124 P.2d 729 | Okla. | 1942
This action involves the title to accreted lands in Le Flore county. The facts are fully set out in Goins v. Merryman,
When the case came on for hearing in the lower court after the mandate of this court had been spread of record, the court, without hearing further testimony, made a division of the accreted lands, and from this division the plaintiffs in error appeal. They make three contentions: (1) That the trial court erred in refusing to take additional evidence before effecting the division; (2) that it was error to allow Grace Babcock, one of the riparian owners, more of the land than the portion allowed her in the former judgment, from which she did not appeal; and (3) that the trial court erred in finding that the new south line of the river in 1927 was 9,530.4 feet in length instead of 5,900.4 feet. *443
1. The trial court did not err in refusing to take further evidence before proceeding with the division of the accreted lands. The evidence taken in the first trial was sufficient to establish the necessary facts and to fully disclose the situation of the parties insofar as their right to share in the accreted lands was concerned. All that remained was to effect a proper division. The rights of the various parties to participate in the lands, and the method to be used in effecting the division, were fixed by the former opinion.
2. The fact that Grace Babcock did not file a cross-appeal on the first appeal of the cause did not operate to bar her right to participate in the division of the lands. The reversal as to the division of the lands was an entire reversal of that part of the judgment, and the interests of all parties were thereby affected. Grace Babcock was a defendant in error on the first appeal, and was permitted to adopt and join in the brief of other appealing parties whose situation was identical with hers. The plaintiffs in error cite Knox v. Cruel,
Where the judgment is not severable, or where the rights and interests of the parties are so intermingled or interwoven that reversal as to one would injuriously affect the rights of his co-parties, or where the error permeates the entire case, the court may reverse as to nonappealing parties. 4 C. J. 1206; 5 C.J.S. 1423; 3 Am. Jur. 693; Tate v. Goode,
In the present case the first judgment of the trial court, holding that those parties whose lands were south of Cache creek were not entitled to participate in the accreted land north of the creek, affected all parties so situated. It was analogous to a judgment for partition, which is not severable. Kyle v. Kyle,
3. The third contention of plaintiffs in error is well taken. The Merrymans owned fractional lot 3 of section 10, which was the most northerly tract of the lands involved in this action. The evidence at the first trial established that the Arkansas river in 1927 ran from the northwest to the southeast, being north and east of the land involved in this action. The trial court in its last judgment, instead of taking into consideration only the length of the southwest bank of the stream in 1927, included, in determining the length of such line, that part of the quarter section line of section 10 (3,630 feet in length) which was the north boundary line of the land which had accreted to lot 3 on the east by the shifting of the river. Said line was not a part of the southwest bank of the river in 1927, and ran almost at right angles thereto. The length of the southwest bank of the river in 1927, insofar as it bounded the land involved in this action, was found and adjudged to be 5,900.4 feet. The trial court, in applying the formula prescribed by this court in the first opinion, added to the 5,900.4 feet of new river bank the 3,630 feet of boundary line which was not river bank, making a total of 9,530.4. The trial court found that the old bank, existing at the time of the allotment of the lands of the *444 parties here involved, was 10,730.94 feet in length, and that figure is not now in dispute.
The owner of each parcel is entitled to the same proportion of the new river bank as he originally had of the old bank. Johnston v. Jones, 1 Black, 209,
Reversed, with instructions to proceed in conformity with the directions herein given.
WELCH, C. J., CORN, V. C. J., and RILEY, GIBSON, DAVISON, and ARNOLD, JJ., concur. OSBORN and BAYLESS, JJ., absent.