Carter Oil Co. v. Fleming

1926 OK 208, 245 P. 833, 117 Okla. 39, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
Docket15661
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1926 OK 208 (Carter Oil Co. v. Fleming) 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
Carter Oil Co. v. Fleming, 1926 OK 208, 245 P. 833, 117 Okla. 39, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 715 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

JARMAN, C.

This was an action by Christina E. Fleming, nee Bennett, a duly enrolled Choctaw Indian of one-sixteenth degree of Indian blood, to cancel two oil and gas leases upon a 50-acre tract of land located in Carter county, which was acquired by proceeds derived through a guardianship sale of her allotment. Thomas Bennett, as guardian of the plaintiff, Christina E. Bennett, a minor, sold, through the county court of Carter county, on May 15, 1916, an oil and gas lease on said 50 acres of land, and pursuant to said sale and the order of court confirming same, the guardian executed said oil and gas, lease to S. W. Tyer for a term of five years, and as long thereafter as gas or oil should be produced in paying quantities. W. T. Bennett succeeded Thomas Bennett as guardian of said minor, and on June 15, 1919, sold and executed to I. M. Roberts, through the county court of Carter county, an oil and gas lease on 100 acres of land belonging to said minor, including the 50-acre tract theretofore leased to S. W. Tyer, for a term of five years, and as long thereafter as oil or gas should be produced in paying quantities, for' a consideration of $2,500.

On July 19, 1919, the minor, by her guardian, W. T. Bennett, joined by I. M. Roberts, purchaser of the latter lease, brought an action in the district court of Carter county against Tyer for the cancellation of his lease on the ground that the rental, due May 15, 1919, had not been paid as required by the terms of his lease. On November 13, 1919, W. T. Bennett, guardian, filed an application in the county court to vacate the order confirming the sale of the lease to Roberts on the ground that the full consideration had not been paid, alleging that $1,-250, one-half of the consideration, had been placed in escrow in the bank to be paid conditionally upon the cancellation of the Tyer lease.

On December 12, 1919, a hearing was had in the county court of the proceeding to vacate the order confirming the Roberts lease, and the matter was taken under advisement until December 23, 1919, when the court made a finding in favor of the defendant Roberts, and ordered that the $1,250, the one-half of the bid made by Roberts, and which had been tendered in court in that proceeding, be turned over to and accepted by the guardian, which was done.

On January 2, 1920, the guardian filed a petition in the county court for authority to compromise the proceeding to vacate the order confirming the ‘ sale of the lease to Roberts, and also the action brought in the district court by the guardian and Roberts to cancel the Tyer lease, and alleged that an agreement had been reached whereby the second lease, the Roberts lease, could be sold for as much as $75,000, and that the holders of the two leases had agreed to pay to the guardian for the use and benefit of the ward, one-third of such sums as could be obtained by the lessees for said leases.

About February 19, 1920, the Carter Oil Company, defendant, became interested and made an agreement to purchase both the Tyer lease and the Roberts lease for a consideration of $92,500, and the proposition was submitted to the county court in a petition filed by the guardian on February 21, 1920, and said court made an order approving the transaction and authorized the guardian to dismiss the action in the district court and the proceeding in the county court upon payment to him for the use and benefit of his ward one-third of said sum. Pursuant to said agreement and to the orders of the county court, the Carter Oil Company paid to the guardian one-third of the consideration, $92,500, and one-third thereof to each of the holders of said leases and took assignments of both leases. The guardian dismissed the actions in the county and dis *40 trict courts. Upon the consummation of this transaction, the Garter Oil Company, at the ■request of the guardian, filed of record a release of the Tyer lease, in order that there would be no confusion about which lease the Garter Oil Company would operate under, and for the further reason that the terms of the Roberts lease were more advantageous to the minor.

The Carter Oil Company entered' upon the lands in question and has been producing oil therefrom in paying quantities since April 9, 1921.

The plaintiff was married, prior to her majority, to W. C. Fleming, who succeeded W. T. Bennett as her guardian. The plaintiff arrived at her majority on April 9', 1923, and on April 30, 1923, this action was instituted against the Carter Oil Company, I. M. Roberts, and S. W. Tyer, and thereafter, L. O. Addie and others were made parties defendant. Upon a trial, the court rendered judgment canceling both oil and gas leases in their entirety, from which the defendant Carter Oil Company has appealed.

'There are numerous assignments of error urged, all of which are ably and exhaustively briefed and discussed by counsel for both sides; but, in our view of the case, it is necessary to consider only one proposition, to wit: Did the county court of Carter county have jurisdiction to authorize the compromise or settlement of the controversies relative to the Tyer and Roberts leases?

The county court, coextensively with the county, has jurisdiction in all probate matters and shall transact all business appertaining to the estates of minors. Sections 12 and 13, art. 7, Constitution. Unless otherwise ordered, a guardian appointed by the county court has power over the person and property of the ward. Section 6586, C. S. 1921. The county court, making the appointment, has exclusive jurisdiction of the management as well as the disposition of the property of his ward. Section 6583, C. S. 1921. The clear intention of those provisions of the statute and of the Constitution is to give to the county court and to the guardian a very wide discretion in dealing with the estate of a ward, and their acts in exercising such discretion, in the absence of fraud or of a statute providing otherwise, will not be disturbed when it is exercised to the advantage and best interest of the ward. This principle is illustrated by the holding of the court in the case of Cabin Valley Min. Co. v. Hall, 53 Okla. 760, 155 Pac. 570, where the question was involved as to the jurisdiction of the county court to authorize the making of a valid oil and gas lease beyond the date of the majority of the ward, and in disposing of the question the court said:

“There is no limit in this section (sec. 1458, C. S. 1921), as to the terms of the lease nor any limitation as to the time for which the same may run; it being left to the judgment of the court in the exercise of sound discretion, to determine what is best for the interest of the minor under the circumstances.”

OCn recognition of this principle, this court, in the case of Wiley, Guardian, v. Gypsy Oil Co., 115 Okla. 120, 242 Pac. 189, in an opinion filed October 13, 1925, used the following language:

“It would seem that under the constitutional provisions above referred to and the decisions of this court, the guardian and the county court having jurisdiction of the probate case have substantially the same power to deal with the ward’s estate as the ward would have if of adult age.”

We have no statute restricting the power of guardians to compromise, nor th.i jurisdiction of the county court exercising probate jurisdiction to approve compromises or settlements made by the guardian on behalf of his ward.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 208, 245 P. 833, 117 Okla. 39, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-co-v-fleming-okla-1926.