Woodruff v. Woodruff

1966 OK 144, 418 P.2d 642
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 19, 1966
DocketNo. 41302
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1966 OK 144 (Woodruff v. Woodruff) 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
Woodruff v. Woodruff, 1966 OK 144, 418 P.2d 642 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves conflicting claims of relatives to the ownership of a farm containing a half section of land (minus a part of the minerals) formerly belonging to their common ancestor, Mrs. Ida Belle Wood-ruff.

The plaintiff in error, Howard L. Wood-ruff, is the son of one of the said Mrs. Ida Woodruff’s two sons, Leonard, who died several years ago. The other plaintiffs in error are Howard’s children, all of whom were his minor wards at the time this action was commenced. Defendant in error, Herman C. Woodruff, is Mrs. Wood-ruff’s other son.

For many years Mrs. Woodruff’s home was at 902 “E” Street, in Ardmore. For several years prior to 1954, her said grandson, Howard, together with his wife, Willie Mae Woodruff, and their children, lived with Mrs. Woodruff there, while her son, Herman, otherwise herein referred to as “defendant”, lived on his ranch 8 miles northwest of Healdton and some 12 or 15 miles southwest of Tatums, Oklahoma.

On October 21, 1958, the said Herman Woodruff filed for record a quit claim [644]*644'deed purporting to have been executed by his mother, Ida, before a notary public named “Hiram Mitchell”, on August 29, 1946, conveying the subject property, among other lands, to him.

Thereafter, in June, 1959, plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to collectively as “plaintiffs”, instituted the present action, claiming ownership of the farm, alleging that they and their predecessor in title, Mrs. Ida Belle Woodruff, were, and had been for more than 20 years, in adverse possession of the farm, and further alleging, among other things, that the deed filed by Herman Woodruff was void, champertous, and constituted a cloud upon their title. They prayed that said title be quieted.

In a second amended petition they thereafter filed, plaintiffs asserted, as the basis of their claim of record title to the land, a quit claim deed, dated December 23, 1954, and filed of record January 5, 1955, wherein Ida Belle Woodruff, “ * * * was grantor” and they “ * * * were grantees * * * ”. Plaintiffs alleged that the title vested in them by said deed, was a gift. They also specifically alleged their claim of prescriptive title, and added to their previous allegations of 20 years’ adverse possession, additional allegations concerning their payment of taxes and making improvements upon the property. Plaintiffs also alleged, in substance, that on the same day defendant filed his above described quit claim deed for recording, he also filed of record a mineral deed, also dated August 29, 1946, purporting to be a conveyance to him from Ida Belle Woodruff of certain minerals under said land. Plaintiffs further alleged, among other things, that, at the time of the execution and delivery of their deed from Ida Belle Woodruff on December 20, 1954, they knew nothing of the deeds upon which defendant’s claim of title was based, and had no notice, either actual or constructive, of his claim until those deeds were recorded. They further alleged that if any such deeds were actually executed and delivered, there was no consideration for them, and they should be cancelled, and defendant precluded from asserting any rights thereunder.

In an answer to plaintiffs’ second amended petition, defendant denied plaintiffs’ claim of ownership and possession, but admitted Ida Belle Woodruff was in possession of the property, and alleged that said possession was pursuant to an oral agreement, made between her and said defendant at the time she delivered to him the deed of August 29, 1946, that she should have the possession thereof, and the revenue, rents and profits therefrom. Defendant further alleged, among other things, that if plaintiffs in fact had a deed from Mrs. Woodruff, it was executed after she became 88 years of’age, and was, by reason of her advanced age and infirmities, easily imposed upon and persuaded to do things of which she had no conscious knowledge; and that such deed, if executed by her, was contrary to her will and desire. Defendant further alleged that such deed, if made, failed to transfer any right, title or interest in the property, because of his prior deed to it.

Mrs. Ida Belle Woodruff died on February 1, 1960, before the case was tried. Thereafter, in a “Response” to an order of the court, plaintiffs obtained, to require defendant to allow them to inspect the originals of his deeds, defendant revealed that he no longer had them, and expressed the belief that they were either lost or stolen. The Response also stated, however, that defendant was attaching to it certified, photographic copies of said deeds.

When the case finally came to trial in May, 1964, plaintiffs introduced evidence consisting principally of the testimony of Mrs. Lucile P. Lacy, a handwriting expert, to show that the grantor’s purported signatures on defendant’s deeds were forgeries, and elicited, testimony from Mrs. Willie Mae Woodruff in an effort to show that Ida Belle Woodruff could not have executed that deed, as defendant’s evidence tended to prove. When it was attempted to show by the testimony of the defendant himself, that he gave Mrs. Woodruff, now [645]*645deceased, a good and valuable cash consideration for the deed, the trial court sustained the objection plaintiffs made to the elicitation of such testimony, on the ground it violated the so-called “Dead Man’s Statute”. Defendant then made a tender of such proof.

When defendant was interrogated as to why he had waited so long after its execution, to file the deeds from his mother for record, he testified, in substance, that said filing was postponed so that there would be no legal obstacle to her receiving the income from said property, while she needed it to help defray her living expenses, that were substantial, while her grandson and his family were residing with her.

At the close of the evidence, the trial court entered judgment for the defendant and decreed his title quieted against the claims of plaintiffs, as prayed for in his cross petition.

Under plaintiffs first proposition for reversal, they first say that Mrs. Lacy’s testimony that the signatures on defendant’s deeds were not the genuine signatures of Ida Belle Woodruff, was “conclusive”. Thereafter, they discuss certain circumstances which they characterize both as “badges of fraud” and as “ * * * telltale signs which indicate the truthfulness of the testimony of the witness Lacy.” Without entering into a detailed discussion of all of these circumstances to which plaintiffs attach significance, suffice it to say that we have thoroughly considered them, in connection with our careful examination of the entire record and are of the opinion that these circumstances, which plaintiffs attempt to make defendant’s obtaining the deeds from his mother appear so strange or unusual, cannot be said, as a matter of law, to have rendered unworthy of belief, defendant’s evidence to the contrary. Whether they were sufficiently explained by other evidence, and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, as to cast no serious doubt upon the veracity of defendant’s evidence was purely a matter of weighing the evidence — a function which, in this jurisdiction, is performed initially in the trial court. The determination there, can only be overturned here, when it is clearly against the weight of the evidence.

Defendant introduced in evidence the photographic copies of the deeds upon, which he based his claim of title to the-property.

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 144, 418 P.2d 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-woodruff-okla-1966.