Green v. Hight

148 P.2d 475, 194 Okla. 214
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 21, 1944
DocketNo. 31126
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 475 (Green v. Hight) 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
Green v. Hight, 148 P.2d 475, 194 Okla. 214 (Okla. 1944).

Opinions

HURST, J.

Elva Jane Green appeals from a judgment of the district court of Oklahoma county affirming an order of the county court appointing Elnora Hight guardian of the persons and estates of Charlene Hight and Claudel Hight, minors of the age of 11 and 10 years, respectively.

Appellant is the mother of said children, Claude L. Hight, now deceased, was their father, and Elnora Hight is their stepmother. Their father and mother were divorced in November, 1936, and their custody was, by the divorce decree, - awarded to the father. In May, 1937, Claude L. Hight and Elnora Hight were married and they lived together until his death, in March,- 1942, and during that time the children were under his custody • and control. Hight left some life insurance of which said children are beneficiaries, and he left other property a portion of which they will inherit.

About ten days after the death of Hight, Elnora Hight filed in the county court of Oklahoma county a petition asking that she or a brother of Hight be appointed guardian of the persons and estates of said Charlene Hight, [216]*216Claudel Hight, and of Robert Hight, son of Elnora Hight and Claude L. Hight. In the petition she alleged the foregoing facts, and further alleged that she is a suitable person, and Elva Jane Green is an unfit person, to be appointed such guardian.

Notice of hearing said petition was duly served on Elva Jane Green, and she appeared and contested the appointment of a guardian, although she filed no written objections. The county court appointed Elnora Hight guardian of the persons and estates of said .minors. The order does not contain an express finding that Elva Jane Green was an unfit person to be appointed such guardian. Elva Jane Green appealed to the district court. She filed no pleadings in the district court. At the trial in the district court, Elnora Hight introduced evidence tending to establish the allegations of her petition, including evidence as to her fitness and evidence as to the unfitness of Elva Jane Green to serve as such guardian. Elva Jane Green did not testify, nor did she introduce any evidence. She did ask the court to talk with the children as to their desires in •the matter. This the court agreed to do, but the record is silent as to whether he did so. We assume he did. The district court made findings of facts and conclusions of law and entered a judgment affirming the order of the county court. It specifically found that the evidence was not sufficient to establish that Elva Jane Green “is an unsuitable person to be appointed” general guardian of said children, but that, by making default in pleading and by not asking that she be appointed, she waived her preference right to the appointment, and that Elnora Hight, as next in order of preference, is a suitable person to be appointed.

1. The appeal to this court was made by “Elva Jane Green and Claudel Hight and Charlene Hight, infants, by Elva Jane Green, their mother and next friend, plaintiffs in error.” The appellee urges that this court is without jurisdiction and that the appeal should be dismissed.

While conceding that Elva Jane Green is a party aggrieved by the order appealed from, appellee contends that since she filed no pleading in the county court, she was “in default” under 58 O. S. 1941 § 722 and could not appeal without making the affidavit showing her interest and right to appeal as provided in 58 O. S. 1941 § 723. But the order of the county court recites that she appeared by attorneys and contested the petition and excepted to the order of appointment. The word “default” is defined in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary as “ the nonappearance of a plaintiff or defendant at court within the time prescribed by law to prosecute his claim or make his defense.” She was not, therefore, in default. Her failure to file any pleadings narrowed the issues, but we believe the effect of her contest was to place on Elnora Hight the burden of showing the necessity or advisability of appointing a guardian and that she or the brother of decedent was qualified to be appointed.

Appellee also urges that the appeal bond was made to Elnora Hight instead of the State of Oklahoma as required by 58 O. S. 1941 § 730. But the bond as it appears in the record has the name of Elnora Hight scratched out and the State of Oklahoma is inserted as obligee. The record is silent as to how or by what authority the bond, which is styled “amended appeal bond,” was amended. We must assume that it was properly amended. See Harjo v. Aubrey, 184 Okla. 344, 87 P. 2d 140. The motion to dismiss the appeal filed in the district court was overruled, and we assume the court found that the amended bond was filed with permission of the court.

Since the appeal by Elva Jane Green was properly lodged in the district court, and she has properly appealed to this court, we need not notice the contention that the minors could or could not appeal or that they did not appeal properly.

We conclude that there is no substantial merit in the affirmative con[217]*217tention of appellee that the appeal should be dismissed.

2. On the merits, we think there are three principal questions for decision, (a) whether the petition gave the county court jurisdiction to entertain the cause and appoint a guardian for said children, (b) whether the court properly appointed the stepmother guardian of their estates, and (c) whether the court properly appointed the stepmother guardian of their persons.

(a) Under 58 O. S. 1941 § 761, a guardian of the person and estate, or either, of a minor, who is an inhabitant or resident of the county, or who resides without the state and has estate within the county, may be appointed on the petition of “a relative or other person” in behalf of such minor. Petitioner is a relative by marriage of said children. She is a “relative or other person,” who, under the broad terms of said statute, had the right to initiate the proceedings. Her petition stated facts making it “necessary or convenient” that a guardian be appointed for the estates of said children, and the allegation that their natural mother was unfit to serve as such guardian was sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the county court to appoint a guardian of their persons.

(b) Did the county court properly appoint a guardian of the estates of said children? We think so.

Said children had an interest in the life insurance money due on the death of their father, and. they had an interest in his estate. Our statutes provide: “The parent, as such, has no control over the property of the child.” 10 O. S. 1941- § 8. “No person, whether a parent or otherwise, has any power as a guardian of property, except by appointment as hereinafter provided.” 30 O. S. 1941 § 7. These sections are declaratory of the common law. Seal v. Banes, 168 Okla. 550, 35 P. 2d 704; 46 C. J. 1314, § 138; 25 Am. Jur. 13, § 10; 6 A. L. R. 115, note. It was, therefore, “necessary or convenient” that a guardian of the estates of said minors be appointed in order to collect and manage their share of the insurance and their share of the estate. By not asserting her preference right, Elva Jane Green waived the right to now insist that she should have been appointed, and in her brief she admits that this is the case. She does not argue that Elnora Hight was unfit to be appointed, but contends that she is disqualified from acting as such guardian by reason of the fact that she is the duly qualified and acting administratrix of the estate of Claude L. Hight. She calls our attention to no Oklahoma statute or decision that supports such contention, and we know of none.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 475, 194 Okla. 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-hight-okla-1944.