Cales v. Smith

1934 OK 141, 69 P.2d 384, 180 Okla. 315, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 660
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1937
DocketNo. 24934.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1934 OK 141 (Cales v. Smith) 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
Cales v. Smith, 1934 OK 141, 69 P.2d 384, 180 Okla. 315, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 660 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

Esther Berry Smith, a full-blood Osage Indian citizen, died intestate without ever having received a certificate of competency, leaving surviving as her heirs at law her husband, Jeff Smith, and three minor children, to wit, George W. Smith, John Smith, and Elizabeth Smith, said children being unallotted minor Osage Indians of the half blood.

An administrator was appointed and the restricted funds in the hands of the Indian Agency belonging to said Esther Berry Smith, amounting to more than $100,000, were turned over to the administrator under the apparent mistaken belief that her death removed the restrictions.

Nannie J. Smith, the grandmother of said minors, was appointed guardian, and their portion of said estate was turned over to her after she had made a satisfactory bond upon which J, O. Cales and A. D. Krow appear as sureties. The funds were deposited in the First Commerce Bank of Ralston, Okla., in which bank said sureties were the principal stockholders. A portion of these deposits was evidenced by certificates of time deposits issued by said bank.

From this point this opinion will consider the questions involved in which the minor John Smith alone is concerned. John Smith, the minor, having reached his majority, the guardian filed her final account and report as such guardian. She presented as a part of the assets of the minor’s estate three certificates of deposit in the First Commerce Bank of Ralston, totaling $9,360. Exceptions were filed to this report, by both Jeff Smith, the father, who was subsequently appointed guardian of his son after he had been adjudged an incompetent, and the Superintendent of the Osage Agency, upon the grounds that these certificates of deposit represented investment of the funds without authorization or approval of the county court, and upon hearing, the county court sustained the objections and surcharged said guardian with the amount represented by these certificates of deposit. Eleven days later the bondsmen filed their motion for a new trial, which was in due course overruled.

From this order of the county court an appeal was taken by the bondsmen above, to the district court, where the judgment and findings of the county court were sustained. Upon order of the county court suit was brought in the district court of Osage county against the former guardian and the sureties on her bond, and from a judgment, in favor of the plaintiff this appeal is prosecuted.

It appears from the findings of fact of the trial court that when Cales and Krow signed the guardian’s bond they had an agreement with the guardian that she was not to withdraw the funds from the bank unless Cales, one of the sureties, countersigned the check, and that in obedience to this arrangement she deposited in this hank with a capital stock of only $10,000 approximately $60,000 in guardian’s funds, and that, trouble finally resulted when the bank *317 became insolvent and was ultimately taken over by tbe State Banking Department.

Plaintiffs in error first urge that tbe action was not brought by tbe real party in interest. Tbe moneys turned over to this guardian were trust funds which had accumulated in the hands of the Indian Agency over and above the regular quarterly payments made to Esther Berry Smith, and it is contended by plaintiffs in error that inasmuch as the federal government had supervision of and control over the funds in question, it is the real party in interest and the cause cannot be prosecuted without it becoming a party to the action.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error have favored us with very exhaustive, interesting, and illuminating briefs upon this question, and give particular emphasis to the case of Hickey v. U. S., 64 Fed. (2d) 628. After a careful study and analysis of these briefs and authorities cited, however, we are unable to agree with learned counsel. We must not lose sight of the fact that this guardian’s bond is a statutory bond,-and the rights and duties of the parties are defined by its terms. It is an obligation on the part of the guardian that she will account to the wards for the funds belonging to them and entrusted to her as such guardian, and a guaranty on behalf of the sureties that the minor’s money will be forthcoming at the proper time.

The plaintiffs in error claim that the money in question did not belong to the minor. To be sure the government of the United States, in its zeal to safeguard the interests of the Indian, exercised certain supervisory control over his estate, but at no time has the government claimed any right to or ownership in these funds except in so far as it may be necessary to properly safeguard them. We do not hold that the government could not prosecute the action to properly safeguard and protect, the Indian’s estate, but we do hold that the guardian is not precluded from doing so merely because the government is not made a party.

This court had a question similar in point of law before it in Moore v. Leigh-Head & Co., 48 Okla. 228, 232, 149 P. 1129, 1130, and in that case we said:

“The provision common in. all statutes that the action must be prosecuted by the real party in interest has been the subject of much judicial consideration, and the courts universally hold that the object of this provision of the statute is to make it possible always for the defendant to be able to present his defense to the action, should he have a defense or set-off against the real party in interest; but in an action, as in the case at bar, the defendant has no concern in the question as to who the real party in interest is, except where he has pleaded a defense which turns upon points involving the personal conduct of the real party, and a failure to state any defense against the alleged real parties prevents the defendants from complaining that the plaintiffs are not the real parties in interest.”

It is next contended by plaintiffs in error that the certificates of deposit were legal investments of the minor’s funds. It appears that the guardian filed her annual reports regularly with the county court, after they had been submitted to the Superintendent of the Indian Agency and by him approved, and that these annual reports and accounts were also approved and allowed by' the county court. It is contended that, since these reports and accounts were approved by both the Indian Agency and the county court, the guardian was relieved and exonerated from further responsibility or liability upon the same items appearing in her final account, and report.

On the other hand, it is contended by defendant in error that these certificates of deposit amounted, in fact, to a mere loan to the bank without security and that the certificates of deposit were, in fact, mere unsecured notes of the bank. Section 1459, O. S. 1931, limits the authority of the guardian to invest his ward’s funds to the security therein named. This section reads as follows:

“The money belonging to estates of minors and incompetent persons, subject to the jurisdiction of the county court can only be invested in real estate and first mortgages upon real property which do not exceed fifty (50%) per cent, of the actual value of the property, United States bonds, state bonds, and bonds of any .municipal corporation and in building and loan stock of Oklahoma building and loan associations.”

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Related

Methvin v. Methvin
1942 OK 176 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)
Davis v. Baum
1941 OK 400 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
Cales v. Smith
1937 OK 140 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Smith v. Smith
1937 OK 148 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 141, 69 P.2d 384, 180 Okla. 315, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cales-v-smith-okla-1937.