Brewer v. Dodson

1916 OK 701, 159 P. 329, 60 Okla. 81, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1276
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 20, 1916
Docket7559
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1916 OK 701 (Brewer v. Dodson) 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
Brewer v. Dodson, 1916 OK 701, 159 P. 329, 60 Okla. 81, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1276 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BLEAKMORE, 0.

On August 20, 1914, Emmett Brewer, by Alice Goodman, his next friend, commenced this action against J. S. Dodson and the American Surety Company. The parties occupy the same relative position here, and are referred to, as they appeared in the trial court.

By the petition it is alleged, in substance, that plaintiff is a minor Creek freedman, enrolled as of 4 years of age in September, 1898; that there was allotted .to him 160 acres of land, and upon the death of his father and sister he inherited 320 acres of other lands; that on April 25, 1910, the de-iendant Dodson was appointed guardian of plaintiff’s estate, and as such executed two bonds for $1.500 and $5,000, respectively, with the American Surety Company as surety; that on September 2, 1910, by virtue of proper proceedings in the county court of Muskogee county, his guardian sold his allotted lands for the sum of $6,519, and on October 5, 1910, in the same manner, sold his inherited lands for $2'700; that three clays thereafter defendant Dodson, together with his stepfather, A. M. Goodman, induced plaintiff, then a minor as shown by the records of the Commission of the Five Civilized Tribes, and in fact 16 years old, to petition the superior court of Muskogee county to confer upon him the rights of majority, and in said petition falsely represent that he had been a resident of Muskogee county for more than one year, and was then 19 years of age; that plaintiff, who had theretofore worn knee pants, was dressed in long trousers on the occasion of his appearance before that court, which, on October 15, 1910, rendered judgment, conferring upon him the rights of majority concerning contracts; that on the same day defendant Dodson filed in the county court of Muskogee county his report as guardian, showing a balance of $8.082.74 due the plaintiff, his ward; that two days later at the instance of Dodson, plaintiff, without receiving any part thereof, signed and delivered a receipt, acknowledging the payment to him of said $8,082.74; that thereafter, on January 23, 1911. the county court of Muskogee county, relying upon the truthfulness of said receipt showing that plaintiff had been paid said amount in full, and upon faith of the judgment of the superior court, regarding the same as valid and binding, made and entered an order approving said report and discharging Dodson as guardian, and releasing the American Surety Company from further liability upon his bond; that thereafter Dodson gave the plaintiff a check for $3,750, which was deposited by his stepfather, Goodman, and Dodson, in a bank to the credit of his mother, who subsequently withdrew and dissipated the same. There was a prayer for cancellation of the receipt, *82 vacation of the order approving the final report of said guardian, and discharging him and releasing his surety, for judgment against Dodson in the sum of $8,082.74, and against the American Surety Company for $6,500. Defendants demurred to the petition on the grounds: (1) Failure to state a cause of action; (2) that the cause of action alleged was barred by the statute of limitations; and (31 that the district court was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

In determining the principal questions presented by the record we may consider: First, the jurisdiction of the trial court, which involves the nature of the attack upon the order of the county court; second, the effect of the judgment of the superior court, conferring the rights of majority upon the plaintiff; and, third, the statute of limitations.

It is urged that the order of the county court, approving the report of the guardian, and discharging him and releasing the surety upon his bond',1 could only be vacated in a proper proceeding for (he purpose in that court, and that the district court is therefore without jurisdiction to grant the relief sought. We are unable to agree with this proposition. In this ease fraud is charged on the part of the defendant Dodson. It is alleged, in effect, that, having converted the whole estate of his ward, consisting of 480 acres of allotted and inherited lands, into money, between April 25 and October 5, 1910, in conjunction with plaintiff’s stepfather, Dodson knowingly influenced the plaintiff, an ignorant negro boy of 16, in short trousers, to falsely 'represent his age and residence to a court, in a petition praying the removal of his disabilities as a minor; that he procured for plaintiff his first long trousers, to be worn upon the occasion of the hearing of said petition, ostensibly to deceive the court in regard to his age by his appearance, and on the very day the judgment of emancipation was procured as a result of such falsehood and deception, filed in the county court a report, showing final settlement of his guardianship account and receipt of his ward for more than $8,000, which, in fact, had never been paid to him, and later consummated his scheme to exploit the estate by obtaining from that court the approval of such-account, his discharge as guardian, and the release of his surety, by means of such false receipt, and the judgment procured by fraud upon the jurisdiction of another court.

It is clear that the judgment of the superior court, and the order of the countv court, based upon falsehood, fraud, and chicanery, induced and participated in by the defendant Dodson, were not procured on behalf of the plaintiff or in his interest, but. on the contrary, were intended to, and will if permitted to stand, denude him of his estate and leave him penniless, the procedure designed by the law for his protection being employed to rob him' and profit his guardian. Tt is in such instances, where intimate trust relations are violated and advantage taken of ignorance, dependence, and helplessness, that speedy equitable remedies are peculiarly appropriate ; and where, as a means of accomplishing such unconscionable purpose, fraud is practiced in invoking the jurisdiction of another tribunal, the district court may properly exercise its powers in equity under the Code to relieve against the wrong by setting aside the judgment of such tribunal, which would not have been rendered in the absence of fraud, or may refuse to give effect thereto. In Brown et al. v. Trent et al., 36 Okla. 239,. 128 Pac. 895, this court said:

“Fraud vitiates everything founded upon it, and when the fraud is established, no court will give effect to a judgment so procured. In one sense, it is not a judgment at all. Grantham v. Kennedy, 91 N. C. 148. The presumption is that the judgment would not have been rendered if the court rendering it had not been imposed upon, and the presumption applies with equal weight to the judgment of -the highest and lowest court.”

In Bridges v. Rea et al. (not yet officially reported), 166 Pac. 416, a suit in ejectment and to set aside, for fraud in their procurement, certain proceedings in the county court, culminating in the sale of plaintiff’s land by her guardian, it was said by Mr. Justice Turner, speaking for the court:

“It will not do to say that this is a collateral attack, and that the proceedings of the county court, which show a sale for cash, cannot be impeached by evidence aliunde, as we held in Hathaway v. Hoffman [reported in 53 Okla., at page 72, 153 Pac. 184]. This for the reason that this is not a collateral attack, but a direct attack, alleging fraud in the procurement of the proceedings. As to whether this is a direct or collateral attack was correctly decided and put at rest in Brown et al. v. Trent et al., 36 Okla. 239 [128 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 701, 159 P. 329, 60 Okla. 81, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-dodson-okla-1916.