Irvin v. Thompson

1972 OK 99, 500 P.2d 283
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 27, 1972
Docket44415
StatusPublished

This text of 1972 OK 99 (Irvin v. Thompson) 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
Irvin v. Thompson, 1972 OK 99, 500 P.2d 283 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

DAVISON, Vice Chief Justice.

The appellant, plaintiff in the trial court, prosecutes this action, as administrator of his deceased wife’s estate and individually, against appellees, the deceased wife’s mother, brother and sister, defendants in the trial court, to set aside transfers of real and personal property by the deceased wife to one or more of the defendants. The transfers were made without consideration and without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent about 2 years before the wife’s death at a time she knew she had a malignant tumor.

The real property consisted of an undivided ¾⅛ interest therein which she had ■inherited from her father. This %th interest was transferred by deeds in equal share to the defendants. The personal property consisted of substantial accounts in the Fairview Savings & Loan Association and the Watonga Savings & Loan Association. The transfer of the savings and loan accounts were made by changing the ownership of the accounts from Nellie Mae Thompson Irvin to Nellie Mae Thompson Irvin and Maggie Thompson, Joint Tenants with right of survivorship. Maggie was the mother of Nellie Mae. These accounts were established in substantial amounts before Nellie Mae’s marriage to plaintiff. Thereafter the accounts were increased from income Nellie Mae received from her ⅜⅛ interest in farms inherited from her father. Both the real and personal property, so transferred, were the separate properties of Nellie Mae; neither was acquired by joint industry during coverture. No children were born of the marriage.

The trial court sustained a general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff then filed his amended petition as Administrator and Individually, which stated in part:

“7. That NORRIS N. IRVIN, husband of NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN, had no knowledge whatever of the execution or existence of the Deeds described above until some period of time after the death of his wife which occurred on August 31, 1964, and that said Deeds were secret conveyances executed by NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN without consent or knowledge and were executed with the secret and fraudulent intent and purpose of defeating the rights of succession of the lawful heirs to be of NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN, *285 deceased, and of that estate’s right to possession to all of the above described real property during the pendency of the administration proceedings.
“8. That the Defendants, MAGGIE THOMPSON, CHARLES THOMPSON, and MAUDIE FIREBAUGH, participated actively in the fraud that has been attempted to be perpetrated upon the lawful heirs of NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN, deceased, and their participating in her estate under the Laws of Succession of the State of Oklahoma.
“9. That the Deeds and the Accounts in the Fairview Savings and Loan Association and the Watonga Savings and Loan Association referred to above were mere devices and contrivances on the part of NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN to defeat the rights of succession of the lawful heirs to be of the said NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN, and more specifically NORRIS N. IRVIN, her surviving husband; that the said NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN did not intend to part with control or benefit resulting from her interest in and to said real and personal property and, consequently did not divest herself of actual ownership therein, but only created an illusory transfer which is both invalid and unlawful. That the said NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN did retain complete control, use, and enjoyment of her interests in said real and personal property; and rental income from said real property was paid to NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN during her lifetime. That the rental income from the real property was paid to Plaintiff as Administrator of the Estate of NELLIE MAE THOMPSON IRVIN, deceased.”

The trial court sustained a motion to strike all parts of the petition except the introductory paragraph and the prayer. This order had the same effect as one sustaining a general demurrer. Plaintiff appealed from the final order to the Court of Appeals, Division No. 90, which reversed the judgment of the trial court holding the amended petition stated a cause of action. Irvin v. Thompson, Okl.Ct.App., 464 P.2d 775.

Defendants in their answer denied all allegations of plaintiff’s amended petition except such as were explained or admitted. Defendants explained that the real property involved was inherited from their father who died February 22, 1944; that. the share of Nellie Mae Thompson Irvin was an undivided %th and that Nellie Mae deeded her interest to defendants by deeds dated December 13, 1962, about two years before her death, and the deeds were recorded December 31, 1962. Further answering the defendants specifically denied that they had at any time either past or present, engaged in any type of fraud upon the plaintiff.

Upon trial of the case before the court without a jury, the trial court rendered judgment for defendants.

For the reasons hereinafter set forth, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

It is to be noted first that plaintiff in his amended petition states two different theories, somewhat inconsistent, as grounds for relief. In paragraphs 7 and 8, herein-above set forth, plaintiff treats the transfers, as intended to be real and not illusory, for “the secret and fraudulent intent and purpose of defeating the rights of succession of the lawful heirs to be of Nellie Mae Thompson Irvin.” Although we held in Sanditen v. Sanditen, Okl., 496 P.2d 365, •that depending upon the nature of ownership or acquisition of property there are circumstances under which the conveyances by one of property to some one other than his or her spouse may be in fraud of the marital rights of the other spouse, we made it clear that we still hold to the doctrine of Farrell v. Puthoff, 13 Okl. 159, 74 P. 96. We there held: “A married man, during his lifetime, may give away his separate property, real or personal, and such gift will be valid and binding as against his lawful heirs after his death, and where the effect of such gift is not to defraud his creditors, the administrator of his estate cannot maintain an action to recover the *286 property so transferred.” See 32 O.S.1961, § 4, and 16 O.S.1961, § 13.

In the case before us there are no creditors. Accordingly, since the property here involved was without question the separate property of plaintiff’s deceased wife, its transfer by her was not and could not have been, as a matter of law, a fraud upon her heirs.

In paragraph 9 of plaintiff’s amended petition, as hereinabove set forth, plaintiff claims that his deceased wife did not make an actual transfer of the properties here involved; that by execution of the deeds of transfer she did not intend to convey the real and beneficial interest in the property but only the bare legal title; that the transfers were illusory and not real for the purpose of defeating the rights of succession of the lawful heirs; that she retained complete control, use and enjoyment of her interest. In support of this position, plaintiff relies upon Courts v. Aldridge, 190 Okl. 29, 120 P.2d 362. A conflict of testimony pertaining to this issue, requires that we first analyze Courts v. Aldridge. By its judgment in the case before us, the trial court held the transfers were real and not illusory. On the basis of the tests used in Courts v.

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Related

Sanditen v. Sanditen
1972 OK 39 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1972)
Marshall v. Amos
1970 OK 73 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Nisbet v. Midwest Oil Corporation
1968 OK 115 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
Farrell v. Puthoff
1903 OK 72 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1903)
Courts v. Aldridge
1941 OK 405 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
Irvin v. Thompson
1969 OK CIV APP 17 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 99, 500 P.2d 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvin-v-thompson-okla-1972.