Arnold v. Willis

1924 OK 1142, 232 P. 15, 105 Okla. 172, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1924
Docket13911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1142 (Arnold v. Willis) 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
Arnold v. Willis, 1924 OK 1142, 232 P. 15, 105 Okla. 172, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 506 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

LOGSDON, C.

Three propositions are presented and argued by respondent for a reversal of this case. The first and second propositions are so related that they may properly be considered and discussed together. In substance these contentions are that chapter 25, Sess. Laws 1919, is unconstitutional and void, but that if it should be held that this act is constitutional, yet it must be held that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction in adjudging that respondent has no interest in the estate of John Lick, deceased, its jurisdiction being limited to a determination as to who are heirs.

The sole authority cited and relied on to sustain these contentions in the recent case of Homer v. Lester et al., 95 Okla. 284, 219 Pac. 392. A broad distinction exists between the Homer Case and the instant case, and the question of the controlling force of that opinion over this case can be determined only after that distinction is recognized.

In the Homer Case no appeal was taken from the decree determining heirship, and that decree was relied upon to establish the rights and title of the determined heirs in am action of ejectment brought against persons in possession claiming record title from others who claimed to be heirs at the time of such conveyances. The defendants in that action, the record claimants, and who were in possession and had been for a number of years, attacked the validity of the decree on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to render a decree binding on them for the reason that they made no claim as heirs, but were purchasers. In the instant case the appeal is direct from the decree determining heirship and is brought by one claiming to be. sole heir. That this dis *174 tinction between tbe two cases is correctly drawn is shown by the following language from the body of that opinion at page 286:

“The only question tor determination on this' appeal is whether or not the trial court erred in excluding the judgments of the county court and the district court in the heirship proceeding as conclusive evidence that plaintiff was the sole and only heir of Thomas J. Taylor, deceased. If the heir-ship judgment was admissible in evidence and conclusive, then plaintiff is entitled to recover the land, as defendants claim title only through deeds from other persons claiming 'to be the heirs of Thomas J. Taylor, unless the p¡Lea of statute-of limitations can be sustained in defendant’s favor.”

In the instant case the only issue presented to the trial court for decision was: Who are the heirs of John Lick, deceased? This issue was joined by the allegations of the petition and the answer and cross-petition of respondent. This issue alone was determined by the court. No other matter is mentioned or determined in the decree than the rights of those claiming to be heirs. No person but respondent, who claimed to be sole heir, is here complaining of that decree. That portion of Senate Bill No. 60 (Act of April 4. 1919), which was declared in the Homer Case, supra, to violate section 12 of art. 7, Constitution, is not involved in this proceeding, because it is not sought by this decree 'to bind anyone except those claiming to be heirs. The nature of the rélief sought is shown by the following allegation of the petition:

“That 'this proceeding is instituted in pursuance of the laws of the state of Oklahoma, and of the Act of Congress of June 14, 1918, and is brought for the purpose of determining the heirs of John Lick, deceased, and not for the purpose of administering upon the estate of said John Lick, deceased.”

And the prayer of the petition reads:

“Wherefore, petitioners pray that a hearing be granted on this petition, and that on consideration thereof a decree be rendered establishing the heirship and fixing their various interests in the lands herein described, and, on all other estate of the said John Lick, deceased.”

It is therefore obvious that only the procedural portions of Senate Bill No. 60 were invoked and relied on in this proceeding to afford the relief authorized by Act of Congress of June 14, 1918. These portions of Senate Bill No. 60 have been expressly sustained by this court as being within constitutional limitations. State ex rel. Miller et al. v. Huser, 76 Okla. 130, 184 Pac. 113.

Upon the other contention, that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction in decreeing that respondent has no interest in the estate of John Lick, deceased, it is sufficient to say that respondent made no claim of any kind or character to an interest in said estate except as sole heir of John Lick. The court found, as a fact, from the evidence and the rules of law which it applied thereto. that respondent is not an heir at law of John Lick, deceased. Cta this finding of fact the law precludes respondent from claiming any interest as an heir. If the trial court went beyond the issues .properly triable bp it in announcing this legal conclusion, such action is not a substantive part of tbe decree and cannot impair the jurisdiction of the court to determine the heirs, which it did. Not being a substantive part of the decree, but being separable and distinct from that Which is substantive viz., the determination of heirship, jurisdiction to determine which is express, the legal conclusion that respondent has no interest in the estate, if in excess of the court’s jurisdiction, may be disregarded, and is error of which respondent may not complain. In the second paragraph of the syllabus in Both et al. v. Union Nat. Bank of Bartlesville et al.. 58 Okla. 604, 160 Pac. 505, this court said:

“If a judgment or decree includes a decision of an independent and separable subject-matter or question within, and an independent and separable subject-matter or question beyond its jurisdiction, the same is valid as to the former and a mere nullity as to the latter, and is not void in toto.”

Respondent’s third proposition is that the trial court erred in not decreeing respondent to be the sole heir of John Lick, deceased.

Respondent is not related in any way by blood or marriage to deceased. Her claim to being his sole heir is based on the provisions of Carter’s Indian Territory Statutes, secs. 1842 and 1843, and on. a written instrument executed by John Lick June 23, 1903, by which he designated respondent as his heir at law “to take of my estate the share of a child at my death.” The two sections relied on read as follows: .

“Sec. 1842. When any person may desire to make any person his heir at law, it shall be lawful to do so by a declaration in writing in favor of such person, to be acknowledged before any judge, justice of the peace, clerk of any court, or before any court of record in this state.”
“■Sec. 1843. Before said declaration shall be of any force or effect, it shall be record *175 ed in the county where the said declarant may reside, or in the county where the person in whose favor such declaration is made may reside.”

These sections are a part of chapter 49, Mansfield’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, which, with other chapters thereof, was adopted and put in force in (the Indian Territory! by Act of Congress of May 2, 1890. The material portion of section 31 of that Act reads:

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Related

In re Micco's Estate
59 F. Supp. 434 (E.D. Oklahoma, 1945)
Sturm v. Dyer
1941 OK 91 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
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In Re Fulsom's Estate
1929 OK 554 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1929)
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Owens v. Howard
117 Okla. 151 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
In Re Jackson's Estate
1926 OK 146 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1142, 232 P. 15, 105 Okla. 172, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-willis-okla-1924.