McCrary v. McCrary

764 P.2d 522, 1988 WL 117682
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 1988
Docket62814
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 764 P.2d 522 (McCrary v. McCrary) 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
McCrary v. McCrary, 764 P.2d 522, 1988 WL 117682 (Okla. 1988).

Opinions

SIMMS, Justice:

This is an appeal brought by the inter-venor/appellant, Randle L. Graham, Jr., from an order of the District Court of Oklahoma County which refused to vacate a judgment of foreclosure, quieted title against the appellant, disbursed proceeds of sale, and assessed attorney fees against appellants. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

In December, 1975, defendants Suzanne and Mark McCrary, as husband and wife, executed a mortgage on their home in favor of Mark’s parents, Beonard and Lila McCrary. Five years later, Suzanne and Mark were divorced. Just weeks prior to the time a final decree of divorce was entered, Beonard and Lila McCrary instituted foreclosure proceedings against the couple’s home.

Suzanne was awarded the home and alimony for support, while Mark was granted custody. Both parties were dissatisfied with the terms of their divorce and appealed to this Court; Mark contesting the property distribution and alimony award, and Suzanne contesting the grant of custody to Mark.

[524]*524Randle Graham, Jr., the appellant here, is an attorney who lived across the street from the younger McCrarys. He was contacted on behalf of Suzanne to represent her in the appeal of the divorce decree. Because she had no money and her primary concern was the custody of her children, Suzanne agreed to execute a quit claim deed to the home as attorney fees. This was at Graham’s insistence. Rather than have himself appear of record as owner of the property during the appeal, however, Graham had Suzanne execute the quit claim deed in favor of Graham’s brother-in-law, Mark Owen Stallings.

The deed was executed January 19,1981, and Graham began his representation of Suzanne McCrary at that time. Because foreclosure proceedings had been instituted against the home, he also purported to represent Suzanne in that case as well. In the meantime, he began renting the house to third parties and collected the rent in his own name. At no time during the divorce appeal or during the initial foreclosure proceedings, did Graham disclose his own interest in the property to the courts hearing the matters.

In early May, 1982, the Oklahoma Court of Appeals rendered its decision in the McCrary divorce appeal. Suzanne retained her property award but lost her award of alimony for support and did not receive custody of the couple's children. After these results were known, and on May 18, 1982, the deed from Suzanne to Stallings was recorded in the office of the County Clerk of Oklahoma County.

During this time, and for the following months, Graham still purported to represent Suzanne McCrary in the foreclosure of the property that was now. in Stallings’ name. Primarily, this representation was in the form of offers to settle and to pay the outstanding indebtedness. This representation continued until at least September, 1983, when a Journal Entry of foreclosure in favor of Beonard and Lila McCrary was entered which reflects that the foreclosure defendants McCrarys appeared pro se, having discharged their attorney, Randle L. Graham, Jr.

On December 2, 1983, Graham and Stall-ings filed an application to intervene in the foreclosure action. At the same time Graham filed an application to withdraw as Suzanne McCrary’s attorney.

The application to intervene was granted and intervenors then sought, and obtained, an order withdrawing the court’s previous order granting special execution and order of sale.

Intervenors then filed a petition to vacate the judgment of foreclosure, alleging that plaintiffs had obtained the judgment by fraud upon intervenors as plaintiffs had taken judgment with notice of intervenors’ claim and their judgment was for an amount greater than was sought in the petition. Stallings then executed a quit claim deed to Graham which was recorded December 20, 1983.

Graham presented this latter deed to the court as the basis of his claim of title to the property. At the outset, he testified that he had taken title, through Stallings, as attorney fees for representing Suzanne McCrary in her divorce appeal. He also admitted that he used Stallings as a straw man in order to prevent the appellate courts from learning that Suzanne was no longer owner of the property which was a subject of that appeal. Graham stated that he had made his claim of ownership known from the very beginning, however, by renting the property and collecting the rent in his own name. He testified that he knew the fair market value of the property greatly exceeded what would have been a reasonable hourly attorney fee in prosecuting an appeal from a divorce decree, yet denied that he took title as a contingency fee. Graham insisted that the arrangement constituted outright fees for services rendered.

At the close of the evidence presented by the intervenors, the trial court sustained appellee’s demurrer. The court found that the quit claim deed from Suzanne to Stall-ings had been orchestrated through fraud, overreaching and oppression, resulting in a conveyance that was void ab initio. Title was quieted in Suzanne McCrary as against the appellant, subject to existing liens and [525]*525encumbrances. A constructive trust was imposed on the moneys received as rent by Graham, and Graham was ordered to pay the portion of Suzanne McCrary’s attorney fees attributable to defending against Graham’s petition to vacate. Graham appeals all of these orders.

As his first assignment of error, Graham asserts that the trial court erred in requiring intervenors to prove the basis for their claim of title after intervention had been allowed. Appellant contends that the order granting intervention had already decided the issue of their “having” an interest in the property. He asserts that on the face of the record, bare legal title was sufficient to sustain intervenors’ claim to the property, and the court erred in going beyond issues raised in their petition to vacate. Intervenor’s position is untenable. Graham was permitted to intervene pursuant to 12 O.S.1981, § 237 (since repealed in lieu of 12 O.S.Supp.1987, § 2019 (A), which allowed intervention when a party claimed an interest in the property which is the subject of litigation and the interest could not be protected in any other way. Dean v. Fruehauf Corporation, Okl., 562 P.2d 505 (1977). However, once allowed to intervene, the burden is on the intervenor to prove his allegation of ownership. See, e.g., Greer v. Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corp., Okl., 436 P.2d 50 (1967); Rector v. United States, 20 F.2d 845 (CCA Okl.1927). Appellant clearly failed to meet that burden.

The appellant next argues that the trial court erred in cancelling the deeds from appellee and Stallings. Here, he attempts to suggest that cancellation of these conveyances was done solely to punish him for perceived violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility and he complains that the district court is not the proper authority to determine such violation, or impose punishment therefor. Again, we disagree. Appellant misapprehends the issues and the trial court’s resolution of same.

We are of the opinion that the trial court was correct in cancelling the deeds in question and finding that Graham’s fee was “clearly excessive”.

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McCrary v. McCrary
764 P.2d 522 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
764 P.2d 522, 1988 WL 117682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrary-v-mccrary-okla-1988.