Wilson v. Lee Evans Drilling Co.

1957 OK 326, 322 P.2d 630, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1957
Docket37228
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1957 OK 326 (Wilson v. Lee Evans Drilling Co.) 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
Wilson v. Lee Evans Drilling Co., 1957 OK 326, 322 P.2d 630, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 661 (Okla. 1957).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action was initiated by the owners of oil and gas leases on the allotment of Ramsey Bruner, deceased, Seminole Freedman, to quiet their title to the leasehold estate against the claims of plaintiffs in error. Aaron Sancho, one of the plaintiffs in error, answered and cross-petitioned, asserting his claim as a son of a deceased daughter of the allottee, and interpleaded as defendants in the action all others known to be heirs of the allottee, or who claimed an interest in the allotment, Caroline Wilson, the other plaintiff in error, also answered and cross-petitioned, asserting her claim as a daughter of the allottee. All other persons claiming as heirs .of the al-lottee, or their devisees or assignees, asserting an interest in the allotment, pleaded their respective claims in answer to the plaintiffs in error’s cross-petitions, and the action proceeded to trial. Aaron Sancho and Caroline Wilson will be referred to hereinafter either individually or as plaintiffs in error and all other parties will be referred to as defendants in error.

The plaintiffs in error’s claim to the ownership of an interest in the property is based upon their contention that Ramsey Bruner, according to the custom and practice, took as a second or plural wife, Zadie Stidham, by whom he was the father of Caroline and of Pearly, now deceased, mother of Aaron Sancho. The events material to the determination of this action occurred in the last part of the Nineteenth Century, and the testimony of the many witnesses was conflicting on the factual issues. It appears, however, that plural marriages were recognized in the Seminole Nation, and the validity of this practice will be taken as an established fact in our discussion.

Prior to any plural marriage, Ramsey Bruner was married to Sarah by whom he *632 had five children: Palesa, Bud, August, Melvina, and Solomon. The trial court also found that a Gertrude J. Martin, nee Bruner, was an illegitimate but recognized daughter of the allottee. Only Melvina was living at the time of trial. The other defendants in error claim as heirs, devisees or assignees of these undisputed heirs of the allottee. Ramsey Bruner died in 1905, and the property has been in the possession of some of his aforementioned heirs since that time.

In answer to the cross-petition, among other defenses, the defendants in error pleaded certain judgments as a bar to the claim of plaintiffs in error. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law the trial court found that plaintiffs in error were estopped by judgment. This issue, as well as the facts concerning their birth, necessitates a separate consideration of the respective claims of plaintiffs in error.

Aaron Sancho.

One of the judgments pleaded by defendants in error was the decree of distribution in the Estate of Bud Bruner. In March, 1954, hearing was held in the county court of Seminole County on the petition for distribution and 'discharge of the administrator in the Estate of Bud Bruner. At that hearing Aaron Sancho appeared personally and therein claimed to be the grandson of Ramsey Bruner, the child of a deceased sister of the deceased. It appears from the evidence here that this issue was litigated in that hearing. In its decree of distribution the County Court of Seminole County held that Bud Bruner died intestate; that “he left no widow, no children and no child of any deceased child surviving him, but left as his sole and only heirs at law” Melvina, a sister; Lula Jacobs, a niece, daughter of Palesa; Solomon, a brother; and Sarah Black and Eva Bruner, nieces, and Ramsey Bruner, a nephew, children of August. Since it is and was undisputed that Aaron is the child of Pearly, the effect of this decree was to determine that Pearly was not the legitimate child of Ramsey Bruner, for by our statute of descent the property descended to the brothers and sisters and to the children of any deceased brother or sister by right of representation. 84 O.S. 1951 § 213(3). Thus the identical issue upon which Aaron Sancho must prevail in this action has been determined heretofore contrary to his contention, in an action to which he was an adverse party to the acknowledged legitimate heirs and descendants of the allottee, defendants in error here. He is precluded in this action by the determination there.

“A right, question, or fact distinctly put in issue and directly determined by a court of competent jurisdiction cannot be disputed in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies, although the subsequent suit is on a different cause of action; and a plea setting up the former adjudication of a fact, right, or question distinctly put in issue between the same parties or their privies is not a plea in bar, but a plea of estoppel by judgment. Identity of causes of action is not a necessary element in the plea of estoppel by judgment but it is necessary that the point upon which the plea of estoppel by judgment is based is in issue in the latter case and was in issue and decided in the former.”

Craig v. Roxoline Petroleum Co., 170 Okl. 307, 39 P.2d 575; see also McKee v. Producers’ & Refiners’ Corporation, 170 Okl. 599, 41 P.2d 466; Reinhart & Donovan Co. v. Guaranty Abstract Co., 201 Okl. 334, 205 P.2d 881; Garrison v. Bonham, 207 Okl. 599, 251 P.2d 790. The cases cited by the plaintiffs in error do not conflict with our conclusion. Johnson v. Whelan, 186 Okl. 511, 98 P.2d 1103, recognized the rule where the factual issue had in fact been determined by the prior adjudication. So also did Harding v. Taylor, Okl., 272 P.2d 443. These cases distinguished the broad application of res judicata from the more limited application of the principle where a particular issue within a cause of action has been adjudicated. The more limited rule is usually referred to as an estoppel *633 by judgment or verdict and does not require all of the identity of elements necessary to create a complete bar to a cause of action. Freeman on Judgments, 5th Ed., §§ 627-677. Lincoln v. Herndon, 141 Okl. 212, 285 P. 120, and Jones v. Douglass, 152 Okl. 89, 5 P.2d 345, presented a different situation from that presented here. Those cases involved the devolution of Indian ancestral estates prior to statehood and determined that the court in a decree in the estate of the ancestor did not have jurisdiction to determine the heirs of the deceased child. Here, too, the issue of relationship was not stipulated as in the Lincoln case, and no half-blood problem intervenes.

Caroline Wilson.

The trial court found that the “sole and only heirs” of the allottee were his wife, Sarah, their five children, and Gertrude J. Martin, an illegitimate but recognized daughter; “ * * * that Za-die Stidham was the mother of Caroline Bruner, who was born in the Creek Nation in the 1890’s, the exact date being uncertain; * * * The preponderance of the evidence reveals, or discloses, that the father of Caroline Bruner * * * was John Tecumseh and not Ramsey Bruner * * and “ * * * that Cross-Petitioners have offered proof of heirship and other copies of Indian Departmental records and evidence as tending to support the claim of Aaron Sancho and Caroline Bru-ner, in that Caroline Bruner and Pearle Bruner were children of Ramsey Bruner. These records are Prima facie evidence thereof, but same has been overcome and nullified by true, cogent, clear and concise evidence introduced by the plaintiffs, inter-venors and defendants herein.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 326, 322 P.2d 630, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-lee-evans-drilling-co-okla-1957.