Cowan v. Hubbard

1915 OK 605, 151 P. 678, 50 Okla. 671, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 478
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 31, 1915
Docket4227
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1915 OK 605 (Cowan v. Hubbard) 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
Cowan v. Hubbard, 1915 OK 605, 151 P. 678, 50 Okla. 671, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 478 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

WILSON, C.

Plaintiff in error, by his guardian, as plaintiff, sued the defendants in. error, as defendants, in the trial court, to set aside and vacate fa *672 guardian’s sale of certain real estate belonging to him, and to' set aside a guardian’s deed purporting to convey said land to defendants, and to award the plaintiff judgment for the possession thereof. Several grounds for the relief prayed for were asisgned in plaintiff’s petition; but the only one relied on in his petition in error, and urged in his brief, is the alleged ground that said deed is absolutely void, for the reason that the guardian’s petition for the order of the county court to sell said land did not set out facts sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the court to make the order of sale, and for the further reason that the order of sale made pursuant thereto was absolutely void for want of jurisdiction of the court to make the same. On the trial of the action in the district court, the prayer of plaintiff's petition was denied, and the title of the defendant Charles J. Hubbard forever quieted as against the plaintiff.

The material parts of the petition of plaintiff’s former guardian to sell the lands involved in this action, and the one complained of as not being sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the county court to order the sale of land, reads as follows, omitting the description of the lands:

“Your petitioner further states that said Chas. Cow-an is a minor under the age of 14 years, and resides with your petitioner, who is his father, and that the said Chas. Cowan is a citizen of the Choctaw Nation or Tribe of Indians of less than one-half blood, and that there are no restrictions upon the alienation of his property. Your petitioner further states: That as such citizen there has been allotted to him as his allotment, of which he is the fee simple owner, the following lands, to wit: [Describing lands.] That Frances Cowan was the mother of said minor, and a citizen by blood of the Choctaw Nation, and the wife of your petitioner, and that she departed this life about the month of February, 1908, intestate, and *673 left surviving her your said petitioner, her husband, and said minor, Charles Cowan, and Myrtle Susie Cowan, the sister of the said Charles Cowan, and that she left no other heirs, her surviving, within the said degree of relationship. That as a portion of her allotment as such citizen the said Frances Cowan died seised and possessed of the following described lands, to wit: [Describing lands.] That the said Charles Cowan inherited and became the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the tracts of land last above described upon the death of his said mother, Frances Cowan, and that the said minor is not the owner of any other property, real or personal, except the lands above described, and that he is of scholastic age and should be placed in school.
“Your petitioner further states that said Frances Cowan, mother of said Charles Cowan, áforesaid, died of consumption, and that said disease is hereditary in the family, a number of her family having died of said disease, and that the said Charles Cowan is of a feeble structure and liable to become affected with said disease if kept in the climate where he now lives, and that it is necessary for the health and protection of said minor that he be removed to a more healthy climate, where he will be free from the natural causes which produce disease germs, and that his said lands above described can be sold for a reasonable price and will bring their value on the market, and that said lands should be sold and the proceeds invested in other real estate in a more healthy climate for the benefit of said minor, or in other revenue-bearing property for his benefit or his maintenance and education, and that a necessity now exists for the sale of said lands for said purposes. Your petitioner therefore prays the order of this court,” etc.

Upon the hearing of the petition the county court of Bryan county ordered a sale of the land by the guardian, and it was afterward sold to one of the defendants pursuant to said order or license. Was the petition sufficient *674 to confer jurisdiction on the court to make such order of sale, which would be good as against a collateral attack; this being a collateral attack on the validity of the order?

Section 5498 of Snyder’s Compiled Laws 1909 (sec. 6558, Rev. Laws 1910), provides.

“When the income of an estate under guardianship is not sufficient to maintain the ward and his family, or to maintain and educate the ward when a minor, his guardian may sell his real or personal estate for that purpose, upon obtaining an order therefor.”

. = Section 5499 (sec. 6554, Revi Laws 1910), provides:

■ “When it appears to the satisfaction of the court, upon the petition of the guardian, that for the benefit of his.;ward .his real estate, or some part thereof,- should be sold* and-.the proceeds thereof put out at interest, or invested in some productive stock, or in the improvement oy ^security of any other real estate of the ward, his guardian may sell ■ the same for such purpose, upon obtaining an offer therefor.”

Section’5502 (sec.'6557, Rev. Laws 1910), provides:

“To. obtain .an order for such sale, the guardian must present to the county court of the county in which he was appointed guardian, a verified petition therefor, setting forth the condition of the estate of his ward, and the facts and circumstances on which the petition is founded, tending to show the necessity or expediency of a sale.”

It is contended by the plaintiff that a substantial compliance with the provisions of the last-quoted section of the statute was necessary to confer jurisdiction on the court"to order the sale of the real'estate involved in this action, and that the guardian’s petition for such sale did not substantially comply with the provisions of said section, and that consequently the court was without jurisdiction to order the sale, and the sale was void, even as *675 against a collateral attack thereon. In Stockey v. Winstock, 43 Okla. 758, 144 Pac. 372, it was held that:

“The petition of a guardian to sell the real estate belonging to his ward must' state the ’condition of the estate, and facts' tending to show the expediency or necessity of such sale, in order to give the court jurisdiction to order the sale.”

And under that rule it is very doubtful if the allegations of the petition referred to were sufficient to warrant the sale when attacked directly by some proceeding provided by the statute for the express purpose of defeating it; but the action appealed from was a collateral attack on a judgment of a court having jurisdiction of the .person and to order the sale of real estate in guardianship matters, and the question for our decision is whether the proceedings were so utterly void as to be subject to an attack of this.kind. We think not. In A. & E. Ene. P. & P. vol. 10, p. 782, is the following statement of the law on the subject: • ,

“The authority to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 605, 151 P. 678, 50 Okla. 671, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-hubbard-okla-1915.