In Re Concer's Estate

1954 OK 163, 271 P.2d 329, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 25, 1954
Docket35933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1954 OK 163 (In Re Concer's Estate) 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
In Re Concer's Estate, 1954 OK 163, 271 P.2d 329, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 541 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

271 P.2d 329 (1954)

In re CONCER'S ESTATE.
DOBSON et al.
v.
MACOM et al.

No. 35933.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma.

May 25, 1954.

*330 Hulsey & Hulsey, McAlester, for plaintiffs in error.

Windham & Windham, Poteau, for defendants in error.

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to as appellants, are the first cousins of the deceased, Mary Ann Concer, who, at the time of her death, was seized, among other property, of her allotment of land as a member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians.

In the proceedings to determine who were decedent's heirs and to administer her estate in the County Court of LeFlore County, appellants were opposed by defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as appellees, who are the decedent's grand nieces.

It was conceded in the County Court that both appellants and appellees were related to the decedent in the same, or fourth degree of blood, but that the "common ancestor" of the decedent and the cousins, through whom the latter claimed, was the decedent's grandfather; while the "common ancestor" of the decedent and the grand nieces was the decedent's father. After attorneys for both groups had submitted to the County Court memorandum briefs on the question as to which of these relatives should inherit the estate, said Court determined that under Title 84 O.S. 1951 § 213, the appellees claiming through *331 the decedent's father were claiming under the "nearest" ancestor, as that term is used in said statute, and therefore should inherit all of the decedent's estate to the exclusion of the appellants. Said court thereupon entered an "Order Allowing Final Account, Determination of Heirship and Order of Distribution", in accord with its determination of the above described legal question.

From said determination, appellants sought to appeal to the District Court, and accordingly, within the ten days prescribed by statute, Title 58 O.S. 1951 § 724, filed in the county court a "Notice of Appeal", and an appeal bond. In this Notice of Appeal, they stated that they were appealing from "the judgment and decree" of the county court "determining the heirship" of decedent in favor of appellees "* * * on questions of law only * * *". After the appeal had been docketed in the District or appellate court, appellees filed in said Court a Motion to Dismiss the appeal on the ground that said Notice did not specify "the particular grounds upon which Appellants intended to rely * * *" nor state any legal question to be determined on the appeal, and therefore was wholly insufficient under the statutes to give said Court jurisdiction of the appeal. Thereafter appellants filed a Response to said Motion, denying that their Notice was insufficient to give the Court jurisdiction, but admitting that "through inadvertence apt words stating the precise question of law on which the appeal was based were omitted from said notice", and they added, among other things, that they desired to invoke the appellate jurisdiction of the court merely to reverse the county court's decree holding that, although appellants and appellees were related to the decedent in the same degree and of the same blood, the appellees inherited the decedent's entire estate, including her Indian allotment. In concluding this Response, appellants moved the court, in the furtherance of justice, to direct that said Response "be taken and considered as an amendment to the notice of appeal for all purposes."

Upon a hearing of the issues joined by the above-described Motion and Response thereto, the District Court sustained the Motion and dismissed the appeal. From said judgment of dismissal, appellants have perfected the present appeal to this Court.

A correct determination of the only issue before the District Court, and accordingly, the only one to be determined here, namely: The sufficiency of appellant's "Notice of Appeal," necessitates a proper interpretation of the following portions of Title 58 O.S. 1951:

"§ 725. Appeal — How taken. — The appeal must be made:
"1. By filing a written notice thereof with the judge of the county court, stating the judgment, decree, or order appealed from, or some specific part thereof, and whether the appeal is on a question of law, or of fact, or of both, and, if of law alone, the particular grounds upon which the party intends to rely on his appeal; and,
"2. By executing and filing within the time limited in the preceding section, such bond as is required in the following sections. It shall not be necessary to notify or summon the appellee or respondent to appear in the district court, but such respondent shall be taken and held to have notice of such appeal in the same manner as he had notice of the pendency of the proceedings in the county court."
"§ 737. Dismissal of appeal affirms county court — Amendment of error. — The dismissal of an appeal by the district court is in effect an affirmance of the judgment, decree or order appealed from; and when an appellant shall have given, in good faith, notice of appeal, but omits, through mistake, to do any other act necessary to perfect the appeal or to stay proceedings, the appellate court may permit an amendment, on such terms as may be just." (Emphasis added.)

It is plain from the above quotation of Section 725 that it provides for the doing of two acts, by appellant: (1) Giving notice of his appeal, and (2) Filing an appeal bond. We think it is clear from the *332 wording of Section 737, supra, that: "when an appellant shall have given, in good faith, notice of appeal, but omits, through mistake, to do any other act necessary to perfect the appeal" that said statute refers to the act of giving notice, rather than to the writing, or the instrumentality, used for that purpose; and that when appellant has "in good faith" given notice and substantially complied with the procedure prescribed by the statutes preceding said Section, the district court, may, if appellant has not complied with their letter, upon the conditions and under the circumstances named therein, allow him to amend.

A principle traditionally recognized by all courts, including our own, is that statutes giving the right to appeal must be liberally construed to serve the ends of justice. In re Benson, 178 Okl. 299, 62 P.2d 962; Transwestern Oil Co. v. Partain, 188 Okl. 97, 106 P.2d 263; Taylor v. Langley, 188 Okl. 646, 112 P.2d 411. In accord with this principle, the statutes under consideration have never been given a literal construction. Thus, though it would seem from a literal interpretation of the wording of Section 725, supra, that the notice of appeal therein contemplated is an individual or separate written instrument, yet this Court in the early case of In re Tubbee's Estate, 48 Okl. 410, 149 P. 1120, held that it may be complied with by dictating the notice into the record in open court in the presence of appellee and his counsel at the time the order appealed from is made. There, the court, after citing authorities to the effect that the purpose of such notice is that appellee may appear and be heard, concluded that such purpose was sufficiently served by that kind of notice.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 163, 271 P.2d 329, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-concers-estate-okla-1954.