Cochran v. Davis

1931 OK 581, 6 P.2d 685, 154 Okla. 103, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
Docket19816
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1931 OK 581 (Cochran v. Davis) 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
Cochran v. Davis, 1931 OK 581, 6 P.2d 685, 154 Okla. 103, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 497 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff on reaching majority to recover the value of land purported to have been sold for cash at guardian’s sale but alleged in the petition to have been exchanged by an agreement under which the guardian executed the deed upon payment of $500 of the confirmed purchase price and the execution of a conveyance of real estate taken at an agreed valuation of $2,600. Prior to the arrival of the minor at majority the grantee, the defendant, had conveyed the real estate, and the minor brought suit on the theory that he was entitled to the value of the property at the date of the alleged fraudulent conveyance made by the guardian.

Unfortunately the guardian died before the trial, and a real estate man who participated to some extent 'in the transactions died before the trial, and there was no witness with any appreciable knowledge of the transactions capable of testifying except the defendant. However, there was documentary evidence that in our opinion was decisive of the controversy.

The evidence shows that on July 14, 1913, an order of sale was made in the guardianship proceedings, authorizing a private sale of the minor’s real estate for cash. On August 16, 1913, an order was made confirming a reported sale made August 4, 1913, to the defendant, J. K. Davis, for $3,100 cash.

The guardian’s deed was dated August 21, 1913, and was .filed for record August 22, 1913, at 3 o’clock p. m. On August 22nd a petition was filed by the guardian reciting that he had on hand $3,10g as proceeds of sale and praying for leave to invest it in certain real estate described in the petition, which the petition alleged could be purchased for $2,600. An order was made not reciting its date, but reciting that it was made the day the petition was filed, and bearing a file mark of the same day, August 2Í2, 1913, 'in which it was recited that the judge had examined the real estate described; and the order authorized that it be purchased from the defendant, J. K. Davis, and that the guardian obtain a warranty deed of conveyance. The deed was introduced and 'bears date of August 22, 1913, but it was not filed for record until October 6, 1913, over a week after the last entry in the books of the bank upon which the purchaser and the guardian had drawn the checks that were involved in the transactions.

The alleged payment was in each case made by check, the purchaser at the guardian’s sale having given 'his check for the $3,100, and the guardian having given his check for $2,600 for the alleged investment. The defendant testified that he deposited his check with the county judge on the day he made his bid, or about that time, and he professed ignorance of what later happened to it. He testified to having offered to deposit the money and having been told by the county judge that he had investigated his standing and that his check would be all right. The guardian’s bank account appears in evidence and it shows that the $3,100 check was not credited to the account of the guardian until August 23, 1913, and there was shown charged against the guardian’s account on the same day, August 23, 1913, a $2,600 check of the guardian in favor of the defendant. Prior to the deposit of the $3,-100 check the guardian had no account in the bank as guardian. The $2,600 check was introduced in evidence and it bore the date of August 22, 1913, the day on which 'the order granting leave to make the investment was made and on which the guardian’s deed *105 was filed for record at three o’clock in the afternoon. While the $2,600 check given to the defendant by the guardian was credited to the defendant’s account August 23, 1913, the $3,100 was not charged against the defendant’s account on the day it was credited to the account of the guardian. On that day, August 23, 1913, the account of the defendant showed a credit of only $69.55, and on the next secular day, August 25, 1913, after crediting the $2,600 check and deducting checks charged against the account, the balance was $2,607.85. On the morning of August 26, 1913, the account showed a credit of $2,606.85, which included this $2,600 credit, and on that day the $3,100 check was charged against his account. The president of the bank testified that the 'bank would at any time have honored the defendant’s check for $3,100 regardless of the state of his account, and the defendant testified that he had arranged with the bank to honor the check.

(1) The plaintiff based his contention partly upon the ease of Perkins v. Middleton, 66 Okla. 1, 166 P. 1104, in which it was held that even though a sale for cash was confirmed and an order was made permitting an investment of part of the funds alleged to have been received in payment of the purchase price, notwithstanding the fact that the sale proceedings were regular on their face and the court also passed upon the advisability of such an investment of proceeds, if the record was made under an agreement that the purchaser was not to pay the purchase price 'in full but that the real estate of the ward would be conveyed for the real estate purported to be purchased hinder the investment order, such proceedings, though regular on their face, constitute a constructive fraud upon the estate of the ward. In that case there were sales to two parties for cash, which were confirmed. The bidders then defaulted, and the defendants agreed with the guardian that they would take the allotments sold at the price bid, if the guardian would purchase a hotel property. The bids amounted to $3,-050, and the hotel property was taken in at $2,200, the balance being paid partly to the guardian and partly on costs and fees. The defendants deeded the hotel property to the wards, and the guardian executed a deed to the bidders, who quitclaimed to the defendants. In the opinion, after quoting sections 6553 and 6554, Rev. Laws 1910, now sections 1466 and 1467, C. O. S. 1921, and then quoting sections 6555, 6556, and 6569, Rev. Laws 1910, same as sections 1468, 1469, and 1482, C. O. S. 1921, all of which were in effect at the time of the sale in the case we have under consideration, the court said:

“These last-quoted sections are relied upon by defendants as authorizing the transaction which took place in the instant case. We think, however, that they afford no authority for the exchange by the guardian, with or without the consent of the county court, of the property of the ward for other property, and that, construing all of our statutes governing the administration of estates of wards 'by guardians, no authority can be found for the sale of the ward’s property for anything but money. Section 6567, first quoted above, seems to be mandatory, and requires all sales to be made for cash unless made upon terms or deferred payments. Our statutes relative to the investment of funds of the ward, whether arising from sales of the ward’s property or otherwise, contemplate that the money to be invested shall be in the hands of the guardian at the time -such investment is made. It seems to us that there is ample reason why this should be the law. If the property of the ward be exposed for sale for cash, it is open to the bid of any one desiring to bid. If it be offered for exchange of other property the field for bidders is necessarily reduced and limited by the condition of the property offered to be sold and by the condition of the property sought in exchange. So it is as to funds for investment. If the guardian has money of the ward in his hands for investment, the entire field of investment, as limited by the statutes, is open to him.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 581, 6 P.2d 685, 154 Okla. 103, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-davis-okla-1931.