Keith v. Winters

1944 OK 350, 154 P.2d 83, 194 Okla. 634, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 12, 1944
DocketNo. 31570.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1944 OK 350 (Keith v. Winters) 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
Keith v. Winters, 1944 OK 350, 154 P.2d 83, 194 Okla. 634, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 554 (Okla. 1944).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This is a probate case which originated in the county court of Osage county. The county court allowed as a claim against assets of the estate of Ella Todd Quarles a judgment in favor of J. W. Keith entered by the district court of Osage county.

On appeal the district court of Osage county decided the assets of the estate in the hands of the administrator were exempt from payment of the Keith judgment claim and for that reason disallowed the same. The claim was presented by Keith or his attorney, to Mr. C. S. MacDonald, attorney for the administrator, W. H. Aaron, during the first few days (September 5th to September 12th) of September, 1942. The attorney retained the claim for the purpose of investigating its merits until about November 12, 1942, on which date it was approved by the administrator and allowed by the county judge of Osage county.

The entire assets of the estate consisted of money derived from fraternal insurance and property purchased with such money. The fraternal insurance was on the life of James J. Quarles, the husband of Ella Todd Quarles, who died in 1941. At the time of his death Mr. Quarles was insured by the two fraternal insurance companies. He held a $3,000 policy in the Knights of Pythias and a $3,000 policy in the Modern Woodmen of America, a total of $6,000. With a portion of this money Mrs. Quarles purchased $1,000 worth of Louisiana Land and Exploration Company stock. The assets of the estate were listed as cash in bank, $3,-909.46, and Louisiana Land and Exploration Company stock, $1,000.

In deciding the exemption feature of the case we must construe section 283 of 36 O. S. 1941, which provides:

“The money or other benefit, charity, relief or aid to be paid, provided or rendered by any association authorized to do business under this article, shall not be liable to attachment, by trustee, garnishee or other process, and shall not be seized, taken, appropriated or applied by any legal or equitable process, or by operation of law, to pay any debt or liability of the certificate holder, or of any beneficiary named in any certificate, or any person who may have any right thereunder.” (Emphasis ours).

The claim of Keith is based upon a judgment of the district court of Osage county rendered in September of 1931 in favor of the Citizens National Bank of Pawhuska against Mr. and Mrs. Quarles. The judgment was for the principal sum of $3,583.35 plus interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent from June of 1931, and $368.30 attorneys’ fees, a total of $7,726.12.'

The Citizens National Bank of Pawhuska ceased to do a banking business in 1931. It was liquidated. J. W. Keith was one of the liquidating committee. In 1941 he purchased the remaining assets of the bank, including the judgment presented herein as a claim. The purchase price was $25. *636 Throughout the years the judgment was kept alive by execution issued for its collection.

All other claims against the estate in the aggregate sum of $922 have been paid by the administrator, Aaron. The assets of the estate are therefore cash derived from fraternal insurance, about $3,000, and Louisiana Land and Development Company stock, $1,000.

A casual examination of the statute, section 283, supra, indicates that the cash is exempt from the payment of the judgment or any portion thereof. Mr. and Mrs. Quarles were the judgment debtors. The insurance was on the life of Mr. Quarles and Mrs. Quar-les was the designated beneficiary. The judgment debt was the debt of both or either. In this proceeding it is sought to be enforced as a claim against the estate of the beneficiary of the insurance, Mrs. Quarles.

The statute (sec. 283, supra) has been construed in part by a number of cases by this court. State of Oklahoma ex rel. Lankford v. Collins et al., 70 Okla. 323, -174 P. 568, 6 A.L.R. 603; Stekoll v. Abraham, 90 Okla. 218, 217 P. 410; Modern Woodmen of America v. Crudup, 175 Okla. 183, 51 P. 2d 718; Supreme Forest, Woodmen Circle, v. Bowen, 180 Okla. 534, 71 P. 2d 480; Johnson v. Roberts, 124 Okla. 68, 254 P. 88. These cases hold that the money or other benefits coming to the beneficiary from a certificate of insurance on the life of one of the members of a fraternal insurance company are exempt from legal process for the debts of such beneficiary.

The situation presented to us in each of the foregoing cases differs from the case at bar in one respect. In this case the beneficiary is dead. In each of the cited cases the beneficiary was still alive when the litigation occurred. In this case the controversy is between the heirs and devisees of the beneficiary and creditor of such beneficiary whereas in the cited cases contests arose between the beneficiary and a creditor. The question here to be decided is whether, under the statute, the exemption in favor of the beneficiary will retain its exempt character against the debts of the beneficiary in favor of the heirs of the beneficiary.

A number of states, including Missouri and Nebraska, have the identical statute as section 283, supra, and the latter states have construed the statute in deciding the question in controversy. In Grand Lodge Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Dister, 77 Mo. App. 608, the Court of Appeal for St. Louis stated:

“ . . . The obvious purpose of the statute was to exempt the fund due on a benefit certificate from involuntary application to the debts of the beneficiary named therein or the person entitled thereunder.”

And:

“Under the facts shown in the petition when the member of the respondent order died, the right to receive the fund at once vested in the intestate of the administrator, who was then alive, with all the safeguards thrown around her ownership and enjoyment by the statute under consideration. She having died before receiving payment, the fund did not on that account lose the exemption from application to her debts which attached to it during her life, but retained that quality. For if this were not true the statute would only protect the fund against the creditors of a named beneficiary provided such beneficiary got actual possession of it before death. Such a construction is opposed to the law and spirit of the act. As it was then a fund secured from her creditors and yet a part of her estate, the only question to be answered is who, under the laws of Missouri, was entitled to receipt for it to the respondent order? Under our laws except upon an order of the probate court dispensing with administration, the only party entitled to the assets of the estate of an intestate is the administrator. ...”

And in Coleman v. McGrew, 71 Neb. 801, 99 N. W. 663, it was said by the Supreme Court of Nebraska:

“. . . This statute clearly exempts *637 these funds from the debts of the testatrix, and constitutes them a trust fund in the hands of the executor for the benefit of plaintiffs, who are legatees and sole heirs at law of the deceased.”

Upon consideration of the foregoing authorities and careful scrutiny of the language of the statute by which we are governed, we conclude that the money and bank deposits held by the administrator are exempt and therefore not available for payment on the Keith claim.

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Bluebook (online)
1944 OK 350, 154 P.2d 83, 194 Okla. 634, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-winters-okla-1944.