Eaves v. Mullen

1910 OK 54, 107 P. 433, 25 Okla. 679, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 321
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1910
Docket933
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 1910 OK 54 (Eaves v. Mullen) 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
Eaves v. Mullen, 1910 OK 54, 107 P. 433, 25 Okla. 679, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 321 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

(after stating the facts as above). The first contention of counsel for plaintiff in error is that the county court of Carter county was without jurisdiction to entertain the petition of the guardian, F. A. Bonner, for an order of sale of his wards’ interest in the land in controversy. He concedes that the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory had jurisdiction to appoint F. A. Bonner guardian of the minors. His wards then resided, and now reside, in what was formerly the Southern District of the Indian Territory. It is not contended that any change of residence has been made by any act of the wards, their guardian, or their parents, but that by the Constitution the territory formerly constituting the Southern District of the Indian Territory was divided into 10 or more counties, and that the place of residence of the minors is not within Carter county, but is within Johnston county. The statute extended in force in the state by the enabling act and the *684 Schedule to the Constitution provides that the county court, when it appears necessary or convenient, may appoint guardians for the persons and the estates, or both of them, of minors who have no guardian legally appointed by deed or will, and who are inhabitants or residents of the county. Section 1814 of Wilson’s Revised & Annotated Statutes of 1903 of Oklahoma. Similar statutes' conferring jurisdiction to appoint guardians exist in nearly all the states of the Union. Such statutes appear to have been uniformly held to condition the exercise of the power to appoint guardians upon the residence of the minors within the county over which the territorial jurisdiction of the court extends, and the appointment of a guardian by the court of a county of which the minor is not a resident is void, and may be so treated in a collateral proceeding. Woerner, Am. Law of Guardianship, p. 80. But the question here presented is not one of jurisdiction to appoint, a guardian, but is: “What became the status of the guardianship proceeding of F. A. Bonner upon admission of the state into the Union?” This proceeding had been instituted in a court having jurisdiction to entertain same, and was there pending when the state was admitted. When Congress came to provide for the admission of Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory as one state, it undertook, as has been the general custom of that body since the admission of Florida as a state, to provide for the disposition of those cases pending in the territorial courts at the time the state would be admitted. Section 19 of the enabling act (Act June 16, 1906, c. 3335, 34 Stat. 277) provides:

“That the courts of original jurisdiction of such state shall be deemed to be the successor of all courts of original jurisdiction of said territories, and as such, shall take and retain custody of all records, dockets, journals, and files of such courts, except in causes transferred therefrom as herein provided. * * *”

Section 3 of an act of Congress approved March 4, 190?, generally known as the “Amendment to the Enabling Act” (34 Stat. 1286, c. 2911), provides that:

*685 “All causes, proceedings and matters, civil or criminal, pending in the district courts of Oklahoma Territory, or in the United States courts of Indian Territory, at.the time said territories become a state, not transferred to the United States Circuit or District Courts in the state of Oklahoma, shall be proceeded with, held, and determined by the courts of said state, the successors of said district courts of the territory of Oklahoma and the United States Courts in the Indian Territory. * * *”

Other sections of the enabling act and of the amendment thereto provide for the removal of all cases of a federal character to the United States Circuit and the District Courts established in the state, but no provision was made for the removal of probate causes to said courts, and it was evidently intended that such cases pending at the time of the admission of the slate should be received by the courts of the state for final disposition. But the question arises as to whether it was intended by the foregoing sections of the enabling act and of the amendment thereto to designate a particular court of original jurisdiction into which each cause pending in the courts of the territories should pass and be finally determined.

We think that no such meaning can be attributed to these sections. Congress, at the time of the enactment of the enabling act, did not know, and could not anticipate, what courts of original jurisdiction would be established within 'the state. At the time two different judicial systems existed within the territory to be embraced within the proposed state. Congress did not, and could not, know which of these systems, or whether either of them, would be adopted and continued by the Constitution, and, in fact, neither of said systems was adopted or continued by the Constitution, but a system different from either of the system's theretofore obtaining has been established. It could not be foretold whether the framers of the Constitution^ of the proposed state would make the jurisdiction of .the courts having original probate jurisdiction in guardianship proceedings depend upon the residence of the minor or upon the location of his estate. These provisions of the enabling act were not self-enforcing. Subse *686 quent legislation either by way of constitutional provision or acts of the legislative body of the state was necessary to carry these provisions into effect. In Benner et al. v. Porter, 9 How. 235, 13 L. Ed. 119, the court said:

“On the admission of a territorial government into the Union as a state, the concurrence of both the federal and state governments would seem to be required in the transfer of the records in cases of appropriate state jurisdiction from the old to the new government. An act of Congress would be incapable of passing them under the state jurisdiction, as would be an act of the Legislature of the state to take the records out of the custody of the federal government. Both should concur.”

Speaking further upon this question, the court said:

“We have said that the assent of Congress was essential to the authorized transfer of the records of the territorial courts, in suits pending at the time of the .change of government, to the custody of state tribunals. It is proper to add, to avoid misconstruction, that we do not mean thereby to imply or express any opinion on the question whether or not, without such assent, the state judicatures would acquire jurisdiction. That is altogether a different question. And, besides, the acts of Congress that have been passed, in several instances, on the admission of a state, providing for the transfer of the federal causes to the District Court, as in the case of the admission of Florida, already referred to, and saying nothing at the time in respect to those belonging to state authority, may very well imply an assent to the transfer of them by the state' to the appropriate tribunal. Even the omission on the part of Congress to interfere at all in the matter may be subject to a like implication. And a subsequent assent would doubtless'operate upon past acts of transfer by the state authority.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 54, 107 P. 433, 25 Okla. 679, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaves-v-mullen-okla-1910.