State Ex Rel. Schuman v. Fraley

1941 OK 342, 118 P.2d 1023, 189 Okla. 511, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 21, 1941
DocketNo. 30317.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1941 OK 342 (State Ex Rel. Schuman v. Fraley) 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
State Ex Rel. Schuman v. Fraley, 1941 OK 342, 118 P.2d 1023, 189 Okla. 511, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 296 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

In this appeal plaintiff in error seeks a reversal of that portion of the trial court’s judgment denying the relator, Morris Schuman, a writ of mandamus requiring the county treasurer of Osage county to certify his redemption of a city lot in Pawhuska, Okla., that had been sold to said county at the 1939 tax resale. As the action was prosecuted by Schuman and he appears to be the real party in interest, he will hereinafter be referred to as “plaintiff.”

Plaintiff based his claimed right to such a redemption certificate upon the following provisions of section 14, art. 31, ch. 66, S. L. 1939, to wit:

“The last record owner of any real estate sold at the 1939 tax resale, or any person having a legal or equitable interest therein, may redeem the same by paying to the county treasurer on or *512 before the 1st day of December, 1939, the full amount paid for resale deed if sold to an individual purchaser, including costs of listing, advertising and sale, and the costs of deed and recording thereof paid by him, plus penalty and interest at the rate of one per cent (1%) per month; and if purchased in the name of the county, the full amount for which said property was sold, plus penalty and interest at the rate of one per cent (1%) per month; such redemption shall be evidenced by a certificate of the county treasurer. . .

In August, 1939, several months after its purchase of the lot at the resale as mentioned above, the county sold it to one R. S. Tolson. When, on November 28, 1939, plaintiff formally tendered to the county treasurer the full amount for which the county had sold the same to Tolson, together with the fees, expenses, penalties, etc., provided in the above-quoted act, and requested that he be issued a redemption certificate in accordance with said act, the county treasurer refused to accept said tender or to comply with plaintiff’s request because the sum tendered was less than the amount for which the lot had been sold to the county at the resale. Thereafter, but on the same date, plaintiff commenced the present action to compel the county treasurer to accept his tender and issue the certificate.

By the time the cause was ready for trial there seems to have been no dispute as to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s tender, and the principal question at issue then was whether or not plaintiff had such an interest in the lot as to entitle him- to redeem it under the provisions of section 14, art. 31, ch. 66, supra.

There was no question raised concerning the validity of plaintiff's title to or ownership of the lot prior to August 16, 1935, but the records in the office of the county clerk of Osage county revealed a quitclaim deed executed by the plaintiff to one C. Plant, as grantee, and filed of record on April 29, 1936. Plaintiff admitted the execution and delivery of this deed, but, nevertheless, alleged in his petition for the writ of mandamus that he was the owner of the lot. Plaintiff’s allegations were generally denied, both in an answer filed on behalf of the county treasurer and the county clerk, and a pleading filed by R. S. Tolson, designated as an “inter-plea.” In the latter, the facts concerning Tolson’s purchase of the lot from the county were set forth; it was asserted that by reason thereof he was its owner, and Tolson specifically denied that plaintiff had any equity or interest in the lot or the right to redeem it.

At the trial, the plaintiff attempted to establish that he had a “legal or equitable interest” in the lot at the time of the 1939 resale entitling him to redeem it from said sale under the statute hereinbefore quoted, by showing, first, that he had not divested himself of the real or actual ownership nor the equitable title to the lot by his purported quitclaim deed of August 16, 1935, and also that the nominal title evidenced by said instrument was reinvested in him about one month prior to the resale by a quitclaim deed executed and delivered to him on March 24, 1939, by C. Plant, the grantee named in his quitclaim deed of August 16, 1935. The only evidence introduced by either the plaintiff or the defendants which tended to establish the latter alleged transfer of title was the testimony of the plaintiff himself and a quitclaim deed which on its face purported to have been duly executed and acknowledged by C. Plant as grantor to the plaintiff as grantee on March 24, 1939. There was testimony given on behalf of the defendants which tended to show that the execution of the instrument had not been acknowledged as shown on its face and to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff on this point.

Certain remarks made by the trial judge and included in the record are rather enlightening as to his reasons for rendering that portion of the judgment herein appealed from. They are as follows:

“. . . Now, certain testimony has been offered here on the part of the plaintiff, Morris Schuman, to the effect that the *513 quitclaim deed dated March 24, 1939, was executed on that date by C. Plant to him, and that he was the record owner of this property, or at least had an equitable interest in it at the time of the resale. The only evidence that he had any interest is his evidence to that effect. So far as this deed is concerned, the court does not intend to recognize it at all from the fact that it was not properly executed and was not delivered, and there is a question in my mind about the validity of the entire thing — and particularly the deed was not completed upon that date, and inasmuch as the representations made with reference to this deed are so contrary, in the mind of the court, to what the facts were, he is going to ignore all evidence concerning any equitable interest in this property, and I am going to hold that Mr. Tolson is the owner and entitled to lot 12, block 21 of Original Townsite of Pawhuska under the terms of the deed, and I will deny the mandamus on that property.”

Much of the argument in the briefs of both the plaintiff and the county treasurer, who is the only one of the defendants filing a brief herein, concerns the validity of the purported quitclaim deed dated March 24, 1939, as a conveyance of title; the plaintiff asserting that even though the grantor’s execution of same was not properly acknowledged as the evidence of the defendants tended to show, this did not destroy its validity as a conveyance of title from C. Plant to him; and it being argued on behalf of the county treasurer, hereinafter referred to merely as the defendant, that such proof was fatal to the validity of the deed. It is also pointed out on behalf of the plaintiff, however, that the validity of this purported quitclaim deed as a conveyance of title from C. Plant to the plaintiff is an immaterial consideration if at all times subsequent to his acquisition of the lot and on the date said deed is supposed to have been executed, plaintiff, rather than C. Plant, was the true owner of the lot. Thus if we conclude that his evidence on this point is to be believed and was binding upon the trial court, we need not consider the parties’ contentions with reference to other matters.

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Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 342, 118 P.2d 1023, 189 Okla. 511, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-schuman-v-fraley-okla-1941.