Secrest v. Nobles

1922 OK 220, 223 P. 863, 97 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1095
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 19, 1924
Docket14875
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1922 OK 220 (Secrest v. Nobles) 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
Secrest v. Nobles, 1922 OK 220, 223 P. 863, 97 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1095 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This is an action in ejectment to recover certain lands in Wagoner county, Okla., instituted in the district court of said county by James E. Secrest and William E. Long, plaintiffs, appellants herein, against James Nobles et al. The plaintiff Secrest deraigned his title and relied onj the deed from his coplaintiff, William E. Long. The answering defendant, B. Mobbs, who appears and adopted an answer and cross-petition of his brother, F. J. Mobbs, who was acting for the said B. Mobbs under power of attorney, relies on a deed from one G. D. Sleeper. A number of the defendants file disclaimer and the others make default. Long and Sleeper were copartners engaged in the real estate business and at one time owned the land in controversy. The deeds conveying same were made to them in their individual names, and they, by separate conveyances, joined by their wives, conveyed the land to Harry Blake. Afterwards Blake traded for a 180 acre tract of land in Cherokee county belonging to Sleeper and Long, giving as consideration a warranty deed to Long covering the land in controversy and also a note for $600, and interest notes made payable to Sleeper and Long and secured by a mortgage on the 180 acres of land, in Cherokee county. A little more than a year thereafter Sleeper obtained a quitclaim deed to the land in controversy from Blake, which land, as heretofore stated, at the time of the transaction was deeded to Long, and thereafter Sleeper conveyed the land to F. J. Mobbs. On July 23, 1919, Long deeded the land in controversy to the plaintiff Secrest. The contention of plaintiffs is that the consideration of the deed to Long in his individual name, was for his individual interest, being an undivided one-half interest, in the 180 acre tract of land in Cherokee county, and that neither the partnership composed of Sleeper and Long nor Sleeper had any interest in the land conveyed thereby, which is the land in controversy, and that the consideration for the notes and mortgage represents the individual interest, or undivided one-half interest of Sleeper in the Cherokee county land, and that neither .the partnership of Sleeper and Long nor Long had any interest in said notes and mortgage.

The matter was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury and the court found that the plaintiff Secrest was the owner and entitled to an undivided one-half interest in said land, and that J. F Mobbs was the owner and entitled to a one* half undivided interest in said land.

*278 Numerous deeds are offered in evidence showing the chain of title as deraigned both by plaintiffs and defendants, but the only controversy, as we understand the record, arises out of the transaction wherein Long and Sleeper conveyed the 180 tract of land in Cherokee county to Blake in exchange for the land in controversy and $500 as evidenced by notes and mortgage. The evidence also discloses that Blake, at the time of. this transaction, was paid a small amount in cash by Sleeper. The witness had forgotten the exact amount, but estimated it at from $25 to $75, and also the effect and purpose of the quitclaim deed from Blake to Sleeper, which, so far as the record discloses, was made without consideration', must be determined.

The deed from -Harry Blake and his wife to William E. Long was executed on the 31st day of January, 1913, and the conveyance by William E. Long and wife to plaintiff James P, Secrest was on July 23, 1919. The deed upon which the appellants rely was the quitclaim deed from Blake to Sleeper, dated February 12, 1914, more than one year after the transaction was had in which the land was exchanged. The record also discloses a deed of September 5, 1919, from Blake to (he plaintiff Secrest, which was evidently a correction deed to which no special importance is attached. The contention of the defendants is that the transaction heretofore referred to was purely a partnership transaction, that the 180 acres of land in Cheror kee county was the property of the partnership composed of Long and Sleeper and that the partner, Long, held the land conveyed to him by Blake, the land here in controversy, in trust for the benefit of the partnership. The appellants set forth the following specifications of error upon which they rely for reversal in this case:

“(1) That the decisions' and judgment of said district court is contrary to law.
“(2) That the judgment of the said district court is not sustained by the evidence.
“(3) That said district court erred in rejecting competent, relevant, and material evidence on the part of the plaintiffs in error, to which the said plaintiffs in error at. the time duly excepted.”

And the first, proposition presented is that the judgment of the court is not sustained by the evidence and is contrary to the law. The theory of the defense being that the plaintiff Secrest is the trustee of a resulting trust, that Long held the legal title to the land which was the partnership property of Sleeper and Long. That the plaintiff Se-erest possessed a legal title which Long owned, and the defendant Mobbs the equitable title which. Sleeper owned, as a partner of Long’s, and appellants urge that, there being no express written or oral agreement evidencing this fact, the burden is upon the defendants to establish same, and that the evidence should be clear and convincing.

Appellants cite R. C. L. vol. 20, p. 854, sec. 61. which announces the general rule governing such matters:

“There is some uncertainty as to what must be shown in order that real property may be considered a portion of the firm assets. The rule which has the support of the best authority, and which rests on sound principles, is the one which makes the intention of the parties at the time of making the conveyance the proper test. In other words the question is. one to be determined from the intention of the parties, or as it is sometimes said, from the agreement of the parties. In all cases the presumption is against the inclusion of the real estate and in order that it may be treated as belonging to the partnership the intention must be clearly manifested. There is also a presumption that the ownership of real estate is where the muniment of title places it. If by all the circumstances attending the transaction, it is made to appear tha%, in the intention of the parties, it was purchased for and was treated as partnership property, the presumption of ownership arising from the fact of the deed will be overcome, and the property will be treated as belonging to the partnership. * * *It may be added that in general the theory of trusts underlies the whole subject of partnership real estate, each partner being considered a trustee for the others to the extent of his proportionate interest in the firm.”

Also, 30 Cyc., page 432 under “Partnership,” we find the following statement:

“In determining whether particular real estate is firm property, or belonging to the partners as individuals, the courts' seek to give effect to the intent of the partners, unless such a result would work a fraud upon third persons. The intent may be disclosed either by their conduct, or by their agreements either express or implied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 220, 223 P. 863, 97 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/secrest-v-nobles-okla-1924.