Snodgrass v. Snodgrass

1924 OK 597, 231 P. 237, 107 Okla. 140, 52 A.L.R. 1213, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 3, 1924
Docket12855 and 12857 Consolidated
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 1924 OK 597 (Snodgrass v. Snodgrass) 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
Snodgrass v. Snodgrass, 1924 OK 597, 231 P. 237, 107 Okla. 140, 52 A.L.R. 1213, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 649 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

LYDICK, J.

This case involves the question of whether certain deeds were delivered by the grantor before his death. On April 23, 1912, John ¡3. Snodgrass executed his will and testament and also then executed two warranty deeds by terms conveying unto each of two of his adult children, Minnie E. Pierce and Geo. L. Snodgrass, a separate tract of real estate, subject to a reservation of a life estate to himself. These he deposited with one J. Collins, who was an abstracter and a loan agent and not a lawyer, and who had drawn the papers for him. On May 22, 1915, the same grantor executed a similar deed to Rachel Rice, his adult daughter, conveying to her another tract < f real estate and deposited' same with the other papers with Mr. Collins. On December 1. 1917, John S. Snod-grass took up and destroyed the will he had formerly executed and thereupon executed another will which he left with Mr. Collins, who drew it for him. We do not know the contents of the first will, but the second will is in the record. Therein he directs his executor to sell all his real anti personal property, but none of the same is therein described. He ■ directs that JJ.'om the proceeds thereof the executor pay a designated sum to each of the legatees therein named and divide the residue equally among them all. It is provided that there shall go “to Geo. L. Snodgrass a warranty deed to the northwest quarter of section 1. etc,” that being the land described in the deed to him left on deposit with Mr. Collins as heretofore stated. The legatees named consist of the three adult children above named, and of all the testator’s other surviving children, among whom are H. C. Snodgrass and S. J. Turnbull, and consist, also, of all children of his deceased issue.

While these three deeds and this second and last will were on deposit with Mr. Collins, and in March 1919, the said John S. Sn'odgrass departed this life. Thereupon Mr. Collins delivered the will and the three deeds to the county judge of Kingfisher county. Prior to the institution of probate proceedings, the county judge, in the presence of all the, legatees, delivered the three deeds to the three grantees therein named, and they recorded these deeds, took charge of the lands and asserted ownership thereof. Thereupon the will was admitted to probate and Carl J. Pierce was appointed executor thereof and the county court proceeded with the administration of the estate.

In the following January, H. C. Snodgrass and S. J. Turnbull, heirs at law of John S. Snodgrass legatees of specified sums named in his last will, and also residuary legatees therein filed an application in the county court of Kingfisher county for an *141 order directing the executor to seek to recover for the estate the three tracts of real estate claimed by the testator’s three adult children under the aforesaid deeds. The executor and the other adverse .claimants named demurred, and the county court held that it had no jurisdiction to so order, and this want of jurisdiction in the county court was affirmed by the district court on appeal.

Thereupon H. C. Snodgrass and S. ,T. Turn-bull brought this suit in equity in the district court. They plead the facts as heretofore stated and allege that the executor refuses to bring this suit or to attempt to recover the three tracts of land ecnveyed as aforesaid. They allege that the three deeds were never lawfully delivered and are therefore void. They seek to cancel all three of these deeds and quiet the title of the heirs, devisees, and legatees to said land, and ask for an accounting for the rents and profits. This relief they seek for themselves and for the estate. They make the executor and all other heirs, devisees, and legatees defendants, as they could not join as plaintiffs.

After first requiring the plaintiffs to make a separate ease against each of the three grantees, the issues were joined and the cases were again consolidated by agreement and so tried. The lower court made no separate findings of fact and conclusions of law in the form' authorized by section 556, Comp. Stats. 1921, but found generally and specially against the plaintiffs and rendered judgment quieting the title of the three grantees named. The plaintiffs bring the case here on appeal, with case-made attached to their petition in error.

Mr. Collins was the only witness concerning the instructions and actions of the deceased relative to a delivery of the three deeds. On a trial, which it seems involved the same facts had in the county court shortly after the death of the deceased, Mr. Collins testified that John S. Snodgrass had left’ the deeds and the will with him “simply for safe- keeping,” and without instructions. However, in this trial the witness, in a very vague and highly unsatisfactory manner. seemed inclined to indicate that the deceased had given him instructions to deliver the deeds to the county judge with the will after the testator should pass away. He testified as follows:

“Q. Did he tell you to personally see that you delivered those deeds to Rachael Rice and Minnie E. Pierce and Geo. B. Snodgrass respectively? Answer that yes or no. A. Ho did not. He said I was to keep those with that. * * * Q. Now what instructions did he give you with regard to the Rachael Rice deed? A. I don’t remember only that they were to go together. In fact, he would have made all the deeds for all his property if he had — if he had had his way about it, but some things prevented him from so doing, and the will was intended to cover all excepting what the deeds did convey and they were to go along with the will. That’s all I remember about it.”

This last statement is the mere expression of the opinion of the witness, and it is as incompetent and of as little value as is his "testimony at another point where, when asked whether the deceased so deposited these deeds and wills with the witness that “he was at perfect liberty to come in or at least had the right to come in and take the envelope and open it or do what he saw fit,” he answered: “He didn’t do it. He had the privilege.”

Frequently confronted on the witness stand with the variance between his testimony on the first hearing and in this trial, (he witness each time asserted that his recollection was fresher and better in the first, hearing, and as clearly each time indicated that his first testimony was the most reliable. In this we agree with the witness and will so hold. But under our theory of the law the result must be the same no matter which of these two stories we follow. According to the first story, deceased gave the witness no instructions, and under the other story he merely led the witness to believe that he intended the deeds to be delivered to the county court after his death, together with his will, for such action as the law provided.

The three grantees testified that they had never had any agreement with the grantor during his life concerning the execution of these deeds and knew nothing of their execution until the deeds were delivered to them in the county court. The witness Collins was net even acquainted with ihe grantees. There is no evidence that the grantor ever communicated to any one the fact that the deeds had been executed by him or that he even discussed the subject with any one whomsoever except Mr. Collins.

By, each of these deeds the grantor sought to convey to each grantee a future estate, to commence in possession after the lapse of a designated time, to wit, the grantor’s death, and this he had the right to do. See section 8407, Comp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 597, 231 P. 237, 107 Okla. 140, 52 A.L.R. 1213, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snodgrass-v-snodgrass-okla-1924.