Richardson v. Carr

1917 OK 575, 171 P. 476, 68 Okla. 46, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 4, 1917
Docket6432
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1917 OK 575 (Richardson v. Carr) 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
Richardson v. Carr, 1917 OK 575, 171 P. 476, 68 Okla. 46, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 399 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

THACKER, J.

The plaintiff in error, as plaintiff in the trial court, commenced this action on May 31, 1911, against the defendants in error for the possession of and to ¡remove the cloud of certain deeds from the title to the west 50 feet of lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ;and 6 of Margaret McKinley’s subdivision of lots 14, 15, and 16 (the same being lo,ts that were originally platted as 15 and 16) in "block 24 in Oklahoma City as shown by the recorded plat thereof. The plaintiff’s petition, treated as amended in a few comparatively unimportant respects in order to make it conform strictly to the agreed or the undisputed facts upon which he predicates his ■action, and so as to include some of his admissions otherwise than in his pleadings, alleges, in effect:

That he 'acquired the title to said original lots 15 and 16 under the provisions of an act of Congress of May 14, 1890, entitled “An act to provide for town-site entries of land in wha;t is known as ‘Oklahoma,’ and for other purposes” (26 -Stats, at L. 109, c. 207, the same being U. S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 1463; U. S. Comp. St. 1916, § 5029), and other acts to which reference is therein made; tha|t on September 3, 1890, town-site board No. 2 of Oklahoma City made application to purchase the quarter section, including said lots, of the United States for the use and benefit of its occupants; that on September 6, 1890, said town-site board filed its plat of the same, designating all the lots involved in this action as Nos. 15 and 16 in said block 24; that on October 1, 1890, the United States, by and through the President, issued its patent to said board as trustees for the use and benefit of the occupants of said quarter section, according to their respective interests; that the plaintiff, as an occupant of said lots within the meaning of said 'act of May 14, 1890, was, on September 3 and October 1, 1890, entitled to acquire the title to ¡the same from the United States through its officers or agents, the said town-site board as such trustees; that plaintiff’s acquisition of such title was delayed by 'a contest for said lot 15 and by another for said lot 16, which were finally decided in his favor on March 28, 1895, except for a motion for review of that decision which was decided in his favor on July 6, 1895; that on July 23, 1895, the Commissioner of the General Land Office ordered ealch of the two cases of contest against the plaintiff closed, and on July 30, 1895, he was officially notified that the lots in controversy- “had been awarded to him, and that upon [his] payment of the fees and assessments fixed against the same a deed” of conveyance to him would be duly executed and delivered; that on August 22, 1895, such deed was executed and acknowledged and ready for delivery to plaintiff upon his payment to said.board of fees and charges to ¡the amount of $52:50, as required by the notice he had received; that on August 31, 1895, the plaintiff deposited with said board said $52.50 under protest against the said fees and charges against said lots, and appealed from tb© decision of said board 'against him in this respect, pending which the board withheld actual delivery of the deed to him; that on September 30, 1895, the Secretary of the Interior had ruled thiat the said fees and charges were proper, and on ■that date said deed was mailed to him, and after 'October 7, 1895, the said deed was actually delivered to him, but was thereafter lost; that on May 31, 1897, a second and substitute dleed (bearing a certificate 'to the effect that the original deed was mailed, and thus delivered to the plaintiff on September 30, 1895) was issued to the plaintiff, and on July 30, 1897, was recorded at page 84 of Book 4 of the Records of Deeds for Oklahoma County; that plaintiff acquired the title to said1 lots about, but after, October 7, 1895, and not before; that the plaintiff has never conveyed nor otherwise divested himself of the title thus acquired, and is entitled to the possession of the said lots, but the de *49 fendants unlawfully keep him out of such possession; that the defendants wrongfully claim title to and right of possession of this property through a succession of pretended, but ineffective, transfers beginning with a pretended, but void, judicial sale in an action commenced on September 3, 1895, in which- A. J. Beale was plaintiff and ¡the plaintiff: in the instant case was defendant, and which sale was predicated upon a pretended, but void, attachment on said September 3, 1895, of said original lots 15 and 16, and is evidenced by a pretended, but void, sheriff's deed executed on June 16, 1896, in said action, and recorded on July 18, 1896, falsely purporting to convey said lots to said A. J. Beale, who on February 17, 1898, executed a deed purporting' to convey the same to one John Summerfield; that defendants also claim ¡title through a pretended, but void, recorded tax ¡deed of November 22, 1897 (on account of taxes unlawfully assessed for the year 1893 against said lot 15), from the bounty treasurer of Oklahoma county to Louella Brogan, whose pretended title was passed through ¡the said John Summer-field to some of the defendants, and -through another pretended, but void, recorded tax deed of November 22, 1897 (on account of taxes unlawfully assessed for the year 1894 against said lot 15), from the county treasurer to B. H. -Co-oke, whose pretended title passed through the said John Summerfield to some of the defendants, and though still another pretended, but void, recorded tax deed of February 5, 1897 (on account of faxes unlawfully assessed for the year 1893 against said lot 16), from the county treasurer to one W. J. Patterson, whose- pretended title passed through skid John Sunú merfield to some of the defendants; that each of the d-efendantsc claim title through the said John Summerfield, as a common source, whose pretended muniments of the title were and are dependent upon said sheriff’s and said county treasurer’s deed for their effectiveness, and are therefore ineffective; that the said sheriff’s deed was and is void, and conveyed no title, because the judgment of November 7, 1895, to satisfy which it was issued, was and is void for want of jurisdiction of -the subject-matter and of the person of the defendant, the plaintiff here; that the mandatory record, that is, the record proper of -the -trial court, shows upon its face that the said judicial proceedings in the Beale case, upon which the sheriff’s deed wa-s and is dependent for its validity, were and are void in the following respects, to wit: (1) Void in -that the affidavit of September 3, 1895, in the Beale case, for the service of summons upon the defendant there (the plaintiff here) by publication does not show '-t'ha-t Beale’s case was one of those in which the service of summons by publication is authorized by section 3950, Stats. 1893 (section 4722, Rev. Laws 1910) ; (2) void in that, although the affidavit of September 3, 1895, in the lB-eale case, for services of summons u-p-o-n the -defendant there (the plaintiff here) by publication states that the plaintiff “is, with due diligence, unable to make personal service of summons upon ¡the defendant,” and “that the defendant is a nonresident of this territory, having in this territory property -and debt's owing him, sought in the above action to be taken in attachment,” it omits to show that defendant (-the plaintiff her,e) was out of the jurisdiction of the court so that personal service of summons could no-t be had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 575, 171 P. 476, 68 Okla. 46, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-carr-okla-1917.