Burton v. Colley

1925 OK 768, 242 P. 185, 113 Okla. 265, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 980
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 1925
Docket14841
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1925 OK 768 (Burton v. Colley) 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
Burton v. Colley, 1925 OK 768, 242 P. 185, 113 Okla. 265, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 980 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

NICHOLSON, C. J.

This is an acción in ejectment, commenced in the district court of Love county by plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, against the defendants in error, as defendants below, to recover the possession of certain lands 'situated in Love county, of which the plaintiff claimed to be the owner by inheritance from her deceased mother and sister.'

The defendants answered, pleading title in themselves by virtue of a guardian’s sale, duly conducted in the county court of Le-Flore county, and attached to their answer, as exhibits, copies of the entire probate proceedings had in said court, including Ihe deed of Solomon Daney, as guardian of the plaintiff, to one W. B. Dennis, and also pleaded mesne conveyances showing the title to said lands to be vested in them, and by way of cross-petition prayed that their title be quieted. The plaintiff replied, averring that the purported conveyances set out in said answer .were void for the reason that the county court of LeFlore county had no jurisdiction of the estate of the plaintiff, and that Solomon Daney was never properly appointed, or the legal guardian of her estate.

Upon the issues thus framed, a trial was had, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants in accordance with the prayer of their answer and cross-petition, from which judgment the plaintiff has appealed. Y

It appears from the record that one J. J. Eaves was, on the 8th day of November. 1905, duly appointed guardian for the plaintiff by the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory, and that said guardianship proceeding was pending in said court at Marietta upon the admission of the state into the Union, and was by order of the district court of Love county duly transferred to the county court of said county, and, while this guardianship was still pending, the county court of LeFlore county, on August 10, 1908, appointed the plaintiff’s father, Solomon Daney, her guardian, the plaintiff residing at 'that time in LeFlore county. Solomon Daney, acting as her guardian, filed in the county court of LeFlore county his petition for authority to sell the lands here involved, *266 which sale was ordered, was made and con-, firmed and guardian’s deed executed-and delivered. The plaintiff, after reaching her majority, seeks to recover the lands thus sold, contending that the county court of Le-Flore county had no jurisdiction to appoint a guardian for her in 1908, because J. J. Eaves was her legal guardian at that time; that such guardianship was still in existence and pending in the county court of Love county, and that the county court of Love county having jurisdiction over her guardianship, the jurisdiction of every other county court in the state to appoint a guardian for her was excluded.

This appeal presents for determination the following questions: (1) Did the jurisdiction acquired by the county court of Love county, as the successor to the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory, exclude the jurisdiction of the county court of LeFlore county, the county in which the plaintiff was then domiciled, to appoint a guardian for her? (2) The records of the county court of LeFlore county showing the appointment of Solomon Daney, in 1908, to be, in all respects, regular, and all proceedings being apparently valid, can the plaintiff recover the lands sold by her LeFlore county guardian, on the order of the county court of that county, to a bona fide purchaser?

In MaHarry v. Eatman, 29 Okla. 46, 116 Pac. 935, this court held that the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory had authority to appoint a guardian or curator of an estate of a minor, located in that district, although the domicile of the minor was in the Central District, and a guardian so appointed, when qualified, had authority to execute a valid lease on the minor’s land. See Eaves v. Mullen, 25 Okla. 679, 107 Pac. 443.

By the provisions of section 19 of the Enabling Act, and sections 1 and 23 of the Schedule of the Constitution, the Eaves guardianship survived the admission of the state into the Union, and passed into the county court of Love county, as the successor of the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory; Eaves v. Mullen, supra; Burdett v. Burdett, 26 Okla. 416, 109 Pac. 922; MaHarry v. Eatman, supra; Scott v. McGirth, 41 Okla. 520, 139 Pac. 519; Crosbie v. Brewer, 68 Okla. 16, 173 Pac. 441; DeWalt v. Cline, 35 Okla. 197, 128 Pac. 121. Thérefore, the county court of Love county had jurisdictioii of the guardianship of the estate of the plaintiff, and so long as this guardianship was pending, the jurisdiction of every other county court in the state to appoint a guardian for the plaintiff was excluded. DeWalt v. Cline, supra; Crosbie v. Brewer, supra; Baird v. England, 85 Okla. 276, 205 Pac. 1098; State ex rel. Monahawee v. Hazelwood, 81 Okla. 69, 196 Pac. 937; Parmenter v. Rowe, 87 Okla. 158, 200 Pac. 683.

The county court acquiring jurisdiction of an Indian Territory guardiauship, as successor to the United States Court in the Indian Territory, exercises a jurisdiction clearly ^ defined by the aforesaid constitutional provisions, and the Legislature recognized this jurisdiction, and beginning with the first session after statehood, enacted laws providing for the transfer of probate proceeding from one county court to another. (Sess. Laws 1907-8, pp. 205-212; Sess. Laws 1910, p. 37; secs. 6196-98, Rev. Laws 1910.)

If upon the creation of counties in that part of the state formerly comprising the Indian Territory, the domicile of the ward was in a county other than that to which his guardianship proceedings passed by virtue of the aforesaid constitutional provisions, the proper procedure was to transfer such proceeding to the county of his domicile, as provided by Sess. Laws 1907-S, supra, or by appropriate action of the court to which such proceeding passed, terminate that guardianship before jurisdiction of another court is sought. To permit a minor, by merely removing his domicile from one county to another, to thereby oust the court iu which the guardianship was pending of jurisdiction and thereby vest jurisdiction in another county court to appoint a guardian, or to permit the parties to ignore entirely the jurisdiction acquired by one couri and vest jurisdiction in another court, would introduce into the administration of the estates of minors and incompetents in this state an intolerable condition of confusion with all the woes incident to two courts of concurrent jurisdiction undertaking to administer the estate at the same time. Such a condition would be intolerable. So long as the guardianship is pending in one county court, no other county court is at liberty to interfere with its jurisdiction. As was said by Justice Cooley in Maclean v. Speed, 52 Mich. 257:

“The principle is essential to a proper and orderly administration of the laws; and, while its observance might be required on the grounds of judicial comity and courtesy, it does not rest upon such consideration exclusively, but is enforced to prevent unseemly, expensive and dangerous conflicts of jurisdiction and of process. If interference may come from one side, it may cune *267 from the other also, and what is begun may be reciprocated indefinitely.”

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 768, 242 P. 185, 113 Okla. 265, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-colley-okla-1925.