Hathaway v. Hoffman

153 P. 184, 53 Okla. 72, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 1915
Docket5070
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 153 P. 184 (Hathaway v. Hoffman) 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
Hathaway v. Hoffman, 153 P. 184, 53 Okla. 72, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 364 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On February 17, 1912, in the district court of Coal county, Ira Owen and Earl and Ellis Hathaway, minors, by their guardian, Mary E. Hathaway, plaintiffs in error, sued J. W. Hoffman, and the remaining defendants in error, in ejectment for a two-thirds undivided interest in a certain 90-acre tract of land (describing it), a part of the town site of Clarita in said county. In the petition, among other things, they allege, pursuant to act approved January 25, 1911 (Sess. Laws 1911, c. 10, p. 25), that the land belongs to said minors; that defendants are in possession and claim an adverse interest therein in virtue of a sale and conveyance thereof by one Teubner, as guardian, to one Lowerre, from whom they deraign title; that said sale.was made by said Teubner purporting to act under appointment as guardian of said minors and an order of sale of the county court of Atoka county, which said appointment they allege was void because, they say, at the time it was made they were residents of Coal county, and hence the court was without jurisdiction to make it and order a sale of the property, and' they pray that they be repossessed and their title to the land be cleared. There is no fraud charged. As exhibits to their petition they file the record and proceedings of the county court which they assail. *74 After demurrer to the petition filed and overruled, defendants answered, in effect a general denial, and for a defense set up and rely upon the records and proceedings assailed, and upon the jurisdiction of the county court of Atoka county to make the appointment and order the sale of the land, which they admit was purchased by Lowerre, and they admit that they deraigned their title as stated in the petition. After issue joined by reply there was trial to a jury, and at the close of the evidence a directed verdict for defendants, and plaintiffs bring the case here.

Among other assignments plaintiffs say the court erred in thus directing the verdict. On this point the record discloses that, assailing the record and proceedings of the county court introduced in evidence and which fail to disclose the residence of the minors at the time the appointment complained of was made, plaintiffs, over objection, introduced evidence reasonably tending to prove that in August, 1908, Elzie Hathaway died in Atoka county, leaving him surviving his children, the minors in question, all under the age of 14 years, also Mary E. Hathaway, his widow; leaving also as a part of his realty, the land in question, situated in Coal county; that on December 6, 1908, said Mary E. Hathaway married one Wisner in that county and continued to live there until about January 5, 1909, when the family, consisting of these minors, the mother- and Wisner, moved from Atoka county to Coal county, where they resided until some time in October, 1909; that while they were living in Coal county, to wit, on May 5, 1909, R. L. Teubner, a resident of Atoka county, on petition filed in the county court of that county, was appointed guardian of said minors, and thereafter, acting under orders of that court, as such guardian, sold and conveyed the land in controversy to one Lowerre, from whom defendants *75 deraigned their title as stated in the petition. The record of the county court of Atoka county being silent as to the factum of the residence of the minors at the time said appointment was made, and the court being one of general jurisdiction as to matters probate, the trial court did right in passing on the motion to direct a verdict, to lay out of the case said evidence as to the residence of the minors at the time the appointment was made and hold, as he did, in effect, that such was a collateral attack on the record of that court, which, importing as it does absolute verity, was not subject to be impeached by evidence aliunde. In Clinton Nat. Bank v. McKennon, 26 Okla. 836, 110 Pac. 649, we said:

“It is the duty of the court in directing a, verdict to lay out of consideration incompetent testimony received over objection.”

The record of the county court being silent as to the residence -of these minors at the time this appointment was made, it is but fair to presume, in aid of the jurisdiction of the court to make the appointment, that the court before making it took evidence, as was its duty to do, and found the facts to be that their residence at that time was in Atoka county. For it is said in the headnote to Grignon’s Lessee v. Astor et al., 2 How. 319, 11 L. Ed. 283:

“It is for that court to decide upon the existence of the facts which gave jurisdiction; and the exercise of the jurisdiction warrants the presumption that the facts which were necessary to be proved were proved. The distinction examined between courts of limited jurisdiction, where the record must show that jurisdiction was rightfully exercised, and courts of general jurisdiction, where the record being silent upon the subject, it will be presumed that jurisdiction existed.” -

*76 Quoting approvingly from Cox v. Boyce, 152 Mo. 582, 54 S. W. 467, 75 Am. St. Rep. 483, in Rice v. Theimer et al., 45 Okla. 618, 146 Pac. 702, and in Baker v. Cureton, 49 Okla. 15, 150 Pac. 1090, we said:

“* * * When application for the appointment of a curator is made, the probate court is to satisfy itself if the minor is a resident of the county, and if the court makes the appointment, the presumption is that it heard the evidence and found the fact to justify its appointment. Unless it appears on the face of the record that the minor is not a resident of the county, the proceedings of the probate court cannot be attacked collaterally on that ground.”

This is in keeping with what this court has always held. In Greer et al. v. McNeal et al., 11 Okla. 519, 69 Pac. 891, in the syllabus the court said:

“It is not necessary that in proceedings properly before the probate court and within its jurisdiction, its judgment shall contain a recitation of the facts upon which the jurisdiction of the court depends. A final judgment of the probate court imports jurisdiction, and it will be inferred from the fact that such a judgment was rendered, that all the facts necessary to its proper rendition had been found to exist before the judgment was rendered.” Holmes et al. v. Holmes, 27 Okla. 140, 111 Pac. 220, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 920.

In aid of the presumption of the jurisdiction of the county court to make the appointment, we will presume the court not only heard, but passed upon, evidence of the same facts disclosed in this collateral attack, in effect, that; after the death of the 'father of these minors in Atoka county, their mother married again there, and the family as thus constituted took up their residence in Coal county; that they were living there at the time the appointment was made; and that thereupon the court held the law to be *77 that the residence of these minors at that time was in Atoka county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P. 184, 53 Okla. 72, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hathaway-v-hoffman-okla-1915.