Anderson v. Miller

324 P.2d 856
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1958
Docket37488
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 324 P.2d 856 (Anderson v. Miller) 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
Anderson v. Miller, 324 P.2d 856 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

This is an appeal by Charles E. Anderson, administrator of the estate of Arne N. Anderson, deceased, from a judgment of the District Court of Kay County, which involved an appeal by Mabel Miller, Anna E. Ryan and Ethel Anderson Shane, hereinafter referred to as defendants in error, from an order or judgment of the County Court of Kay County, allowing certain attorney fees in connection with the estate of said deceased, and charging a portion of such fees against the shares and amounts awarded defendants in error as heirs of said deceased.

Plaintiff in error filed his final account and petition for distribution of the estate of Arne N. Anderson, deceased, on April 6, 1955, and an order was entered fixing the date of the hearing thereon as May 2, 1955. Notice of the hearing was given by publication and by notice mailed to the heirs at law of the deceased, as required by statute. The final account and petition for distribution, as filed, itemized a number of expenses including some expenses of the attorneys involved, and recited that after paying the same there would be the sum of $94,210.19 in the hands of the administrator ready for distribution to the heirs at law of the deceased. On April 26, six days before the hearing set for May 2, the attorneys involved filed an application for attorneys’ fees and reimbursement for expenses. Such application recited the coil-tracts the attorneys had with most of the heirs of the deceased and a résumé of the work they had done. As to the three defendants in error, with whom the attorneys had no contract, the application recites:

“Applicants further show to the court that during the course of this long and tedious litigation, which has involved considerable professional skill and arduous labor by applicants from June 1948 until March, 1955, certain persons who now appear to be heirs at law of Arne N. Anderson, deceased, to-wit: * * *. Mabel Miller* Anna E. Ryan and Ethel Shane, had refused or neglected to enter into this, litigation or render any assistance therein, while the result of these labors and the efforts of clients of applicants, and the moneys which they have advanced, have resulted in procuring for them a large and substantial legacy, which would otherwise not have been theirs; * *

The application then prays for an attorney fee of 50%. It does not appear that any order setting such application for hearing *859 was entered or that any notice was given of the filing of such application or of the hearing thereof. On the date of the hearing, May 2, 1955, the three defendants in error were not present at the hearing, and some time thereafter learned that the county court, in its decree of distribution of the estate, had awarded each of them as their respective distributive shares of the •estate, the sum of $2,871.40, less attorney fees of $1,435.70 to be deducted from each such share, the attorney fees allowed being 50% of the whole amount awarded said heirs. On May 26, 1955, notice of appeal from the order of distribution was filed by each of said defendants in error. Pursuant to the notice, an appeal was lodged in the district court, wherein a motion was filed by the administrator to dismiss the appeal from the county court on the ground that the notice of appeal was not filed within the time fixed by statute. The motion to dismiss was overruled and there was a trial in the district court on the issue relating to the allowance of the attorney fees as against the share and estate of the defendants in error, who contended that they were not subject to the payment of any attorney fees.

The hearing in the district court resulted in a judgment modifying the order of the county court with respect to attorney fees by reducing the amount charged as attorney fees against the three defendants in error from 50% of the amount awarded them to 25% of their distributive shares. The administrator filed a motion for new trial and, on denial thereof, has perfected this appeal.

As his first assignment of error plaintiff in error alleges that the trial court erred in refusing to dismiss the purported appeal of the defendants in error from the county court for lack of jurisdiction. Plaintiff in error asserts that the notice of appeal filed by the defendants in error in the county court was not filed within the time prescribed by law, and that the district court was without jurisdiction in the matter. 58 O.S.1951 sec. 724 provides:

“An appeal by a party, or by a person interested who was present at the hearing, must be taken within ten days, and an appeal by a person interested, who was not a party and not present at the hearing, within thirty days from the date of the judgment, decree or order appealed from.”

.Plaintiff in error contends that defendants in error were parties to the proceeding in the county court on the hearing on the final account and distribution of the estate, and as such were limited to the ten day period of appeal fixed by the quoted statute. Defendants in error assert that they were persons interested, that they were not parties and not present at the hearing, and, therefore, were entitled to appeal from the order of distribution within thirty days, as specified in the latter portion of the quoted statute.

Plaintiff in error concedes that he has been unable to find any authority whatsoever upon the question presented, either from this or any other jurisdiction, but asserts that defendants in error were parties to the proceeding on May 2, 1955, because they were named in the final account and petition for distribution as known heirs of the deceased, and notice of the hearing on the final account was mailed to them as required by statute, and that such was the only method by which they could be made parties to the proceeding. We do not agree.

The terms “party” and “parties” have many different meanings and definitions, depending generally upon the context in which such terms are used. The following definitions are found in 39 Am.Jur. 851, Parties, sec. 4:

“The term 'parties’ is a technical word which has a precise meaning in legal parlance. It designates the opposing litigants in a judicial proceeding —the persons seeking to establish a right and those upon whom it is sought to impose a corresponding duty or liability; it includes all the persons by whom or against whom a suit, either *860 at law or in equity, is brought. In actions at law and in the civil actions under the code practice which in many states is substituted for the various common law forms of action and for actions in equity, the party complaining is known as the plaintiff, and the adverse party as the defendant. * * * Although in its broader respects the term ‘parties’ includes all who are directly interested in the subject matter of suit or some part thereof, and who have a right to make defense, control the proceedings, examine and cross-examine witnesses, and appeal from the judgment rendered, it is ordinarily used to designate only those who are named as such in the record and are properly served with process or enter their appearance. When a statute speaks of a party it refers to a party to the record, a plaintiff or a defendant, and generally those who are not named as such in the record are not properly regarded as parties and may not avail themselves of rights given to parties.

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Bluebook (online)
324 P.2d 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-miller-okla-1958.