Yargee v. McMillan

1927 OK 385, 262 P. 682, 129 Okla. 48, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 500
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 25, 1927
Docket15014
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1927 OK 385 (Yargee v. McMillan) 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
Yargee v. McMillan, 1927 OK 385, 262 P. 682, 129 Okla. 48, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 500 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

BRANSON, C. J.

Error is prosecuted herein from the district court of Creek county. In stating the issues, necessity compels brevity, for a needless detail in discussion of the numerous angles of this lawsuit would lead the reader into inextricable confusion. Where figures appear herein iu parentheses, they indicate the page of the voluminous record.

There were three suits in the district court, No. 8422, No. 4209, and No. 4224. When cause No. 3422 was called for trial, causes 4209 and 4224 were consolidated therewith (3129L3130). It was stipulated by all parties that all allegations of the pleadings against which a specific defense had not been pleaded should be taken as traversed by each and all adversary parties (3127). Parties too numerous to name came into or were brought into the suits, asserting alleged interests from diverse sources. Many defaulted and many disclaimed, whereupon judgment went against them. In naming the parties to the respective suits in tne three succeeding- paragraphs, we confine ourselves to those parties left before the district court at the trial in whose favor judgment was entered, or against whom judgment was entered, and who prosecute error here. All others were by that judgment eliminated.

Paragraph 1 (as to parties and pleadings) ; Sam Yar-gee, Alvey Yargee, and I-Ietti-e Yargee (iB'eets) filed cause 3-122. They sued certain defendants, none of whom are necessary to name under the elimination statement of the preceding paragraph. When such defendants are referred to herein, it ■will be as “defendants in cause 3422.” Plaintiffs plead:

“That they have the legal title in fee simple and the equitable estate in and to the following described real estate (describing it — ours), the same being the allotment of Monday Yargee, deceased, and are entitled to the immediate possession thereof.
“Plaintiffs further state that the defendants have denied, and still deny, plaintiffs’ title and right to the possession of said premises, or any part thereof, and unlawfully withhold the possession thereof from the plaintiffs.
“Plaintiffs derived title to said real estate in the following manner: The said Monday Yargee, a full-blood citizen of the Creek Tribe of Indians, was duly enrolled as such opposite roll No. 7846, on the 23rd day of May, 1901; that certificate of selection for the above-described premises was duly issued to her on the 27th day of June, 1902; that afterwards, to wit, on or about the 1st day of February, 1904, the said Monday Yargee died, single, intestate, and without issue surviving her; that she left no brothers or sisters, or descendants of any brothers or sisters, or father or mother, but left surviving her these plaintiffs, who were sons and daughters of Alex Yargee; that the said Alex Yargee was a brother of Susie Yargee, the mother of said Monday Yargee; that these plaintiffs are the sole and only heirs of said Monday Yargee, deceased.
*50 “Plaintills further state that proper conveyance to all of the above described allotment was duly made and delivered to the said Monday Yargee during her lifetime, to wit, on or about the 20th day of April, 1903, and November 6, il'905, copies of said conveyance are hereto attached and made a part of this petition marked Exhibit ‘A,’ ‘B,’ ‘C.’
“Plaintiffs further stale they have been damaged in the sum of $-- by the said defendants unlawfully holding said possession.
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray judgment for the possession of said premises, and for $- damages for withholding possession thereof, and for their costs and other proper relief.-’

William Yargee and Emma Yargee (As-bell) filed therein a pleading by way of intervention, claiming as if they had been parties plaintiff in the petition. These parties are included when reference is made to “plaintiffs in cause 3422”.

George McMillan intervened and pleaded lie was the owner of the legal title to the allotment patented in the name of Monday Yargee, and further pleaded:

“That the said Monday Yargee died to what is now McIntosh county, in the state of Oklahoma, in the year 1901, intestate and unmarried and without issue or descendant of issue, and that she had never been married. That the said Monday Yargee left as her next kin and sole heir Isaac Walter, her brother, who was duly enrolled and recognized as a citizen of the Creek Nation of Indians and is still so recognized. That the said Monday Yargee and the said Isaac Walter were children of the same mother, a Creek Indian woman known as Semehoke, or Susie.”

1-Ie prayed possession as against defendants and that plaintiffs in cause No. 3422 take nothing.

Paragraph 2 (as to parties and pleadings) : Suelde Coonhead, Hettie Crowles, C. H. Hubbard, R. C. Mason, Joseph Ardizzone, and F. J. Ossenbeck filed cause No. 4209. They sued the same parties as defendants as in cause No. 3422'. They pleaded the land in question was patented to Monday Yargee, that she died about 1904 without having been married or leaving descendants, that she left surviving Warcoche, a' brother of Susie Yargee, mother of the said Monday Yargee. as her sole heir: that thereafter in 1904 the said Warcoche. uncle of the said silottee. died leaving Suelde Coonhead and Hettie Crowles, his daughters, as his only heirs at law, through whom the other parties plaintiff in this cause (4209) derived their alleged interest. Their prayer is:

“Wherefore the plaintiffs prayed that they be decreed to have the right to the possession of the land above described: and that their title be quieted as against the defendants and each of them.”

The other relief prayed by them was entirely dependent upon whether this prayer could be granted.

Paragraph 3 (as to parties and pleadings) : James A. Sellers and B. B. Jones filed cause No. 4224. They sued Charles Hubbard, referred to in the record as O. H. Hubbard. They pleaded that they were the owners of the land here described, and that Hubbard should be enjoined from drilling a well upon the same, or in anywise molesting their rights and possession. In this cause the defendant, Hubbard, filed no answer : but it must be noted, as stated in paragraph 2, supra (as to parties and pleadings), that he was one of the plaintiffs suing defendants in said cause, claiming rights therein outlined, and the question of the relief sought in this cause was not directly determined except upon the pleadings of Hubbard against the defendants in cause No. 4209. This is only important for counsel for Hubbard in their brief make the contention that the action as to him was of purely equitable cognizance; whereas, as outlined in paragraph 2, supra, he, with Suckie Coonhead and Hettie Crowles, had as against the defendants pleaded they were the owners of the legal and equitable tit^e, praying right to possession. Before trial Suckie Coonhead, one of the plaintiffs in said cause No. 4209, died; the cause was revived (800) in the name of her husband, Wylie Coonhead, and Willie Coonhead, a minor, represented by J. H. Hill as guardian. This cause (803) was after revivor dismissed by Hettie Crowles, and the said successors in interest to Suckie Coonhead. The said cause No. 4209 then remained as O. H. Hubbard, R. C. Mason, Jos. Ardizzone, and F. J. Ossenbeck, as plaintiffs, against, as aforesaid, the same parties as defendants as in cause No. 3422.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 385, 262 P. 682, 129 Okla. 48, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yargee-v-mcmillan-okla-1927.