Atkinson v. King

1923 OK 804, 219 P. 914, 93 Okla. 37, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 312
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 23, 1923
Docket12134
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1923 OK 804 (Atkinson v. King) 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
Atkinson v. King, 1923 OK 804, 219 P. 914, 93 Okla. 37, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 312 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

JA'BiMAN, C.

Virginia Louise Atkinson, a minor, by her next friend, Mattie Atkinson, commenced this action in the district court of Grady county to recover certain real estate, and for the canr cellation of deeds and mortgages held by the defendants. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff brings error.

Virginia Louise Atkinson, plaintiff, is a minor allottee of the Chickasaw Nation and had allotted to her, as a member of the tribe of Chickasaw Indians, 218 acres of land. On June 18, 1913, C. E. Atkinson, the father of said plaintiff, entered into a written contract with the Yates & McClain Realty Company, a corporation of Colorado Springs, Colorado, whereby the said C. E. Atkinson agreed to exchange the *38 lands allotted to the plaintiff, and also the allotments of Thos. Jones Atkinson, Catherine Cain Atkinson, and Susan B. Atkinson, brother and sisters respectively of the plaintiff, for certain real property belonging to the said Yates & McClain Realty Company in Colorado. On June 24, 1912, C. B. Atkinson, pursuant to said agreement, filed a petition in, the county court of Grady county for the appointment of himself as guardian of the plaintiff and her minor brother and sisters above named, and alleged as grounds for the appointment of himself as guardian:

“That it is necesjsiary that a guardian be appointed for said minors * * * to take qare of, manage and control and sell and exchange or improve said real estate as may be deemed beneficial to the interests oif said minors, and invest the proceeds from said, sale if the same be ordered sold.”

After notice being given and a hearing being had, said C. E. Atkinson was appointed guardian of the persons and estates of said minors on June 29, 4912, and fixed the amount of guardian’s bond for the four minors at $2,000, which bond was duly excuted and approved by the county judge and filed on July 1, 1912, and on the same day letters of guardianship were issued to said C. E. Atkinson as guardian of said minors. On July 29, 1912, said C. E. Af-kimson, guardian, filed a petition for the sale of the allotments belonging to the plaintiff and her minor brother and sisters, and a total valuation of all four of the minor’s allotments, as set up by the guardian in said petition, is $39,000, and grounds alleged in; said petition for' the sale of said lands are:

“Your petitioner would further show that all of the lands belonging to the four minors hereinbefore named should toe sold and the proceeds derived therefrom put out at the interest or invested in productive stocks or other real estate as the court may deem right and proper to direct, for the reason that the expense of talcing care of said lands as hereinbefore set forth amounts to as much as or more than the income derived therefrom, the said property can be sold well and advantageously at this time, and the profits derived therefrom can toe put out at the interest on good security at the rate of 8% per annum, and your petitioner verily believes that the proceeds derived from said lands when put out at interest will produce twice the income that can be derived from the lands and premises belonging to said minors, and hereinbefore described, and your pe-tioner alleges that the expense connected with said estates will toe greatly reduced and that said sale will be toeneficial to and for the best interests of said minors.”

A waiver of notice of hearing said; petition to sell the lands of said minors was filed by the next of kin and persons interested in the estates of said minors, and a decree of sale was made toy the county court on July 29, 1912, authorizing and directing the guardian to sell said lands for the following reasons, set out in said decree of sale, to wit:

“The court finds that the sale of the real estate belonging to said minors mentioned in said petition and hereinafter described is necessary and will toe toeneficial to and for the best interest of -said wards, in order that the proceeds derived from the sale of said lands may toe put out at interest. And the court further finds that said proceeds can be loaned upon good security for a fair rate of interest and that the proceeds derived from said sale of said lands when put out at interest will produce considerably more than the rents and profits derived from said lands.”

The amount of the additional bond required to be given toy the guardian, is $1,000 for the four minors, which bond was given by the guardian and' approved by the county judge and filed on August 31, 1912. After notice of sale of the lands belonging to said minors was given, a return of sale was made and filed by the guardian, on September 7, 1912, in which it was shown that the lands belonging to ' the plaintiff, Virginia Louise Atkinson, a minor, were sold in separate parcels to John W. Yates and Jesse O. McClain for the aggregate sum of $6,14S cash, and that said purchasers were the highest bidders for said land, and that the amounts received are not disproportionate to the value of said land, and that a greater sum could not be had therefor, and that the same were sold at public auction as required by the decree of sale and as ■ provided by the notice of sale • of said land. Thereafter, upon due notice toeing given, the county court made and entered an order confirming said sale and a guardian’s deed to said lands was duly executed by C. E. Atkinson to the purchasers, John W. Yates and Jesse O. McClain. The said John W. Yates and Jesse O. McClain, purchasers at the guardian sale, are members of, and. interested in the Yates & McClain Realty Company; and all the proceedings had by C. E. Atkinson in the county court for the sale of the lands belonging to the said minors were in conformity with the contract entered into by C. E. Atkinson with the Yates & McClain Realty Company for the exchange of the lands of said *39 minors, as above mentioned; no cash consideration was paid by John W. Tates and Jesse 0. McClain for the lands of these minors, but the real estate mentioned in the contract was. exchanged therefor. On October 19, 1912, John W. Yates and Jesse O. McClain executed a mortgage to defendant Deming Investment Company for $2,500, and on November 22, 1912, the Deming Investment Company sold said mortgage and assigned the same to defendant Hillsboro Bridge Guaranty Savings Bank; on September 24, 1913, John W. Yates and Jesse O. McClain sold said lands and conveyed the same by warranty deed to defendant, C. C. Hemming, and on October 11, 1915, C. C. Hemming sold said land and conveyed same by warranty deed to defendant, W. C. King, and on October 30, 1915, said W. C. King ■ executed a mortgage to C. C. Hemming on said land to secure a series of notes aggregating $1,150 . C. C. Hemming having died, his e lecutors, O. D. Hemming, W. D. Hemming, Lucy R. Hemming, and R. S. Browmees, were made defendants.

The plaintiff alleged that by reason of the fraud practiced by the guardian and the purchasers at the guardian sale to dispose of these lands, that said guardian sale is void anid conveyed no title to the purchaser's, and that the irregularities appearing in the probate proceedings were such that the defendants, in dealing with said land, hadi constructive notice of the fraud practiced upon the plaintiff by the guardian and purchasers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 804, 219 P. 914, 93 Okla. 37, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-king-okla-1923.