Washington v. Morton

1923 OK 380, 216 P. 457, 90 Okla. 142, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1133
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1923
Docket11065
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1923 OK 380 (Washington v. Morton) 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
Washington v. Morton, 1923 OK 380, 216 P. 457, 90 Okla. 142, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1133 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

MASON, J.

This action was brought by defendant in error, plaintiff below, on tbe 15th day of May, 1917, in the district court of Ok-mulgee county, against plaintiffs in error, defendants below, to quiet title to the following described tracts of land:

“The west half CW%) of rhe northwest quarter (IN. W. 3/i) of section twenty-one (21), and east half (E. %) of northeast quarter (N. E. 3A) of section twenty (20), all in township fourteen (14) north, range twelve (12) east; and the northwest quarter (N. W. Vi ) of the northeast quarter (N. E. %) and the northeast quarter (N. E. %) of the northwest quarter (N. W. %) of section thirty (30), township fourteen (14) north, range eleven (11) east, in Okmulgee county, slate of Oklahoma.”

Defendant in error alleges, in substance, in his petition that he is the owner of the land, is in possession of the same; that ho purchased it from W. A. Jolly, and that W. A. Jolly purchased it from Dixon Washington and Aggie Washington, husband and wife, who inherited it in equal parts from their two deceased minor children, and that plain-(iffs in error are asserting claim to the land which is a cloud upon his title, and praying that title be quieted in him as against these claims.

Plaintiff in error Aggie Washington filed a separate answer and cross-petition, denying knowingly having executed. the deed to Jolly or a petition to the county court of Okmulgee county for approval of deed from Dixon Washington, her husband, to Jolly, or that She was ever paid anything for her interest in tbe property. She avers that the only transaction she ever had with reference to the land was under the following circumstances : That in October, 1910, her husband, Dixon Washington, was in jail in the town of Okmulgee, charged with forgery; that plaintiff sent for her to come to Ok-' mulgee. and that when she came she was asked..by plaintiff and his agents to sign an instrument to indemnify Jolly against loss by reason of his becoming bondsman for her husband. She further avers that she was so mentally and physically infirm at the time by reason of pregnancy that she was incapable of understanding the nature of the transaction, and that she had no conception or understanding of the papers she signed, but was told by plaintiff and his agents that it was for the purpose of enabling her husband to mortgage his interest in the land to indemnify his bondsmen, and that the deed was a mortgage of her husband’s interest for this 'purpose, and for the purpose of procuring money with which to pay his attorney’s fee, and that she received nothing for her interest in the land at any time or in any way-

She further avers that she knew nothing of plaintiff’s claim to the title and possession of the land until within the last twelve months, and was preparing to bring suit when this action was brought; that she relied on what her husband, plaintiff, and his agents told her — that the instrument was only to enable her husband to make bond; that this was false and, without reading or knowing the contents of the paper, she signed. it, and that the land is of the value of $8,000.

The other plaintiffs in error claim under subsequent conveyance from Aggie Washington, and it will not be necessary to consider them further, as they must stand or fall by tbe strength of her title.

The evidence is conflicting and irreconcilable, and, unless it clearly preponderates against the judgment of the trial' court, the same must he affirmed, the' action having been treated by all parties as an action of equitable cognizance.

*144 Dixon Washington and Aggie Washington are citizens of the Creek Nation and are enrolled as members of that tribe of Indians. They were husband and wife, Dixon being a full-blood, and Aggie of three-eighths, and, in the year of 1907, under the Arkansas statute of descent and distribution, which was 5h force at that time, they inherited the land in question, jointly, ¡n equal interests from their two deceased minor children.

On the 21st day of October. 1010. (hey conveyed the land by warranty deed to W. A. Jolly in consideration of the sum of $2,000, and on the 5th day of July, 1911. W. A. Jolly. by quitclaim deed, conyeyed it to defendant in error. At the time this action was brought, Dixon Washington was dead, he having died in January, 1917, and as to his one-half interest in the land there is no controversy.

The gravamen of the defense of Aggie Washington, and of the affirmative relief sought in her cross-petition, is the fraudulent character of the transaction and her want of understanding of the nature and character of the instrument she executed, it Being represented to her by defendant in error’s agents that its purpose was to secure Bondsmen and attorney’s fee for her husband, Dixon Washington, who had been informed against for forgery, and was only as to his interest in the land, when, in fact, it was a deed conveying her interest as well as that of her husband’s.

Her testimony, briefly, is that her husband was in jail, and that Joe Grayson came for her and brought her from her home in Beggs, Okla.. to Mr. Holbrook’s office in Ok-mulgee, who was attorney for her husband ®n the criminal • charge, and who told her that Dixon had been in jail quite a while, and said he (deceased) had some land to put up for bond if she would sign so he could get out. and look around for money for his lawyer’s fee; that she was sick at the time of pregnancy; that a child was horn to her about a week later; that she did not read the instrument and had no knowledge that she was signing a deed to her interest in the land, and received no part of the consideration ; that she never was in Holbrooks’ office but the one time, and did not come back to Okmulgee for about seven years; that no one was present when she signed the deed but Joe Grayson and O. W. Holbrook, and that she did not sign a petition to the county court for an approval of the deed of her husband. No witness corroborates her testimony, but, on the other hand, she is strongly contradicted as to every material fact.

The opposing testimony is to the effect that Joe Grayson brought Aggie Washington to the office of O. W. Holbrook on October 15, 1910; that Dixon Washington was released from jail on that day and was not in jail again; that, on the same day, in Hol-brook’s office, Aggie and Dixon talked over with Holbrook the matter of his fee for defending Dixon, and the matter of bond and said that they would sell the land if Hol-brook could find a purchaser; that in pursuance of this arrangement they sold the land to W. A. Jolly and executed a deed to him in Holbrook’s office on October 21, 1910; that no one was present but Aggie and Dixon Washington, C. W. Holbrook, and Nellie Oox, now Mrs. O’Farrell, who was a stenographer in Holbrook’s office; that the instrument was explained to Aggie as a dee<1 to Jolly for the lands allotted to her two deceased children; that she ' acknowledged same before K. D. Carpenter, notary public, and signed and swore to a petition before him in the county court for approval of the deed1 on the part of her husband, who was a full-bloód.

While there are circumstances surrounding this transaction that do not appeal to a court of equity, and however unfortunate it might have been for Aggie Washington, yet she was of average intelligence, could read and write, knew her rights in the property and was under no such mental or physical affliction or debility as would impair her capacity to contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 380, 216 P. 457, 90 Okla. 142, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-morton-okla-1923.