Flynn v. Vanderslice

1935 OK 201, 44 P.2d 967, 172 Okla. 320, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
DocketNo. 22847.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1935 OK 201 (Flynn v. Vanderslice) 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
Flynn v. Vanderslice, 1935 OK 201, 44 P.2d 967, 172 Okla. 320, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 247 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action in ejectment, commenced October 18, 1930, in the district court of Murray county, by the plaintiff in error, Eliza Elynn, as plaintiff, against the defendants in error, Jacob Van-derslice, Rebecca A.. Vanderslice, Maulsie Beula Stone, nee Vanderslice, Robert J. Van-derslice, and Mary Pairlee Tate, nee Van-derslice, as defendants.

In her petition in the. district court, basing her claim of title upon inheritance from her father, Robert J. Vanderslice, deceased, plaintiff sought to recover an undivided one-sixth interest in a large amount of real property. The petition alleged that the defendant Rebecca A. Vanderslice was the widow of the said decedent, and that the other defendants were his remaining children; and that plaintiff and defendants were the sole and only heirs at law of her father. Plaintiff alleged that an instrument had been admitted to probate, in the county court of Murray county, as the last will and testament of her father; and in her petition she sought to recover as an heir in disregard of the provisions of that instrument. She based her claim of title upon heirship, an allegation that her father died intestate, and the following further' allegations quoted from her petition, to wit:

“Plaintiff alleges and states that the said Robert J. Vanderslice left no will that she can in any way discover; that the purported will offered for probate was not the last will and testament of the said Robert J. Vanderslice and has never been determined as such by the court; that no final judgment has been rendered in the matter.”

In her petition below, in addition to her said allegations as to the title of both plaintiff and defendants, as the basis of her claim of right to maintain ejectment, plaintiff alleged that she was prevented from attending the hearing in the county court for probate of her father’s will by her reliance upon an unperformed representation and promise of defendants and proponents of the will to the effect that the will would not be probated at such hearing, but that the executors would be appointed administrators and the estate divided equally among the heirs; that after she learned that the will had been probated and executors appointed, she instituted in the county court a post-probate contest of the will, and had appealed to the district court from an order and judgment of the county court denying her contest; and that on such appeal, no transcript of the record in the county court having been filed in the district court, and the court cleric having docketed the appeal and treated the original county court papers as a transcript, the appealed cause came on for trial in the district court some three months after the appeal was taken, and that that court, upon refusal of plaintiff to proceed because no transcript had been filed, dismissed the appeal for want of prosecution. The petition then alleged that after the dismissal of her said appeal, plaintiff procured a transcript of the record of the county court in the matter of her contest and filed it in the district court.

The petition of plaintiff in the action below further alleged that the order of the district court in the probate case, dismissing her appeal from the county court order denying her contest of the will, was without jurisdiction and void, because no transcript of the case in the county court had been filed in the district court prior to the dismissal; that that appeal therefore is still pending in the district court, by reason of which there has been no binding order probating the will; that plaintiff has called the above facts to the attention of the county court by objection to that court proceeding with the probate administration, and to the attention of the district court by motion to vacate the order dismissing the appeal and by motion to vacate the same; that notwithstanding these facts, the county court is proceeding with the administration ; and that, the premises considered, she *322 is entitled to maintain the ejectment action without regard to the alleged will and the proceedings in the probate case.

In her petition in this case plaintiff did not allege upon what grounds she based her contest of her father’s will, nor whether she had appealed from the orders dismissing her appeal and denying her motions to vacate and for a new trial.

The present case comes to this court on appeal by plaintiff from an order of the district court sustaining a demurrer filed by defendants to the petition in ejectment, and dismissing the ejectment action upon election of plaintiff to stand upon her petition.

Plaintiff in error says that the district court sustained the demurrer to her petition because of her allegations in connection with the alleged will and probate proceedings in the matter of the estate of her father; and she contends that, this being an ejectment action and her petition containing the usual general allegations of title, and right to and withholding of possession, her more detailed and particular allegations should not be considered in determining the sufficiency of her petition.

It was formerly the law in Oklahoma that in an ejectment action plaintiff need not set forth in detail the facts relied upon to establish his claim. Frazier v. Nichols, 50 Okla. 41, 150 P. 711. Even under the statute as it so formerly existed, it had been properly held that where, in an action of ejectment, the plaintiff sees fit, in setting forth the statutory requirements of a cause of action, in addition thereto, to set out the title and source of title of each of the parties, and a demurrer is filed to such pleading, upon consideration of such demurrer all of the facts pleaded were to be considered in determining its sufficiency. Jones v. Carnes, 17 Okla. 470, 87 P. 652. However, the statute as it formerly existed was ■changed by section 467, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, now section 592, O. S. 1931. Following, quoting, and applying to an ejectment action the latter statute, in the case of Taylor et al. v. Campbell, 139 Okla. 110, 281 P. 243, this court announced what is now the proper rule in this state, as follows :

“Section 467, C. O. S. 1921, requires that, in an action for the recovery of real property, it shall be necessary for plaintiff to detail the facts relied upon to establish his claim, and to attach to his petition copies of all deeds or other evidences of title, and that the allegations of his petition be established by competent evidence whether answer be filed or not.”

Applying that rule in the present case, all the facts pleaded in the petition of plaintiff will be considered in determining its sufficiency on demurrer.

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1946 OK 343 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)
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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 201, 44 P.2d 967, 172 Okla. 320, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-vanderslice-okla-1935.