Sango v. Parks

1913 OK 566, 143 P. 1158, 44 Okla. 223, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 23, 1913
Docket2852
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1913 OK 566 (Sango v. Parks) 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
Sango v. Parks, 1913 OK 566, 143 P. 1158, 44 Okla. 223, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 678 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

ROBERTSON, C.

This is an action begun in the district court of Muskogee county, on December 2, 1908, by Ed and Ellen Sango, husband and wife, against O. F. Parks, to cancel certain deeds to three separate quarter sections of land, the same originally being the allotments of Minnie, Rosa, and Lu-anna Sango, deceased minor children of said Ed and Ellen San-go. Since the commencement of this action Ed Sango, one of the plaintiffs, and O. F. Parks, the original defendant, have died and the cause has been revived and now proceeds in the name of Ellen Sango, Nettie Plerred, Priscilla Sango, Benjamin Sango, ■ Will Sango, Mary Sango, a minor, Robert Sango, a minor, Clarence Sango, a minor, and Ellen Sango, as guardian and next friend of said minors, Mary, Robert and Clarence Sango, plaintiffs in error, against Laura Parks, Oakley Fay Parks Brown, •Annie L. Parks, a minor, Goldie Ray Parks, a minor, Dorothy C. Parks, a minor, Lonnie O. Parks, a minor, and Laura Parks, *225 as guardian and next friend of said minors, Annie-L., Goldie Ray, Dorothy C. and Lonnie O. Parks, and Laura Parks, as the administratrix of the estate of O. F. Parks, deceased, defendants in error. The judgment of the trial court was in favor of the defendants, and plaintiffs appeal.

Many alleged errors are assigned in the petition in error, but all are treated together in the briefs; but, from a careful perusal of the petition in error and the briefs and record presented, we conclude that plaintiffs’ arguments are based upon the seventh and eighth assignments, to wit:

“(7) The court erred in rendering his decision and judgment against the plaintiffs and in favor of the defendants.
“(8) The court erred in overruling plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial.”

It is the theory of plaintiffs that the deeds to the land were obtained by undue influence, duress, and fraud. This is the only question in the case. On November 26, 1904, Ed San-go borrowed a sum of money from Parks and gave him as security therefor a warranty deed to the allotment of Luanna San-go, a deceased unmarried minor daughter of Ed and Ellen Sango. The Sangos were illiterate Creek freedmen. On January 5, 1905, Sango borrowed some more money from Parks and gave another warranty deed, by which he attempted to convey the allotments of Minnie and Rosa Bell Sango, both deceased unmarried minor daughters and sisters of Luanna Sango, the al-lottee of the quarter section first above mentioned. On February 14, 1905, Ed and Ellen Sango made, executed, and delivered to Parks three separate warranty deeds to the above mentioned and described allotments, the consideration being described as.$300 in each deed. On September 16, 1905, Ed Sango gave Parks a chattel mortgage on all his horses and cattle to secure the payment of $520. This chattel mortgage appears to have been given without any consideration. Parks, in the summer of 1906, attempted to enforce the payment of the debt secured by the chattel mortgage. No possession has been given of the land under *226 the deeds mentioned, and plaintiffs charge all sorts of fraud and deceit, on the part of Parks, to secure the conveyances to the land. When Parks attempted to foreclose the chattel mort-, gage Sango went to see a firm of lawyers in Muskogee, and as a result they paid off the $520 chattel mortgage and took from him another on the live stock, and a deed on one of the three allotments to secure them for the payment of the $520 debt, and also their fee, for a suit which they then brought against Parks to cancel the deeds given him by the Sangos. Parks filed his answer to this suit on October 3, 1906. Shortly thereafter Parks met Ed Sango on' the street and offered to compromise their troubles; after several interviews the terms of the settlement were agreed upon. Sango called upon his attorneys and told them of the settlement. They told him not to have anything to do with Parks. It seems, however, that Sango, for some reason or other, determined to settle and told his lawyers so, although they again advised him not to do so; but seeing that the Sangos had made up their minds to settle, the lawyers refused to have anything further to do with the transaction, although they refused to release the mortgage or quitclaim the land back- until their fee was paid. The settlement between Parks and the Sangos was reduced to writing and signed by all the parties. Ed Sango signed his own name, his wife signed by mark, her signature being witnessed by three different persons. After the settlement had been agreed upon and reduced to writing Sango took it to his lawyers for their signature, and, Parks, at Sango’s request, agreeing to pay their fee, they signed the same, and it was presented to the judge of the United States court at Muskogee for judgment. The stipulation of settlement and for final judgment is in words and figures following:

“Ed Sango and Ellen Sango, Plaintiffs, v. O. E. Parks, Defendant. No. 6825.
“Decree.
“Whereas, heretofore, to wit, on the 16th day of November, 1906, in settlement of all the differences between the plaintiffs *227 and the defendant in the above-entitled cause, the following stipulation was entered, to wit: ....
“ ‘Ed Sango and Ellen Sango v. O. F. Parks, Equity 6825.
“ ‘Stipulation.
“ ‘It is hereby stipulated and agreed, by and between the parties to this action, that the said action and cause of action have been settled between the said parties as follows: The defendant pays to the plaintiffs the sum of three hundred dollars, cash in hand, and also pays for the plaintiffs the fees of their attorneys, De Graffenreid & Scruggs, in this action; said defendant further takes up for the.plaintiffs from said De Graffenreid & Scruggs two notes of plaintiffs secured by chattel mortgages, said notes being for the sum of two hundred and eighty-three and fifty cents each and interest upon which note the defendant indorses the sum of two hundred dollars and agrees to hold said notes and security until the first day of January, 1907, before enforcing collection of the balance thereon, except so far as is necessary to protect his security.
“ ‘In consideration whereof it is further stipulated and agreed by and between the said parties that the defendant is the absolute owner of all the right, title and interest which the plaintiffs, Ed Sango and Ellen Sango, had as the father and mother and sole heirs'of Minnie Sango, Rosa Bell Sango and Eu-anna Sango (deceased) in and to the southeast quarter of section one (1) and the northeast quarter of said .section one (1), township fourteen (14) north, range seventeen (17) east, and the northwest quarter of section one (1), township eighteen (18) north, range thirteen (13) east, in the Creek Nation and Western District of the Indian Territory and which interests were conveyed by the plaintiffs to the defendant, O. F. Parks, by two warranty deeds dated February Í4, 1905, one of which is recorded at Muskogee, Indian Territory, in Record 36, page 272, and in Record 47, page'291, and the other of which is recorded in Sa-pulpa, Indian Territory, in Record K, page 447, and that said deeds are good and valid transfers of all the title to said lands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 566, 143 P. 1158, 44 Okla. 223, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sango-v-parks-okla-1913.