Burris v. Straughn

1923 OK 465, 232 P. 394, 107 Okla. 299, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1923
Docket14147
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1923 OK 465 (Burris v. Straughn) 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
Burris v. Straughn, 1923 OK 465, 232 P. 394, 107 Okla. 299, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 57 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.

The plaintiffs in error commenced this action for the cancellation of guardian’s deeds to certain lands located in Love county. R. H. Haynes was the duly appointed guardian of Bessie Hensley, Robert Lee Burris, and Douglass H. J. Burris, and on December 30, 1912, as such guardian, filed a petition in the county court of Love county for authority to sell a portion of the land belonging to each of his wards. In this petition the entire allotment of .each minoir was separately described and it was alleged that it was necessary to sell the surplus allotment of said minors for the purpose of improving the homestead and educating the said minors. The petition also contained averments showing condition of the estates and the annual amount chargeable „ aigainst such estates for educe/ i< n and maintenance. The probate proceedings following the filing of this petition, and up to and including the confirmation of the sale made by the guardian, were regular in all respects, except in the decree of sale, notice of sale, return of sale and confirmation, the land belonging to the three minors was described together1, no separation of the lands belonging to each minor being made. In the decree of sale, the court, after finding the necessity for the sale, ordered that the surplus allotments of the three minors, without designating the land belonging to each minor, should be sold in separate tracts or in one parcel as the guardian deemed best. The return of sale recited that the guardian sold the real estate, describing the lands comprising the surplus allotments of the three minors, to E. B. Conrad and R. H. Thompson for $3,775. The sale thus made was confirmed by the county court on the 7th day of April, 1913, and guardian’s deed executed April 8, 1913.

Plaintiffs contend that the above facts bring this case within the decision of this court in Jackson v. Carroll, 86 Okla. 230, 207 Pac. 735. Apparently the only difference between this case and Jackson v. Carroll, supra, is that in that case the petition did not separately describe the lands belonging to each minor and did not separately state the portion of land belonging to each minor that the guardian desired to sell; but described the three allotments together and asked for an order to sell them as the land of the three minors. In the instant case, the petition separately described the land belonging to each minor and the portion which the guardian desired to sell *301 belonging to each minor, and was therefore sufficient to give the court jurisdiction.

Before relief can be granted to the plaintiffs in this proceeding, it must appear that the decree in the county court is void. Before it can be said that the proceedings in the instant case were void, it must appear that the county court was without jurisdiction of the person or subject-matter, or without jurisdiction of the particular matter which the order or judgment professed to decide. As to this third jurisdictional requisite, Mr. Freeman in his work on Judgments, section 120, said:

“It is very easy to conceive of judgments which, though entered in cases over which the court had undoubted jurisdiction, are void because they decided some question which it had no power to decide, or granted some relief which it had no power to grant, and yet it will probably not be possible to formulate any test by which to .unerringly determine whether the action of the court is in similar eases void, or erroneous only.”

The author itlien divides the oajstjs in which judgments have been held void for lack of jurisdiction on this ground into two general classes, viz.: (1) Where the court grants relief which under no circumstances it has authority to grant, and (2) where the court undertakes to decide a question not involved in the suit.

From an examination of the case of Jackson v. Carroll, supra, we are unable to determine the particular jurisdictional question upon which the case was decided, but' the following language is used in the body of the opinion:

“We care not whether the order was joint or not. or whether the notice, was in accordance with the law, and advertised lands of each individual separately, the sale Ayas not a legal side, and vas such a sale ¡is a court could no' legalize' by an order of confirmation. All this appears upon the faeej of 'the return, upon the face of the deed, and upon the face of the order of confirmation, and it shows that the interests of these minors werq merged and hotch-potehed, and no one could determine as to what thq interest, of each minor was.”

AVe gather from the above language that it was intended to hold that the sale in that case was void because the order confirming the sale as it was made in such case was an order which the court under no circumstances had authority to make, and this because “no one could determine as to what the interest of each minor wasand that it appeared from the face of the proceedings that the land of one minor was being sold for the use and benefit of the others.

If it can be said to appear brum the face of the record In the case at bar that tlie land of one minor was sold for the use and benefit of the other minors, the order would be in excess of jurisdiction and the sale would be void; but we must bear in mind that the county court was a court of general probate jurisdiction and it should not be held to have lost jurisdiction or to have exceeded its jurisdiction unless it clearly appears that it entered a decree not authorized by law.

In Pyeatt v. Estus, 72 Okla. 160, 179 Pac. 42, this court said:

“The petition as well as the order of the court, is more oi less general and vague, tending to show a necessity for such sale, yet we have held that the petition was sufficient to giye (he court jurisdiction, and, after having obtained jurisdiction, the court should not be held to have lost jurisdiction, unless it clearly appears that it entered a decree not authorized under the facts and not warranted by law.”

In Cornett v. Williams, 20 Wall. (U. S.) 226, the court said:

"That jurisdiction having attached in the original ease, everything done within the power of that jurisdiction, when collaterally questioned, is to be held conclusive of the rights of the parties, unless impeached for fraud.”

Dot us examine the decree of sale and ascertain whether it clearly appears that the order made in the county court was authorized by law. This order provided for the sale of lands of each of the minors, and to that extent could not be held to be in excess of jurisdiction of the court, although the lands were not. separately described. If the court had . jurisdiction to make the order for the sale of the separate lands of each of the minors, the fact that the lands were described together instead of separately would not, in any manner, invalidate the sale. If the decree in the instant case is invalid, it is because the guardian was authorized to sell the same in one tract instead of selling the land belonging to each minor separately. Does it necessarily follow that this order required the guardian to sell the land in such manner as to result in the sale of the land of one minor for the benefit of the other? If so, the order was in excess of jurisdiction and void.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lowden v. Excise Board of Jefferson County
1938 OK 226 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)
Latimer v. Vanderslice
1936 OK 554 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Ambrose v. Province
1930 OK 566 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Hunter v. Wittier
1926 OK 885 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Coker v. Howard
1926 OK 858 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Cummings v. Inman
1926 OK 472 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Tiger v. Wildman
1926 OK 158 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Askew v. Terrell
1925 OK 746 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Luker v. Masterson
1925 OK 218 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Vann v. Adkins
1925 OK 197 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 465, 232 P. 394, 107 Okla. 299, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burris-v-straughn-okla-1923.