds and quitclaim deeds passing between the defendants Geo. E. Beigel and wife, and A. B. Bockhold and wife. The defendants joined issue with the plaintiffs by general denial, and alsoi pleaded the judgment ¡rendered in the MePheeters Case as a bar to recovery in this action by Mary Brown, nee Beigel, and Elsworth Beigel. In the trial of this cause judgment went for plaintiffs and against Geo. E. Beigel, Millie Beigel, A. B Bockhold, and Lillie Bockhold for an undivided interest in the real estate herein involved and for an accounting between the plaintiffs and the defendants named. Erom which judgment the defendants have appealed to this court. Judgment went for L. Q. Shannon and jL. O. Shannon and Prairie Oil & Gas Company, and against the plaintiffs on a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, from which judgment the plaintiffs perfected their cr< -ss-appeal in this action.

The trial court evidently rested its ac-. tionj in sustaining the demurrer of the defendants on the proposition that the conveyances in the defendants’ chain of title did not give notice of the matters set forth in plaintiffs’ petition, and the defendants were thereby innocent purchasers for value, as against the plaintiffs’ claims. The grantee is not required to take notice of conveyances not within his chain of title or those conveyances through which the purchaser is not' compelled to deraign Ms title. Creek Land & Improvement Co. v. Davis, 28 Okla. 579, 115 Pac. 468; Muller v. McCann et al., 50 Okla. 710, 151 Pac. 621; Perkins v. Cissell, 32 Okla. 827, 124 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 113, 229 P. 556, 110 Okla. 279, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reigel-v-wood-okla-1924.