Jones v. Snyder

1926 OK 457, 249 P. 313, 121 Okla. 254, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 11, 1926
Docket13301
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1926 OK 457 (Jones v. Snyder) 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
Jones v. Snyder, 1926 OK 457, 249 P. 313, 121 Okla. 254, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 128 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

HARRISON,' J.

This was an action by Harry C. Snyder, guardian of Gustava Marshall, a minor ward, to set aside a guardian's deed to the allotment of said ward, on the ground of fraud perpetrated upon the probate court in the matter of procuring letters of guardianship and order o.' sa:le of the minor’s land.

The said minor was a Creek freedman. duly enrolled as a newborn, and to whom was allotted a quarter section of land situated in Creek county, Okla. It- is conceded that she was the illegitimate child of Ethel Birney, her mother, and Abednego Marshall, her father, and that the mother died in Muskogee county, in 1909. It is also- apparent from the evidence that upon the death, of the mother, the surviving father took said child into his home with his legitimate wife and by his every action and conduct acknowledged her to he his child, provided for and cared for her at his home in Wagoner county until the death of his wife, whereupon he placed her -with and under the care of his aunt, Rose Childers, who resided iu Wagoner county, and with whom the child lived continuously as the acknowledged child of Abednegoi Marshall for a period of several years, during which time she attended school in Wagoner county, and was after-wards placed in school in the city of Muskogee, Muskogee countythat she never for any period nor at any time lived in Tulsa county nor ever at any time even Visited in Tulsa county, nor changed her domicile from Wagoner county, nor was she ever denied by her father as being his child.

It appears, hotwever, that in April, 1910, while said minor child resided with her father and had her domicile in Wagfoner county, one Prank Jones and his wife, Mabel Jones, who- was ari aunt of said minor, being the sister of said child’s mother, both she and her husband then residing in Tulsa county, petitioned the county court of Tulsa county for letters of guardianship of the person and estate of said minor child, falsely and fraudulently alleging that said child was a resident of Tulsa county and under the care and custody of said petitioners, and *256 that they had incurred certain and sundry expenses in caring for and supporting said child, and that» her father had never acknowledged her as being his child, and thereupon, without notice to her father, they petitioned for letters of guardianship and drder of sale of the allotment of said child. And upon their false allegations and false testimony in support of same, letters of guardianship were issued to said Frank Jones, an order of sale made, and the allotment of said minor sold, and said minor defrauded out of every penny of the proceeds, neither the minor nor her father having any knowledge of the proceedings.

The records of probate proceedings, on their face, appear to be and are conceded to be regular; likewise the purchaser at said guardian’s sale appears to have been and is conceded to have been a purchaser in good faith for a valuable consideration; also the grantees of said purchaser appear to- have been and are conceded to have been purchasers in good faith.

But, while conceding said probate proceedings to be regular and apparently valid on their face, this 'action is addressed to the . equity powers of the district court to set aside said proceedings and to cancel said guardian’s deed because of the fraud perpetrated upon the probate court in falsely and fraudulently alleging and testifying that said minor was in the custody and under the care of said petitioners, when in truth she was not, and in alleging and testifying that said minor was a resident of Tulsa county, when in truth she was not, and in alleging and testifying that petitioners had incurred sundry items of expense in support of said minor, when in truth they had not, and in prosecuting said proceedings without notice to the father of said minor, falsely alleging and testifying that said father had never legitimatized said minor by acknowledging her to be his own child, when in truth he had so acknowledged her by every requisite act and evidence except that of publicly proclaiming, in so many words, that she was his child, and had taken her into his custody and had cared for and supported her in his home, and upon the death of his wife had placed her with his aunt in Wagoner county, and at all times exercised parental control over her.

The case was tried in the district court upon the issue as to whether fraud had been perpetrated upon the probate court, and upon the finding of facts made by the trial court judgment was rendered holding that said probate orders and decrees had been procured through fraud perpetrated upon said court and were void, and decreeing the cancellation of the guardian’s deed in question, also holding all subsequent conveyances co be null and void and decreeing their can-, cellation as to said minor child.

The court further found and adjudged that the rental value of said lands during, the period which said minor had been deprived of the use and benefits thereof was-$480, ior which the court -gave judgment in. favor of said minor against the defendants-herein.

The court further found, however, that, during the period from 1912 to 1920, inclusive, one of -the grantees, a defendant herein, had paid taxes on said land, aggregating the sum olf $268.09, and was entitled to an offset against said rents to amount of" taxes paid, and rendered judgment accordingly.

In substance, the court decreed the cancellation of all instruments of conveyance pertaining to -said land, in soi far as «they affected the rights of said minor, and gave judgment in her favor for rents to the amount of $480, less $268.09 taxes, paid by said defendant grantee. From such judgment, defendants appealed.

Two propositions are presented, a determination of which disposes of the case. viz.:

First, wás the action in the district court a direct or collateral attack upon the probate proceedings?

Second. Should the purchaser at guardian’s sale, being conceded to have been a purchaser in good faith and for á valuable consideration, be protected under his guardian’s deed to the extent of the purchase price, though the írrobate proceedings be held void and the guardian’s deed be'canceled?

If this -action be a collateral attack, then it cannolt be maintained,' for the reason that the probate proceedings are conceded to lie regular and apparently valid on their face and not subject to collateral attack; but if the action be an attack upon said probate proceedings on the ground of fraud practiced upon the probate court in such proceedings, and if the pleadings and judgment roll in this action show that it was brought for the express purpose and object of avoiding and setting aside such probate proceedings on the ground of the alleged fraud, then the action is a direct attack, the right to maintain which is authorized by law and universally sanctioned by equity. Pettis v *257 Johnston, 78 Okla. 277, 190 Pac. 681; Thompson v. McCorkle (Ind.) 34 N. E. 813, 36 N. E. 211, 43 Am. St. Rep. 334; Walker v. Goldsmith (Ore.) 12 Pac. 537, 553; Schneider v. Sellers (Tex. Civ. App.) 61 S. W. 541-43; Dormitzer v. German Savings & Loan (Wash.) 62 Pac. 862; 34 C. J. 520; 15 R C. L. p. 839; Van Fleet’s Col. Attack, p. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 457, 249 P. 313, 121 Okla. 254, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-snyder-okla-1926.