Drum v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.

1942 OK 31, 116 P.2d 715, 189 Okla. 307, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1941
DocketNo. 27988.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1942 OK 31 (Drum v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.) 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
Drum v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 1942 OK 31, 116 P.2d 715, 189 Okla. 307, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 224 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This action is similar in nature to cause entitled Ruby Webb Wilson v. L. M. Duncan and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 188 Okla. 456, 110 P. 2d 596. Here, Charles Drum, another Osage Indian, seeks to recover the amount of certain funds which he claims were wrongfully disbursed from his so-called “restricted” income and personal property by his former guardian. The guardian, J. W. *308 McCool, having died several years prior to the filing of this action on the 21st day of May, 1936, his executrix was joined with the former surety on his guardian’s bond as parties defendant therein. After the trial court had sustained several successive demurrers to Drum’s petition and the various amendments thereto, the latter finally refused to plead further and judgment was entered dismissing the action. Thereafter, said plaintiff perfected this appeal. As the guardian’s executrix has filed no appeal brief, in our further reference to the parties as they appeared in the trial court the word “defendant” will refer only to the surety company, except when a more specific designation appears in connection therewith.

As in the Wilson Case, supra, plaintiff’s pleadings reveal that the guardian’s final account was approved, he was discharged, and the surety company exonerated from liability on his bond by decree of the county court of Osage county which, in this instance, was entered November 24, 1926, or almost ten years before the commencement of the present action in the district court of said county. Here, too, the defendant surety company relies upon said decree as res adjudicata of all of the questions sought to be raised by the plaintiff’s pleadings herein, and insists that since no surcharge appears to have ever been entered against McCool in the guardianship proceedings, plaintiff cannot maintain this action, citing Drum v. Citizens Trust Co., 184 Okla. 228, 86 P. 2d 308, and the authorities therein cited.

In an effort to avoid the operation of the principles cited in support of the trial court’s ruling on the demurrers, plaintiff calls our attention to the fact that his pleadings contain an attack upon the validity of the county court’s decree of November 24, 1926. His counsel cite allegations of his pleadings to the effect that the disbursements complained of as wrongful were all a part of the funds restricted by the Acts of Congress of April 18, 1912 (37 St. L. 86), and February 27, 1925 (43 St. L. 1008), and were not approved by the Secretary of the Interior or Superintendent of the Osage Agency as is required by said acts. One of the propositions presented in his brief is that this lack of approval rendered the expenditures in question beyond the jurisdiction of the county court to approve or allow, and that consequently its decree purporting to do so is void. It is unnecessary for us to determine the validity of such a decree under such circumstances for the reasons stated in the Wilson Case. (See the 1st, 2nd, and 5th paragraphs of the syllabus thereof.) While it is true that in this case the plaintiff alleges that some of the guardian’s disbursements were neither approved by the county court, nor the proper official of the Osage Agency, nor Secretary of the Interior, and he also alleges that the various orders entered by the county court with reference to the matter of disbursement were not approved by the Secretary of the Interior, still he does not charge that said proceedings and final decree of said court were void upon their face. We are aware of no rule or regulation possessing the authority of law which requires the orders of the county court in such matters to have the approval of any of the above - mentioned officials endorsed thereon, although we are cognizant of the provision of section 1 of the Act of Congress of February 27, 1925, supra, stating that “All payments to legal guardians of Osage Indians shall be expended subject to the joint approval in writing of the court and the Superintendent of the Osage Agency.” In accordance with the principles adhered to in the Wilson Case, a further discussion of the plaintiff’s theory that the county court’s decree is no bar to his action because of his allegations that the disbursements therein allowed had never been approved by the proper officials of the Osage Agency or Department of the Interior is unnecessary until it is determined whether or not the facts relied upon by the plaintiff constitute a proper ground for the vacation of said decree in this action. Before directing our attention to the portion of the briefs dealing with this question, however, another one of the *309 plaintiff’s three propositions should be noticed. It is that “matters not actually embraced in a final report of a guardian and therefore not presented to and not determined by the court” at the hearing thereon “are not concluded” by the decree approving said report. In connection with the proposition plaintiff’s counsel has thus stated, they refer us to the following allegations of his amended petition to wit:

“. . . Plaintiff further alleges that said (John) J. W. McCool as the legal guardian of plaintiff Charles Drum, then incompetent, lawfully, rightfully and legally received money belonging to the estate of said Charles Drum, incompetent, the sum of $302,653.70 as shown by his guardianship reports and accounts; that of said sum disbursed only the sum of $277,329.08 as shown by his guardianship reports and accounts, leaving a balance unaccounted for in his guardianship reports and accounts the sum of $25,324.62.”

In support of their argument concerning these matters, counsel quote a portion of the opinion in Dunleavy v. Mayfield, 56 Okla. 470, 155 P. 1145, wherein this court cited the rule that a county court’s order approving the final report and settlement of a guardian is not conclusive as “to matters not actually or necessarily embraced in the report and determined by such order”; and held that such an order “is not an adjudication of the guardian’s negligence in failing to collect the assets of his ward’s estate, unless that matter is covered by the final report approved.” In our opinion, those expressions do not uphold the plaintiff’s contention in this case. Of course, the question of a guardian’s negligence in failing to collect the assets of his ward’s estate is a matter neither “necessarily,” nor in most cases “actually,” before the court at the hearing of a guardian’s final report, but his accountability and liability for portions of his ward’s estate shown by his reports to have actually been received by him (as McCool’s reports are alleged to have shown) are matters that are necessarily before the court, and thus are presumed to have been determined at such hearing unless it affirmatively appears that they were excluded. Though a sum of money or item of property is not accounted for in a guardian’s report,, still, if said report shows it to have been received into the possession of the guardian, it cannot be said that the sum or item and its whereabouts, as well as the guardian’s accountability and liability therefor, are matters not embraced within the report, nor presented to the court for determination; nor do allegations of such a character outweigh the presumption above mentioned or effectively challenge the scope or conclusiveness of such an adjudication.

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1945 OK 63 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1945)
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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 31, 116 P.2d 715, 189 Okla. 307, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drum-v-aetna-casualty-surety-co-okla-1941.