Kelly v. Blackwell

1917 OK 127, 164 P. 103, 63 Okla. 231, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 30, 1917
Docket6837
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1917 OK 127 (Kelly v. Blackwell) 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
Kelly v. Blackwell, 1917 OK 127, 164 P. 103, 63 Okla. 231, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 529 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On August 14, 1913, A. P. Blackwell and L. R. Blackwell, his wife, defendants in error, sued E. J. Kelly, plaintiff in error, in the district court of Jefferson county on the following promissory note;

“$2920.00.
“Waurika, Oklahoma, January 22, 1910.
“I, E. J. Kelly, of Waurika, Oklahoma, hereby agree to pay to A. P. Blackwell of Durant, Oklahoma, the sum of twenty-nine hundred and twenty dollars ($2920.00) said amount to be due and payable thirty days after abstract is furnished me showing a clear title in A. P. Blackwell to certain lands in Jefferson county, conveyed by A. P. Blackwell and wife to me on the 20th day of January, 1910, for which amount a vendor’s lien is retained for the payment of same.
“E. J. Kelly.”

For answer, after a general denial, Kelly specifically denied liability on the note, because, he said, the abstract tendered him by Blackwell failed to show in him a clear title to the land. After reply filed, the cause was tried to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, the material part of which is:

“4. It is agreed that the land in question was-allotted to Jim Joel, a Ohoctaw minor Indian; that the allotment was made on the 27th day of October, 1905, and was made after the death of the said Jim Joel, and was made by A. P. Blackwell as administrator for the said Jim Joel, and the said A. P. Blackwell acting as -administrator is the same A. P. Blackwell as plaintiff in this action, and that Jim Joel, allottee, died intestate while a child only about one year old, and left surviving him his father and mother, Hampton and -Silen Jo.el, and no brothers or sisters. * *
“5. That on December 20, 1905, A. P. Blackwell purchased the land in question from Hampton Joel and Silen Joel, father and mother of Jim Joel, the allottee; that the said A. P. Blackwell was appointed administrator on the 17th day of October, 1905, for the purpose of selecting the allotment, and that he purchased the lands on the 20th day of December, 1905, and at the time of purchase he had not been discharged as the- administrator, and that the purchase was made from the mother and father direct. * * ”

From which the court concluded as a matter of law that plaintiffs were entitled to recover, and rendered and entered judgment accordingly, to reverse which defendant brings the case here.

It is urged by defendant that the deed from Hampton Joel and Silen Joel, father and mother, and only heirs at law of Jim Joel, dated December 20, 1905, is void because, he says, the same was made, executed, *232 and delivered by them to Blackwell as the result of a purchase from them by Blackwell while undischarged as administrator of Jim Joel. Not so. It being conceded that there were no debts against the estate, that the land was unrestricted, and that there was no fraud in the transaction and the consideration was adequate, the deed was good and passed the title of the father and mother— the only heirs of Jim Joel— to Blackwell. 18 Cyc. 849 lays down the rule thus:

“While the purchase by an executor or administrator of real estate of his decedent or any interest therein from the widow, heirs, devisees, or others in interest is highly disfavored, the judicial disposition is usually to do no more than presume strongly against the validity of such a purchase and require the fiduciary to show affirmatively adequacy of consideration and the general fairness of the transaction, and if the transaction is in good faith and without fraud it 'may be treated as a similar transaction between strangers would be.”

In Haight v. Pearson, 11 Utah, 51, 39 Pac. 479, the facts were that plaintiff as executor of his father’s estate bought, through his attorney, from a brother, another one of the heirs of the estate, the brother’s share of the father’s lands. When plaintiff brought suit against his attorney to recover the lands, the attorney, among other things, pleaded that:

“The plaintiff was incapable of 'purchasing an interest in the estate, because he was executor. Being incompetent to purchase himself, he could not have another purchase in trust for him, and cannot therefore enforce any trust.”

The attorney relied upon Comp. Laws Utah 1888, sec. 4196, p. 513, which reads:

“No executor * * * must, directly or indirectly, purchase any property of the estate he represents, nor must be interested in any sale.”

He also relied upon the rule of equity to the effect “that contracts in which a trustee both buys and sells to himself are void.” But the court held such statute and rule of equity had nothing to do with the case, and that plaintiff had a right to recover, and in passing said:

“But a contract to purchase the interest of an heir in an estate by an executor does not come within the letter or spirit of either the statute or this equitable rule. The executor ■has no authority, as such, to sell the interest of an heir in the estate. Such interest is not in any sense property of the estate; it is the property of the heir, and he alone can sell it. Owing to the advantage that might be taken of heirs by executors or administrators, if we were called upon to pass upon such a sale where the heir was claiming that he had been overreached or wronged, we should scrutinize the matter, and, if unfair in its terms, would not hesitate to' set such contract aside, but not because it was in violation of the statute cited. In other words, these sales by an heir to an executor are not within the statute at all. If they are fair in themselves, they should be upheld the same as other contracts.”

In Barker v. Barker, 14 Wis. 142, a widow sued for partition of her deceased husband’s estate, claiming to be the owner by purchase of the portions of two of the eight heirs, who answered, together with the other six, that the purchase was made with funds Of-the estate held by the plaintiff as administratrix, and it was insisted that she should be adjudged by the court to hold the same in trust for the heirs, which the court proceeded to do as to the lands so purchased, but as to lands purchased not with the trust funds, the court held the deeds conveyed title, and in the syllabus said:

“An administrator is not a trustee for the heirs, of the real property of the estate not necessary to be sold for the payment of debts, and may purchase in his own right, with his own funds, the interest of any of the heirs in such property.”

In the opinion the court said:

“In our former decision we stated that we were satisfied from the evidence that no actual fraud was practiced by the widow in the purchase of tliose shares, by which the sale could be set aside. We will now add, upon a further consideration of the question, that we are satisfied that she did not stand in any such relation to them as would avoid the sale by an application of the law concerning the purchase of the trust estate by the trustee from the cestui que trust. Where the rule is applicable, we have adhered to it strictly. Gillett v. Gillett, 9 Wis. 194. But here we think the relation of trustee and cestui que trust with respect to the real estate did not exist. The administratrix had no title to it, but it descended to the heirs.

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Related

Baker v. Finnell
1953 OK 51 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
Wiggins v. Wiggins
1936 OK 225 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Dees v. Dees
1934 OK 697 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Johnson v. Johnson
1922 OK 111 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 127, 164 P. 103, 63 Okla. 231, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-blackwell-okla-1917.