Trent v. Trent

1954 OK 129, 270 P.2d 953, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 27, 1954
Docket35999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1954 OK 129 (Trent v. Trent) 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
Trent v. Trent, 1954 OK 129, 270 P.2d 953, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 529 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

*954 ARNOLD, Justice.

Plaintiffs, all of whom were children of Charles G. and Mary Trent, both deceased, brought this action in the District Court of Lincoln County against P. J. Trent, a son of the deceased and brother of all the plaintiffs, and his wife Charlotte, and The Texas Company, alleging in their first cause of action that during his lifetime Charles G. Trent, their deceased father, was the owner and in possession of a certain described 40-acre tract in Lincoln County; that on November 16, 1945, Charles G. Trent and his wife Mary for the consideration of $1,000 made, executed and delivered to defendants P. J. Trent and his wife a warranty deed on said premises which deed specifically reserved unto the grantors one-half of all oil, gas and other minerals; that said deed was duly recorded on January 24, 1946; that thereafter on August 30, 1948, defendants unlawfully and fraudulently filed for record a purported mineral deed dated November 16, 1945, from Charles G. and Mary E. Trent to defendants conveying an undivided one-half of all the minerals under said property; that said mineral deed was never made, signed, acknowledged or delivered by the grantors and they had no notice that same had been filed for record; that Charles G. Trent died intestate on January 19, 1950, and Mary E. Trent died intestate on March 12, 1951; that plaintiffs are children and heirs of said deceased and each is the owner of a l/10th part of said one-half of all the minerals in and under the said real property; that The Texas Company is the owner of a lease on said premises dated August 1, 1951, and has completed a producing oil well on the premises and should be required to account for one-half the sales of oil and gas produced from said premises; for their second and alternative cause of action plaintiffs alleged that if Charles G. and Mary E. Trent ever signed the mineral deed in question such signature was obtained without consideration and by fraudulent misrepresentation and undue influence upon said grantors; that defendants represented that they would take and hold said mineral interest in trust for all the children; that after said deed was filed and recorded Charles G. and Mary E. Trent joined in the execution of a lease on said premises and received one-half the bonus and rentals therefrom; that said deed should be cancelled and defendants be adjudged to hold the legal title thereon in trust for plaintiffs. Copies of the warranty deed and of the mineral deed in question were attached as exhibits to the petition. By amendment plaintiffs alleged they had no knowledge of these facts until less than two years prior to filing the petition.

Defendants P. J. and Charlotte Trent filed a general denial and alleged that both of said deeds were made, executed and delivered for a valuable consideration and no oral or written promise or agreement was made in connection therewith. Defendant The Texas Company answered by general denial and that it had witheld the proceeds from one-half the royalty on said tract, that it was a bona fide purchaser for value of the lease, and that it was a mere stakeholder.

Plaintiffs’ evidence reasonably tends to show that at the time of his death in January, 1950, Charles G. Trent was 84 years old and his wife, Mary E. Trent, at the time of her death in 1951 was 78; that for a good many years prior to their deaths they had not lived on the 40 acres here involved but had lived in the town of Chandler; that Charles G. Trent had vision in only one eye and usually in handling his business had other people write his checks for him to sign; that soon after the date of the execution of the deeds in question Rufus Trent, one of the plaintiffs, talked to his brother P. J. Trent, defendant here, at his place of business in Prague at which time P. J. Trent told him he had bought the surface of the 40 acres (which was a part of the old family homestead) and one-half the minerals from his parents for $1,000; that he did not think much of it as an investment but the old folks needed some money to make an addition to their house; that the old folks took the $1,000 and added a bathroom and another room to their house in Chandler; that both Charles and Mary Trent seemed to have equal confidence in all of their ten children and treated them all alike; that until after *955 their father died the other children did not know that P. J. Trent had recorded a mineral deed to the remaining 20 acres of mineral under the forty; that P. J. told several other of the children that he had bought only the surface and half the minerals under the forty; that after the father’s death the mother, Mary Trent, told P. J. Trent in the presence of some of the other children that the balance of the twenty acres of minerals in his name did not belong to him but belonged to all the heirs; that at that time Mary Trent’s memory was good some days and bad other days; that after the date of the deed in question Charles and Mary Trent joined with P. J. Trent in executing an oil and gas lease to Quentin Little on the 40 acres and received half the lease bonus and half the rentals during the life of the lease; that no development was had under this lease and it was thereafter released of record; that after the death of both parents, in August 1951, P. J. Trent and his wife executed a lease to The Texas Company and The Texas Company had brought in one producing well on the property and had two others drilling; that one of the neighbors tried to buy some of the minerals from Charles Trent on this forty acres (the time not being fixed, whether before or after the deeds to P. J. Trent) and he refused saying he wanted to reserve it for his children; that in about 1948 he told some of the other neighbors that he still had twenty acres of royalty under a forty acres but did not say what forty; that after the father died P. J. Trent showed the originals of both the deed to the surface and half the minerals and the mineral deed to the other twenty acres of minerals to one of the children; several of the children testified that after the date of the deed in question both the mother and father had told them that they still owned 20 acres of minerals under the forty and they intended that it would be left for the benefit of all the children after the death of the parents; photostatic copies of the originals of the two deeds were offered in evidence for the purpose of comparison of the signatures on the two deeds.

Testimony was offered by plaintiff to show that on a number of occasions after the date of the execution of the deeds but prior to the recording of the mineral deed here in question Charles G. Trent told some of his children out of the presence of defendants that he had sold P. J. the surface and a half interest in the mineral rights and had retained the other half of the mineral rights for the benefit of all the children, and that the mother, Mary E. Trent, made similar statements on like occasions. This character of testimony was objected to on the ground that it consisted of statements of the deceaseds made out of the presence of defendant and that the witness was incompetent to testify as to a conversation had with a deceased person because he acquired his interest from the dead persons and this objection was sustained by the court. This evidence was properly excluded because it was hearsay. Later, a9 shown above, testimony to this same effect was allowed to go in the record.

At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence defendants P. J. and Charlotte Trent and The Texas Company entered separate demurrers to the evidence.

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Related

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1957 OK 163 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
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1955 OK 92 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 129, 270 P.2d 953, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trent-v-trent-okla-1954.