Turley v. Feebeck

1913 OK 372, 132 P. 889, 38 Okla. 257, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 3, 1913
Docket2618
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1913 OK 372 (Turley v. Feebeck) 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
Turley v. Feebeck, 1913 OK 372, 132 P. 889, 38 Okla. 257, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 355 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

HAYES, C. J.

This action was originally brought by John T. Turley, plaintiff in error, against Maggie E. Feebeck and Hickman P. Eitchie, defendants in error, wherein he sought to have declared a resulting trust in his favor in and to lots 13 and 14 in block 9 in Woodlawn addition to the city of Sapulpa. He alleges in his amended petition that on the 6th day of December, 1904, he purchased from the Sapulpa Townsite Company said lots, and paid as a consideration therefor the sum of $200. He alleges that at that time he was a resident of the state of Kentucky; and that on or about said date, he forwarded to the defendant Maggie E. Feebeck a United States postal money order for the sum of $200 with which to obtain for him a conveyance of said property; that said defendant Maggie E. Feebeck disregarded her instructions, and obtained a conveyance of the property from the Sapulpa Townsite Company by warranty deed to Mary E. Turley, who was then the wife of plaintiff, and was the sister of! the defendant Maggie E. Feebeck; that such deed was procured to be made, to his wife without his knowledge or consent. He further alleges 'that thereafter Mary E. Turley, ■his wife, departed this life intestate, and without issue, and left as her sole surviving heirs the plaintiff and the defendant Hickman P. Eitchie, deceased’s father, who is also father of defendant Maggie E. Feebeck, by reason of which facts he alleges — and it is admitted — that defendant Hickman P. Eitchie and plaintiff inherited from the deceased wife each an un7 divided half interest in the property she owned in this state. He alleges that • thereafter defendant Maggie E. Feebeck, with full notice and knowledge of all the facts, and of plaintiff’s Jlfli-m and title to said lots, procured from; her father, the *259 defendant Hickman P. Ritchie, a deed of conveyance, without consideration, by which he purported to convey to her an undivided half interest in said lots. He thereupon prays that he have judgment, declaring that defendant Maggie E. Eeebeck holds the title to an undivided half of said lots in trust for him, and requiring her to convey same to him. Defendants, by their answer, admit all the allegations of plaintiffs petition, except that they deny that the lots were purchased by plaintiff, and that he furnished the sum of $200 to pay the consideration therefor, and they deny that Maggie E. Eeebeck had knowledge prior to the time she received the deed conveying an undivided half interest to her, that plaintiff was the owner of the equitable title to such undivided half interest in the lots, and she further alleges that Mary E. Turley was in fact the purchaser of said lots, and that defendant Maggie E. Eeebeck was instructed by said Mary E. Turley to represent her in the buying of said lots, and that she, Mary E. Turley, had the means and money to pay the consideration therefor. The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. The court made certain special findings of fact, and also a general finding in favor of defendants. The special findings embrace only such facts as were admitted by the pleadings; but by the general finding the issue made by the pleadings as to .whether plaintiff purchased said lots and furnished the purchase price, and whether defendant Maggie E. Eeebeck had notice of his title before she procured the deed for the property, was found against plaintiff.

On this appeal plaintiff complains that this finding of the court is not supported by the evidence, and is against the evidence. The record in our opinion sustains this contention. Plaintiff testified that he now resides and did at the time of the purchase of the lots in the state of. Kentucky.

Relative to the transaction, his testimony is as follows:

“Q. State whether or not she resided there on March, 1904? A. Yes, sir. Q. State whether or not you recall the circumstances of the purchase by you of two lots near or *260 in Sapulpa, Oída.? A. Yes; I think it was in December, 1904. Q. Through whom was the purchase made? A. Mrs. Feebeck. Q. I will describe lots No. 13 and No. 14 in block No. 9 in Woodlawn addition to the city oí Sapulpa, Creek county, state of Oklahoma, were they the lots? A. Yes, sir, Q. What was paid for these lots? A. $200. Q. Who paid for these lots? A. I furnished the money. Q. Iiow was it paid? A. Paid through Mr. Burris, postmaster at headquarters. Q. What medium was used? A. Money order. Q. How did you pay Mr. Burris for that money order? A. I gave my check for it. Q. Was Mrs. Feebeck in here at that time, or was the money sent to her? A. The money was sent to her. Q. By money order? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you recall whether or not you delivered the check to Mr. Bums as postmaster and sent the money order to Mrs. Feebeck, or whether or not you gave the check, payable to Mr. Burris, to your wife to take to the postmaster, and secure the money order and mail it to Mrs. Feebeck? A. I gave Mr. Burris the check myself. Q. State how that money order was made out? A. To Maggie Feebeck. Q. Did you direct Maggie Feebeck how to have the deed made to those lots? A. 'No, sir; I did not; I just supposed it was going to be made to me, though. Q. When did you first learn .that the deed was made to your wife? A. Never until the deed came back here, and that was some time after the purchase was made. Q. Was that before your wife died? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you have any talk with your wife about the deed? A. Nothing particular; just thought that maybe the deed ought to have been made to me; am not sure of that. Q. Did you ever have any understanding with her or with Maggie Feebeck that the deed was to' be.made to your wife? A. No, sir. Q. In negotiating the purchase of these lots, who did Maggie Feebeck write to, you or your wife? A. My wife was out there at the time the lots were laid oí?, and when she came back home she was telling me of the new town-site that was being laid out there, and that she had picked out two lots, and that she wanted me to buy them. It run along for a while, and I finally told her I would send the money and buy the lots, but when the money got 'there the two lots were sold; I told her then • to write Mrs. Feebeck that the money was there, and not to send it back, but to *261 pick out two other good lots and buy them. It was a month or two after that before I got the deed.”

That he purchased the money order, as testified to by him, plaintiff is- corroborated by two other witnesses. There is an entire absence of any evidence in the record to contradict the foregoing testimony. There is evidence that after the death of his wife plaintiff attempted to procure from defendant Hickman P. Eitehie a deed conveying to plaintiff the legal title. There was also some evidence to the effect that at the time plaintiff married Mary Turley she possessed some personal property. There is also evidence that after the controversy over the lots arose plaintiff offered to one • of the defendants to accept the amount of money that had been paid out for the lots and legal interest thereon, and to execute deed for same; but this evidence does not disprove that plaintiff purchased the lots and furnished the consideration as testified to by him, and there is absence of any evidence that Mary E. Turley furnished the money with which to purchase these lots or that it could have come from any other source than as testified to by plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 372, 132 P. 889, 38 Okla. 257, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turley-v-feebeck-okla-1913.