Tyrell v. Shaffer

1918 OK 317, 174 P. 1074, 70 Okla. 228, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 794
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 28, 1918
Docket9048
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1918 OK 317 (Tyrell v. Shaffer) 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
Tyrell v. Shaffer, 1918 OK 317, 174 P. 1074, 70 Okla. 228, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 794 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

SPRINGER, C.

The parties occupying the same relative position as in the lower court will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiffs and defendant. The amended petition upon which this ease was tried in the lower court alleges, in substance, that Bessie! Tyrell, formerly Offutt, and her husband, P. B. Tyrell, made, executed, and delivered on the 9th day of March, 1909, to C. A. Peterson, a good and sufficient war-renty deed to the premises in dispute here, and that said Bessie Tyrell was a duly enrolled female citizen of the Creek Tribe of Indians, enrolled opposite roll No. 3848, and that the property in dispute here was allotted to her under the provisions of law. The petition further alleges that Peterson made, executed, and delivered to one B. B. Jones an oil and gas lease covering the property, and that B. B. Jones had executed an assignment of the oil and gas lease to him by Peterson to the defendant Charles B. Shaffer, and that Shaffer bad executed and *229 delivered to the defendant Rowland a contract pertaining to and in connection with the gas to be and which was being produced from the premises. The petition further alleges that Bessie Tyrell, qn the1 29th day of March, 1909, was a minor, as shown by the enrollment records, and that the deed and the oil and gas mining lease and the assignment and contract based thereon were void and of no effect. The petition further alleges that on or about the 17th day of February, 1905, the plaintiff Bessie Tyrell and her husband, P. B. Tyrell, made, executed, and delivered to one John C. Ellinghausen an oil and gas lease covering the property in dispute here, and further alleges that, at the time the oil and gas lease was executed by Bessie Tyrell and P. B. Tyrell, Bessie Ty-rell had. attained her majority, as shown by the records, and that said lease was a good, valid, and subsisting oil and gas lease upon the premises, ^nd that, after the execution of said lease to John C. Ellinghausen, as above set forth, the same was by him duly assigned to J. O. Mitchell. The prayer of the petition was for the possession of the premises, and that Charles B. Shaffer and W. J. Rowland be enjoined from interfering with the plaintiff Mitchell in his possession and right to'possession under and by virtue of the assignment of the lease to him by El-linghausen. The defendants answered, and alleged that they held possession under and by virtue of the deed referred to in the petition under date of March 29, 1909, and that Bessie Tyrell at that time was, in fact, of age, having attained her majority on the 28th day of March, 1909, and pleaded further the subsequent execution of a deed under date of December 10, 1909, and the evidence on the trial of the case was confined to the issues thus raised. ■ The judgment of the lower court was in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs perfect an appeal to this court.

The evidence as to the true date of the birth of Bessie Tyrell was conflicting; the defendants contending that she was born on March 28, 1891, and the plaintiffs contending that she was born on March SO, 1891. Minnie Offutt, mother of the plaintiff, Bessie Tyrell, testified that the allottee was born on the 30th day, or about the 30th day, of March, 1891. On cross-examination, however, she stated that she merely knew the child was born about the 30th day of March. The record shows that she made an affidavit in 1911 that Bessie Tyrell was born March 28, 1891. The evidence further shows that she had told Peterson that Bessie was born on the 28th day of March. 1891, and she told Peterson that before the first deed was executed.) The record further shows that Minnie Offutt admitted that she had said Bessie’s birthday was on the 28th day of March, and that she had told her nieces so on several different occasion‡ and .that she had told her brother-in-law. Dr. Bland, the same thing.

A witness by the name of Mack Davis testified that Bessie Tyrell was born at his father’s house on the last Saturday night in March, 1891, and that J. W. L. Jones testified to the same effect.

The plaintiff offered in evidence the following enrollment record:

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Related

Murphy v. Walkup
258 P.2d 922 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
Bilby v. Jacobs
1921 OK 44 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1921)
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1920 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1920)
Gilcrease v. McCullough
249 U.S. 178 (Supreme Court, 1919)
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1918 OK 527 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 317, 174 P. 1074, 70 Okla. 228, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyrell-v-shaffer-okla-1918.