Buikema v. Wagner

178 Okla. 384
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1936
DocketNo. 25372
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 Okla. 384 (Buikema v. Wagner) 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
Buikema v. Wagner, 178 Okla. 384 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In 1894, Etta Wagner, who was then about 35 years of age, married F. E. Wagner and moved to Oklahoma. They homesteaded the southwest quarter (S. W. %) of section ten (10), township sixteen (16) north, range ten (10) east, which is referred to hereafter as Farm No. 1. The patent therefor was issued to F. E. Wagner.

Later, on May 29, 1903, Etta Wagner, as grantee, acquired by warranty deed the southwest quarter (S. W. 14) of section nine (9), township sixteen (16) north, range ten (10) east, which is referred to hereafter as Farm No. 2, for $3,200, paid from her separate estate. They were childness and lived through the years on Farm No. 1. On the 10th day of November, 1908, Etta Wagner opened an account ?.n the bank of Agra and maintained tho account continuously until her death. In July, 1925, she went to Chicago to visit her sister, suffered a stroke, and remained there until her death, which occurred February 18, 1926.

Administration proceedings were had upon her estate in the county court of Lincoln county. F. E. Wagner, her husband, was appointed and qualified as administrator on July 5, 1927. 1-Ie filed his final account February 23, 1933, in which he charged himself with Farm No. 2, the balance in the Etta Wagner account in the Bank of Agra amounting to $770.79, and income from Farm No. 2 in the nature of crops and oil rentals amounting to $2,054.44. He credited himself with items of expense in the nature of repairs, taxes, insurance, and maintenance on Farm No. 2, amounting to $1,490.49, the amount of a judgment recovered by a deceased sister of Etta Wagner of whom ihe appellant is the sole legatee, for the care of Etta Wagner in her last illness $605, funeral expense $473, attorney’s fee $25, court costs [386]*386advanced $10, showing a balance on hand ol' $221.74.

Gertrude Buikema, half sister of Etta Wagner, sole legatee of a deceased sister of Etta Wagner, being the nearest of kin of Etta Wagner, filed objections on the hearing of the final account which will be taken up hereafter. The county judge approved the final account, overruling the objections of Gertrude Buikema, decreeing Farm No. 2 and the income derived therefrom, totaling $2,054.44, and the sum of $74.10, condemnation money from a right of way thereon, to be assets of the separate estate of Etta Wagner to be distributed equally between F. E. Wagner and Gertrude Buikema, decreeing the bank balance of $770.79, the proceeds from the sale of government bonds amounting to $200, and one government- bond amounting to $100 to be property acquired by joint industry, and distributed the same to F. E. Wagner. The county judge also allowed the credits shown by the administrator in his final report, an attorney’s fee of $500, and an administrator’s fee of $228.75. Gertrude' Buikema appealed to the district court of Lincoln county, and that court affirmed the judgment of the county court. Gertrude Buikema appeals.

The first contention of the appellant is that the trial court erred in overruling her objections to the competency of the witness F. E. Wagner. She contends that his testimony was in respect to communications and transactions with his deceased wife and that he was, therefore, an incompetent witness under the provisions of section 271, O. S. 1931. A careful check of his testimony shows that it was confined entirely to transactions relating to Farm No. 2. The trial court sustained appellant’s contention that this Farm No. 2 was not property acquired by joint industry. The appeal of F. E. Wagner from this, judgment has been dismissed. Wagner v. Buikema, 168 Okla. 214, 32 P. (2d) 707. The question as to the manner of distribution of Farm No. 2 has become moot. Town of Covington et al. v. Coberly, 136 Okla. 20, 275 P. 1064. The error, if any, was harmless. Security National Bank of Oklahoma City v. Martin, 113 Okla. 295, 241 P. 812.

Appellant next contends that the trial court erred in overruling her motion to remove F. E. Wagner as administrator and appoint appellant as administratrix. She asserts that he individually claimed certain property which belonged to the estate and this adverse claim rendered Kim incompetent to remain as administrator. In administration proceedings it is the duty of the county court to see that, all the assets of the decedent are properly accounted for by the administrator. For that purpose, evi dence that property has not been accounted for is admissible in a hearing on the final account of the administrator, but a mere allegation or contention is not sufficient justification in itself to cause the removal or suspension of the administrator, and while the county court cannot try the title to real or personal property, it is within its jurisdiction to hear testimony on the question of whether title to the property claimed by the administrator in his individual capacity is vested in the estate of the decedent, and if it finds the contention groundless, it may settle the account and distribute the estate without removing the admitnilstrator. To hold otherwise would place it within the power of any heir, by making allegations without any merit to them, to bring about the removal of an administrator who had been faithful to his trust and to burden the estate with prosecuting groundless suits.

If, however, the county court determines that there are reasonable grounds to support, the contention that the administrator in his own right claims property which is vested in the estate, it is the duty of the county court to give the administrator an opportunity to account for this property and on his failure so to do, to remove or suspend him and appoint someone else who will prosecute an action for the recovery of the property in a proper court where a trial by jury can, if demanded, be obtained. In re Kelly’s Estate, 132 Okla. 21, 269 P. 282.

We shall next determine the contentions made by appellant as to the various items in the final accounting.

First Item. Etta Wagner and F. E. Wagner executed an oil and gas lease on Farm No. 2 on December 15, 1925, for a bonus of $1,600. This bonus was deposited by Orville Wagner, who styled himself the son of F. E. Wagner, in the account of F. E. Wagner in the Bank of Agra on January 21, 1926. This was some few weeks before the death of Etta Wagner. The record does not show that she, by word or action, agreed to this transaction. The trial court held that Farm No. 2 was not acquired by joint industry, but was the separate estate of Etta Wagner.

In Re Pierce’s Estate, 161 Okla. 94, 17 P. (2d) 411, the court said in the syllabus:

“Where a widower owns real estate, leased for gas with production thereon, and he [387]*387thereafter marries, the income received' from the gas produced on said land after his second marriage is not property acquired during coverture with said spouse, because said property was in- existence prior to said second marriage, and the second wife in no way aided in procuring said money.”

If income from an oil and gas lease is not properly acquired during coverture within the facts stated in the above case, it follows that a bonus from the sale of an oil and gas lease upon the wife’s separate estate is not property acquired by joint industry within the meaning of subdivision 2, section 1617, O. S. 1931. Since there is no proof that Etta Wagner, by word or deed, either made a gift of or; for a consideration transferred this $1,600 to F. E. Wagner, the con-, tention of the appellant should have been sustained. The trial court should have given P. E.

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178 Okla. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buikema-v-wagner-okla-1936.