Simon v. Hine

1920 OK 208, 190 P. 264, 78 Okla. 224, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 11, 1920
Docket9894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1920 OK 208 (Simon v. Hine) 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
Simon v. Hine, 1920 OK 208, 190 P. 264, 78 Okla. 224, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 366 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This was a suit for the cancellation of certain deeds and for removal of cloud on title to real estate.

Polly Simon was a Seminole freedman, duly enrolled, and received her allotments as such. She had two sons, Gus Island and Pilot Island, by a former husband whose name was Henry Island. The two sons were likewise enrolled as Seminole freedmen and received allotments as such. Pilot Island’s allotment comprised the west Vs of the southeast Vs, and the southeast V of the southeast V, of section 24, twp. 9 north, R. 7 east I. M. He died December 23. 1906, at the age of 15 years. The title to his said allotment, it is claimed, passed to his mother, Polly Simon, as sole heir of his estate, and this suit grew out of transactions involving a conveyance of his allotment within a few days after his death. On the next day after his death his mother, Polly Simon, drove into the town of Wewoka to get a coffin and shroud in which to bury him, and went to the store of O. S. Grouch, a dealer in coffins, etc., and not having the money to pay for same, she sought to sell a farm lease on 40 acres of her deceased son’s allotment. Mr. Grouch, informed her that he was not dealing in lands, but knew a man who was, his name being James E. Foreman. So Crouch and one. Dennis Gyrus saw Foreman and brought him down to Grouch’s store, whereat an agreement wras reached that Polly Simon would convey to Foreman some kind of a right to the deceased minor’s allotment, and Foreman would pay for the coffin.

Polly Simon claims in her petition herein, and so testified, as shown by the record herein, that the agreement was that she would convey to Foreman a five-year farm lease on 40 acres of the allotment, in consideration for which Foreman was to pay for the coffin and shroud, which cost $30, and for some groceries, which amounted to something over $2.50. Some years later she discovered that What she understood to be a five-year lease on 40 acres had developed into two warranty deeds to the entire 120-acre allotment, and the decision in this case turns upon the question whether she intended to execute a lease on 40 acres of the allotment or intended to execute a warranty deed to the entire 120-acre allotment for the price of the coffin and the few groceries she received. She claims that she executed a lease, and that the lease was the only instrument pf any kind that she ever executed to Foreman, and that the deeds in question are absolute forgeries. The defendant claims that the deeds are genuine, and that she understood them to be warranty deeds at the time she executed them. One of said deeds purports to have been executed and acknowledged by her on the day she obtained the coffin, and the other deed to the same land to have been executed two days later, December 26th, by Polly Simon and her husband, Jack Simon. Polly Simon denies emphatically that she signed any instrument on the day she obtained the coffin, for the reason that that was Sunday, and it was agreed that the coffin would not be paid for on that day, but that she and her husband, Jack Simon, would come in on the day after Christmas and sign a lease.

Defendant claims that on the day she got the coffin she went before M. A. Fowler, a notary public, and at his office and in his presence signed and acknowledged the deed. She denied that she knew Fowler, and denied that she had gone to his office on that day. She claims that on Wednesday, after Christmas, she and her husband, Jack Simon, came into Wewoka to sign the lease, and did sign the lease in question in a hotel in Wewoka.

Defendant claims that she and her husband on that day signed and acknowledged the instrument in question' before a notary public by the name of Jeffreys, and that such instrument was a warranty deed to all of her deceased son’s 120-acre allotment to James E. Foreman. Now the defendant herein, T. S. Hine, claims title tnrough a quitclaim deed from James A. Foreman and wife and from other sources, not material to the decisive question involved.

During the trial it was discovered that the deed executed to Foreman by Polly Simon alone, and also the deed executed to the same party by Polly Simon and her husband both included 40 acres of Polly Simon’s undivided homestead allotment from the government, the same being the northeast Vi of the southeast Vs of section 24, twp. 9, R. 7, and did not include 40 acres of the deceased minor’s allotment, the same being the southeast V, of the southeast Vi of said section, whereupon over the objection of Polly Simon, defendant, Hine, was permitted to amend his cross-petition to show that the misdescription was a mutual mistake, and he asked leave to reform it. Previous to this, how *226 ever, and during tile proceedings, Polly Simon Lad asked permission to make her husband, Jack Simon, a party to the suit, which permission was denied by the court.

The finding and judgment of the court were in favor of defendant, T. S. Hine, holding that the deeds in question were valid and further ordering that the deed be reformed in accordance with I-Iine’s amended cross-petition ; that is, by leaving out Polly Simon’s 40 acres which was included in the deed and taking the son’s 40 acres which had been left out.

The case is brought here upon an assignment of seven separate errors:

The first, in effect, assails the sufficiency of the evidence.

The second, that Jack Simon should have been made a party.

The third, in effect, to the same question as the first.

The fourth, to the same point, in effect, as ihe second.

The fifth, to the rejection of records of a former trial involving the same land, as evidence.

The sixth, that the court erred in holding T. S. Hine not bound by the judgment in the former suit.

The seventh, that the court erred in finding .that “Polly Simon was the mother of 'deceased Pilot Island and as such inherited an undivided one-half interest in his estate,” and then proceeding to award the whole title to T. S. Hine.

Prom the record in the case it becomes unnecessary for this court to weigh evidence and decide whether the judgment of the trial court was against the clear weight of the same.

As to the second error assigned, it is our judgment that Jack Simon was a necessary party to -the suit. This was a suit which invoked the equity powers of the court. Every person whose legal or equitable status, with reference to the real estate involved, would be materially changed by the judgment was a necessary party to the suit. Section 4690, Rev. Laws 1910; M. & P. Nat. Bank v. Horton, 27 Okla. 689, 117 Pac. 201; Burkett v. Lehman, etc., GroC. Co. 8 Okla. 84, 56 Pac. 856; Lynch v. U. S., 13 Okla. 142, 73 Pac. 1095; Hillman v. Schneider, 75 Ill. 422; 34 Cyc. 967.

Now, Jack Simon was the husband of Polly Simon, he and his wife resided upon the homestead allotment of Polly Simon, and hail occupied same as a constitutional homestead from the date of the death of the minor sou, Pilot Island, to the date of filing this suit, November 12, 1915, about nine years. Besides, he was one of the grantors in the deed under which Hine claimed, and the deed under which Hine claimed, until the court decreed the reformation of same, involved the homestead tract upon which he and his wife resided.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 208, 190 P. 264, 78 Okla. 224, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-hine-okla-1920.