Court Opinion

ID: 3814332
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:51:41.40598+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:19.067681
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff for her cause of action alleged that she was married to Geo. Bowman during the minority of the latter, and in the year 1912, in Salt Lake City, Utah. At the time of the marriage the husband was a minor and living with his father, George Bowman, in Salt Lake. The father of George Bowman, with his family, left Oklahoma and resided in the northwest until his death about the year 1914. The plaintiff alleges the land in controversy was the allotment of her husband, George Bowman, and that it was the intention of the plaintiff and her husband to move to Okmulgee and occupy the land as a homestead. The land in question was never occupied by plaintiff or her husband as a homestead. In fact George Bowman had never lived on the land. The plaintiff further alleged while she and her husband were making preparations to move to Oklahoma to occupy the land as a homestead, certain parties came to Salt Lake just as her husband arrived at his majority and induced her husband to execute and deliver deed conveying the property in question to defendants and their grantors, and that *Page 202 
she did not join in the execution of the deed. The defendants filed general demurrer to the petition which was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff appealed the cause to this court, assigning the action of the trial court in sustaining demurrer as error for reversal. The question presented by the appeal is disposed of adversely to her contention by the case of Kerns et al. v. Warden et al., 88 Okla. 297, 213 P. 70; Johnson v. Johnston, 82 Okla. 259, 200 P. 204; Harris et al. v. Cherokee State Bank, 82 Okla. 151, 198 P. 878; Hyde v. Ishmael,42 Okla. 279, 143 P. 1044.
These cases fully support the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff's petition, and fully dispense with the need for further discussion of the question presented by this appeal.
Therefore, it is recommended that the judgment be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.