Robert v. Mullen

1916 OK 812, 160 P. 83, 61 Okla. 40, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 794
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 26, 1916
Docket6992
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1916 OK 812 (Robert v. Mullen) 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
Robert v. Mullen, 1916 OK 812, 160 P. 83, 61 Okla. 40, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 794 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

CAMPBELL, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Carter county by plaintiffs against the defendant for the recovery of a tract of land and for the cancellation of a purported warranty deed covering the same. The petition contained two causes of action, separately stated. The first one was an action in ejectmment, and the other one was for the cancellation of a conveyance covering the same land, purporting to have been executed to the defendant by the plaintiffs, upon the following grounds: (1) That the deed in question was never executed by the plaintiffs; and (2) that the deed had never been approved by the county court as required by law, the said conveyance being a full-blood conveyance of inherited lands. Both causes were set forth in the usual form, and the petition was unverified. The defendant filed an answer properly verified, which contained: (1) A general denial; and (2) affirmative allegations of the execution and delivery of the deed in question by the plaintiffs to the defendant and the payment thereunder of an adequate consideration therefor, and further alleged the ápproval of said conveyance by the county court of McOurtain county, being the court having jurisdiction to approve said conveyance, and in said answer made reference to said order of approval and alleged that a copy of same was attached to the answer and ni"de a part of the same, and prayed for a judgment quieting his title to said lands and barring all claims of plaintiffs to the same.

The order referred to was not in fact attached to the answer and never w-'s filed in the trial court. No reply was filed to the answer and cross-petition of defendant, and on motion of defendant the court rendered judgment against the plaintiffs on the pleadings denying any relief to plaintiffs and quieting the title of defendant to the lands involved, barring all claims of the plaintiffs and enjoining them from asserting any claims to said lands and assessing the costs of the action against the plaintiffs. From this judgment an appeal is brought to this court by plaintiffs upon a transcript of the record, and they assign as error the action of the court in rendering such judgment upon the pleadings.

Before entering upon the discussion of the merits of this appeal, it becomes necessary to notice a contention made by the defendant in error with reference to an in-instrument which has been filed for the.first time in this court. As was stated, the order approving the conveyance which was referred to in the answer of the defendant was not in fact attached to the answer and was never in fact filed in the trial court, and it does not appear in the transcript of the record attached to the petition in error, but was filed for the first time in this court more than a year after this proceeding in error was commenced. It is true that there appears in the transcript a recital as follows:

“* * * And the answer and cross-petition of defendant having been presented and the exhibits referred to having been read to the court, and argued and treated by counsel for both plaintiffs and defendant in their argument as if the same had been attached or filed, were so treated by the court.”

Such recital does not purport to be a copy of any order of the court in the cause, unless it is intended to be a recital of the language of the court in passing upon a motion to permit the filing of a reply, which the trial court, it would seem from such a recital, refused to grant. It is fundamental that a motion and the ruling of the court thereon has no place in a transcript of the record, and if such motion or the ruling thereon is included in a transcript by the clerk, it is a mere nullity and cannot be considered by this court. Devault et al v. Merchants’ Exchange Co., 22 Okla. 624, 98 Pac. 342.

The petition in error with the transcript attached was filed in this court on November 23, 1914, and the order referred to in the answer is not in such transcript. On March 9, 1916, there seems to have been filed in this court what purports to be a copy of such order approving the conveyance in question, as recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Carter county, and it is urged by defendant in error that this court should consider such instrument as a part of the record in this court, even though it was never filed in the trial court, and was filed for the first time in this court more than one year after the proceedings in error were commenced. Such an instrument, or exhibit, not having been filed in the trial court, cannot be made a part of the record by filing the same in this court and attaching it to the transcript, and this court cannot consider the same.

The only question presented by the record in this appeal is as to whether the trial court erred in rendering judgment upon the pleadings as they existed in the court, below. The two causes of action were in usual form» and no contention is made that, either cause is defectively stated, or that either is subject to demurrer. The theory upon which the defendant presented his mo* *42 tion for judgment on the pleadings, and the one which the trial court seems to have recognized, was that the answer and cross-petition required a reply in order to form any issue of fact properly triable to the court or a jury. The petition alleged that the deed sought to be cancelled was never executed by the plaintiffs, and, further, that such deed was never approved by the county court having jurisdiction to approve the same, it being a full-blood conveyance of inherited lands.

Under the facts alleged, and the admissions in the answer, it is apparent that such conveyance was one which is required to be approved before it is a valid conveyance. If such conveyance was never executed, as alleged in the petition, by the plaintiffs to the defendant, or if it were executed but not approved as required by law, then it was subject to cancellation at the instance of the plaintiffs. The defendant in his answer made a general denial, and then alleged affirmatively that such conveyance was executed and delivered to him by plaintiffs, and further alleged that such conveyance was approved by the proper court having jurisdiction to approve same. This is in effect- nothing more than a general denial and added nothing to the general denial theretofore appearing in the answer. Two material issues of fact were tendered by the petition and were joined by the general denial in the answer, and no further allegation as to the execution of the conveyances and its approval by a court having jurisdiction that might be placed in the answer could eliminate the necs-sity for a trial of the issues of fact joined by the general denial. It would seem that the cross-petition of the defendant was merely •one in form, as, the relief sought thereby was only that relief which would accrue to the defendant if he prevailed in the trial of the issues raised by the pleadings. Judgment in his favor in a trial of the issues joined by the general denial would be just as effectual to quiet his title and bar all claims of the plaintiffs as an affirmative judgment to that effect, and, for this reason, his cross-petition was entirely dependent upon the result of the trial of the issues presented by the petition and general denial, and a failure of plaintiffs to file a reply to the answer and cross-petition of the defendant did not warrant the court in rendering a judgment upon the pleadings denying any relief to plaintiffs without having had a trial of the issues properly joined by the pleadings.

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Related

Franklin v. Ward
1918 OK 301 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 812, 160 P. 83, 61 Okla. 40, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-v-mullen-okla-1916.