Ballinger v. Sarkeys

1961 OK 59, 360 P.2d 515, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 14, 1961
Docket38831
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1961 OK 59 (Ballinger v. Sarkeys) 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
Ballinger v. Sarkeys, 1961 OK 59, 360 P.2d 515, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 337 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

WELCH, Justice.

This action was filed by the plaintiffs against the defendants, seeking to quiet title and as an incident thereto cancel a sheriff’s deed and court decree approving same, and oust the defendant S. J. Sarkeys from his title and possession to certain real property held by him by virtue of the sheriff’s deed.

From the judgment denying cancellation and refusing to oust defendant Sarkeys from possession, the plaintiffs have appealed.

The sole error alleged by plaintiffs is that the judgment is contrary to the evidence and contrary to law.

To sustain the burden of proof the plaintiffs offered in evidence an alleged quitclaim deed from Thelma Leora McCoy, dated July 21, 1954, and the original transcript of proceedings in the county court of Cleveland County, in the estate of Olin Wood Kennedy, deceased. This transcript contained an authenticated copy of the foreign will, an order admitting copy of will to ancillary probate in Cleveland County, Oklahoma, and the issuance of letters to Thelma Leora McCoy, dated February 19, 1945. Thelma Leora McCoy, being a nonresident of the State, appointed her attorney of Norman, Oklahoma, as service agent.

These records further reveal that on June 15, 1948, the Oklahoma Tax Commission filed in the probate case a notice of taxes due, and claim of lien, and that on September 2, 1953, there was an order of probate court reciting that same was upon application of the executrix; finding that the application disclosed that the real estate involved herein, which comprised all of the assets of said estate in the State of Oklahoma, had been sold to satisfy estate taxes, and that the sale had been confirmed by the District Court of Cleveland County, Oklahoma, on July 20, 1953. The order further recited that after the • satisfaction of the tax lien there was a balance of $741.92 in the hands of the clerk of the court ready for distribution, and ordered distribution of the money, a part of which was ordered paid to Thelma Leora McCoy. As further evidence the plaintiff offered the original papers in District Court Case No. 16,112, Oklahoma Tax Commission v. Estate of Olin Wood Kennedy, which consisted of a tax warrant and alias tax warrant, notice of sheriff’s sale, sheriff’s return of sale with publication notice attached thereto, motion to confirm sale and order confirming, and an order for disposal of the proceeds of said sale, showing this latter order was entered upon application of Thelma Leora McCoy, Executrix.

It was on this proof plaintiffs rested their case.

Plaintiffs, under their first proposition, contend that the sheriff’s deed is void for the reason the tax warrant was issued without notice to Thelma Leora McCoy personally, or as Executrix, and therefore the property was sold without due process of law.

Many authorities are cited by plaintiffs in support of the well established rule of law that, no judgment of the court *517 is due process of law if rendered without jurisdiction in the court, or without notice to the party. We agree that this rule of law is generally accepted and followed by the courts. However, we are also committed to the rule that where the plaintiffs’ action is brought for the purpose of cancelling instruments and quieting title, the burden of making out a case justifying the relief prayed for is upon the plaintiff; and where, in such case, judgment is rendered for the defendants, in the absence of judicial error, the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal, unless an examination of the record discloses that the judgment is against the weight of the evidence. Walden v. Potts, 97 Okl. 24, 222 P. 549, and Crawford v. Hemmingway, 116 Okl. 192, 244 P. 198.

The only evidence offered by plaintiff in support of this contention was the records of the court proceedings which reveal that on June 15, 1948, the Oklahoma Tax Commission filed in the probate case a notice of taxes due and claim of lien, and that all other notices were given as required by statute. However, the records did not reveal whether the Executrix had been given personal notice as required by Title 68, O.S. 1951 § 1476. This is the notice plaintiff contends should have been given, but was not.

From the records it is apparent that the Oklahoma Tax Commission proceeded to enforce its lien under the provisions of Title 68, Sec. 1477, which does not provide for any notice other than thirty (30) days notice by publication, which was given. However, we must observe that Section 1477 provides in part as follows:

“If any tax, imposed by state tax law, or any portion of said tax, be not paid before same becomes delinquent, the Tax Commission may immediately issue a warrant under its official seal, * * ”

It appears to us that it was the intent of the Legislature to authorize the Tax Commission to proceed under Section 1477, in event the tax had not been paid after imposed and the proper parties notified as provided for in the previous section of the Tax Code. We must presume this to have been done.

The general rule is that in the absence of evidence to the contrary, public officers will be presumed to have properly performed their duties and not to have acted illegally, but regularly and in a lawful manner, when regulations, decisions or orders of administrative officers are challenged in court, and the burden of proving otherwise is upon the party complaining. Ludwig v. Yancey, Okl., 318 P.2d 450. We do not know of any statute requiring records to reveal proof of personal service of notice in order to give court jurisdiction in proceedings of this nature.

The records do reveal that the Oklahoma Tax Commission filed in the probate case a notice of taxes due and claim of lien on June 15, 1948.

Although the records in evidence do not reveal that notice was actually served upon the executrix in person, or upon her service agent in person, they do reveal that at least sufficient knowledge was had by the service agent and attorney for the executrix so as to give her an adequate opportunity to be heard before a judicial tribunal or board of assessment. This fact is further verified by her appearance through her attorney at various stages of the proceedings without objection to said taxes or sale to satisfy the same, as revealed by the records in evidence.

In the case of In re Thomas’ Estate, 192 Okl. 409, 136 P.2d 929, we held:

“In respect to taxation, the ‘due process’ provision of the Constitution is satisfied, if at some stage of the proceeding, either before or after assessment, the party assessed has notice thereof and an adequate opportunity to be heard either before a judicial tribunal or a board of assessment.”

In our opinion the evidence of the plaintiffs is insufficient to show lack of due process herein.

*518 Plaintiffs’ title can be no stronger than that of Thelma Leora McCoy, his grantor, át the time she executed the quitclaim deed, which was July 21, 19S4. At the time plaintiff, Ballinger, acquired this deed, the property had already been sold, sale confirmed, a sheriff’s deed executed in favor of defendant and filed of record, the money paid for’said deed distributed under order of the court upon petition of executrix through her attorney, and ancillary probate proceedings apparently abandoned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 59, 360 P.2d 515, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballinger-v-sarkeys-okla-1961.