Fish v. Deaver

1918 OK 646, 176 P. 251, 71 Okla. 177, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 910
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1918
Docket9472
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1918 OK 646 (Fish v. Deaver) 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
Fish v. Deaver, 1918 OK 646, 176 P. 251, 71 Okla. 177, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 910 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

SHARP, C. J.

The principal question presented for our consideration is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment of the trial court declaring Joseph P. Fish to *178 be an incompetent person, and in appointing a guardian of his pejrson and estate. The record of the proceedings had in the trial court is voluminous, and it would serve no useful purpose to set out at length even the substance) of the testimony of the many witnesses. Briefly, the proceedings to declare Eish an incompetent were had on the petition of Ira O. Deavejr, superintendent of the Quapaw Indian agency at Wyandotte. At the trial Deaver, E. O. Fitzgerald,. United States probate attorney, and J. P. McNaughton testified on behalf of the petitioner, while 11 witnesses gave testimony as to the competency of Fish to manage his property. It appears that Joseph’s father, Leander J. Fish, though a Shawnee Indian by blood, because of his adoption as a Quapaw was enrolled as a Quapaw citizen and allotted land in the Quapaw Indian reservation. His son Joseph, though of Indian blood, was not enrolled by thej government either as a Shawnee or a Quapaw Indian. Leander J. Fish died February 21, 1914, and his allotment, because of the discovery of lead and zinc ore thereon, has sine^ his death become very valuable. During his lifetime Leander J. Fish executed to one W. M-. Smith a mineral lease on allotment which provid^l for the payment of a 5 per cent, royalty. The validity of the lease or at least of a portion thereof, being in controversy, Josejph P. Fish and wife on February 7, 1916, executed to Smith a new lease for a term of seven yejars, or for the unexpired period covered by the original lease, and which also provided for the payment of a 5 per cent, royalty. Subsequent to the making- of the original lease Smith had .subleased a part of the dqhiised premises to the Church-Mabon Mining Company, who had expended in development work thcjreon a sum exceeding $50,000. The lands sublet to the mining company were the lands included in the lease made by Joseph after he had attained his majority. Whdn the first lease was made the Fish allotment was, in mining vernacular, “wild-cat” territory. Due to subsequent development work, large deposits of rich lead and zinc ore were discovered on the lands included in the 40-acre tract covered by the new lease and at the time of the trial in the district court the value of this lease (known as th,e Montreal Mines) was said to be not lejss than $1,000,000. Leander J. Fish, it appears, was an improvident person, and at the time of his death was heavily in debt and his estate more or less incumbered. Smith had on numerous occasions given Leander J. Fish financial aid, and after his dejath assisted Joseph in a financial way. As a result of these benefactions, and the fact that Smith, through his sublessee, had caused large sums <.f money to be expended in the exploration and development of the lands for minerals, Joseph, to remove any existing doubt as to the validity of the lease executed by his father, gave the lease of February 7, 1916. In the situation of the property on the latter date, it commanded better than a 5 per cent, royalty; in fact, Joseph had refused to make th^ witness McNaughton a .lease providing for a 10 per cent royalty and a cash bonus of $1,000. It is due principally to the fact that young Fish respected the lease madej by his father under the circumstance detailed that it is claimed he is an incompetent person and mentally unfitted to manage his property.

We have examined the evidence in the record with care, and, notwithstanding th^ judgment of the trial court, have reached the conclusion that Joseph P. Fish, instead of being mentally incompetent to manage his property, is a young man fy* "1’ove the average in intellect, travel, experience, and business acumen. It appears that Joseph received a common-school education at Wyan-dotte and Washington, D. C., where, with his father, he spent a large part of his boyhood days. While in school he sold papers aftq'r school hours, 'drove a delivery wagon, worked in a department store, ran a shooting gallery, and was employed 1;. .‘he shipping department of the Adams Express Company, and afterwards made first assistant shipping clerk. For about six months during the years 1916 and 1917 he was in the employ of the company operating the Montreal mines at a salary of $75 a month. Two months thereafter his salary was increased to $85 per month. His position was that of stock and weigh clerk, and his duties were to receive all inbound freight and supplies of thej company and check the tickets an)l invoices and distribute the supplies to the miners as called for. He also had charge] of weighing all or,e, coal, and other material used in the mines. All settlements for supplies and ore depended upon the correctness of the checks and weights turned in by him to the bookkeeper. 1-Iis accounts, as testified to by accountant an(l bookkeeper Couch, were always founds to be correct. C. F. Dyke, manager of the Montreal Mines testified that during the six months Fish was in the company’s employ he handled supplies worth between $60,000 and $75,000 in value, and that the ore sold from the mines during *179 bis .employment, based on bis weights, was of the value of more than $200,000. The witness further testified that during Fish’s employment with the company in the mines there had been no discrepancies and no complaint whatever of his wort, and that he left the employment of the company voluntarily for the purpose of platting a town site on a portion of the lands inherited from his father. This business it appears he carried on intelligently, successfully, anjl profitably. It seems, too, that both the witness Deaver and Fitzgerald were consulted by young Fish in respect to his town-site plans. Being asked about Fish’s plan of laying out the town site, the witness Deaver testified.

“Q. Isn’t it a fact that under permission of the judge of the county court of this county he has laid out and has managed a town site up thejre on his land himself? A. Myself and the probate attorney gave him authority to collect rentals up there on that land, etc.
“Q. In fact, instead of you and the pro-batej attorney giving him permission the county judge gave him permission? A. We were all consulted in the matter.
“Q. But the judge finally gave him permission, didn’t he? A. Thej probate attorney arjd myself talked with Fish and discussed this matter and put it up to the county judge and recommended it.
“Q. Now, since he laid out this town site he has b^en leasing the lands and managing the property? A. Yes, sir; we thought-he was capable possibly of doing that.
“Q. And he has been collecting the rents? A. I suppose so.
“Q. Do you know how many lots he has th^re? A. About the time the railroad company was going through there I think something like 300.”

Testimony of witness Fitzgerald respecting the town site is very much the same as that of th^ witness Deaver. Furthermore, it appears that Fish got up his own rental .contracts, and, in short, had entire charge of managing the leasing of lots in the town site. Though introduced as a witness against Fish, J. P. McNaughton testified that Joseph had supported his father while in- Washington, and, without objection, testified that he had been informed by a Mr. Sykes of Sykes & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 646, 176 P. 251, 71 Okla. 177, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-deaver-okla-1918.