Mock v. Stricklin

1957 OK 90, 315 P.2d 247, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 16, 1957
Docket37067
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1957 OK 90 (Mock v. Stricklin) 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
Mock v. Stricklin, 1957 OK 90, 315 P.2d 247, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 494 (Okla. 1957).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

This is a suit, brought in the District Court of Carter County, Oklahoma by W. F. Stricklin, Guardian of the Estate of Lela Pearl Hart, an incompetent, against her son and daughter, Henry Houston Hart and Maudie Plart Wheat, and their children, Harvey Gerald Plart, Helen Juanita Hart, Patsy Ruth Hart, Glen Ray Hart, Flodene Wheat McWorther, Donald E. Wheat, Kenneth E. Wheat, and Doris E. Wheat Felts, and against C. Coit Mock and First National Bank of Wichita Falls, Texas, whereby said plaintiff sought to cancel a certain trust agreement in so far as it affected lands in said county. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Lela Pearl Hart and her son and daughter, above named, were residing in Wichita Falls, Texas, when, on April 7, 1952, she executed a certain trust agreement whereby she appointed the defendant, Mock, as trustee to manage all of her property, both real and personal, for the successive benefit of herself, her two children and her eight grandchildren. The trust conveyance did not specifically describe any certain property but was of “all properties that I now own, whether real or personal, or mixed, of every kind and character, whereever situated, and agree to grant, bargain, sell, assign and convey in trust all properties which I may later acquire * * * ”. By the terms of the agreement, the trustee was given complete authority over the property, to deal with it as he saw fit, to withhold the trust assets or to distribute the same to any or all of the beneficiaries, equally or unequally, as he saw fit, to appoint a successor trustee who should have no power to inquire into the previous management of the estate. The trust was made irrevocable and to exist throughout the life or lives of each and all of the beneficiaries.

At the time of execution of the trust agreement, Lela Pearl Hart’s property consisted of a one ninth undivided interest in approximately 640 acres of land in said Carter County, Oklahoma, which she had inherited from her father and on which there were three producing oil wells, cash in the approximate amount of $7,000 held by her brother for her, and a small house in Wichita Falls, Texas of about $800 in value. At the time of the trial of the case at bar, there were some forty five producing oil wells on the land.

On June 26, 1954, the County Court of Carter County, Oklahoma, appointed the plaintiff herein as guardian of the estate of the said Lela Pearl Hart and, on July 7, thereafter, this suit was instituted by him, seeking the cancellation of the trust agreement as to the lands in said Carter County and the quieting of the title of the said Lela Pearl Hart thereto. Trial of the issues to the court resulted in a decree and judgment for plaintiff from which this appeal was taken by the children of Henry Plouston I-Iart, the trustee, C. Coit Mock, and the successor trustee, First National Bank of Wichita Falls.

The first questions with which we are confronted relate to jurisdiction. It is contended that the plaintiff was not authorized to bring this suit, because the *250 County Court of Carter County did not have jurisdiction to appoint a guardian for the estate of the said Lela Pearl Hart, a resident of the State of Texas unless her incompetency had been previously determined by a proper tribunal of the state of her residence. Regardless of the merit, if any, in that contention, it is not properly before us for determination in this suit. The authority of the County Court, to appoint a guardian of a non-resident minor’s or incompetent’s estate, is defined by 58 O.S.1951, § 861 and 30 O.S.1951 § 9. By attacking the validity of the order appointing the guardian, in this lawsuit, the attack is collateral and, as was held, in the case of Powers v. Brown, 122 Okl. 40, 252 P. 27,

“The county court of Latimer county in guardianship proceedings having found the necessary jurisdictional facts and having issued letters of guardianship, such guardianship proceedings are not subject to a collateral attack unless the proceedings are void upon their face.”

In the case now before us, the order of the county court appointing the guardian contained a finding that Lela Pearl Hart was “a person of unsound mind and mentally incompetent to manage her property and estate.” What evidence constituted the foundation of that finding of fact cannot be collaterally inquired into in this action. In the early case of Lowery v. Partan, 65 Okl. 232, 165 P. 164, 165, the primary issue was the validity of a guardian’s oil and gas lease. The authority of the county court to appoint the guardian was attacked upon the ground that the purported minor had reached the age of majority before the appointment. We said therein that “The order having recited the fact that Choctaw Lowery was a minor, that the necessity existed for the appointment of a guardian, and that W. C. Daniels possessed the qualifications necessary for a guardian, and that an application had been filed asking for such appointment, we think renders the order good as against collateral attack.” The same reasoning is applicable to the situation now under consideration.

The next proposition goes to the-jurisdiction of the trial court to render a personal judgment against the defendant C. Coit Mock. Mock was served by publication. The original petition of plaintiff contained a prayer solely for judgment in rem.. Mock filed a general motion to quash service, then a general demurrer and, finally, an’, answer. In each of the two last mentioned pleadings, he objected to the jurisdiction of the court over his person. Subsequently, plaintiff filed, with permission of the court, an amended petition wherein a personal judgment was sought against Mock, who, thereafter and with permission of the Court' also, refiled his answer. However, no' affirmative relief, in any form, was sought therein. Plaintiff contends that the motion to quash did not raise the jurisdictional question and that the filing of the demurrer and answer had the effect of entering defendant’s general appearance and waiving the question of jurisdiction. To support that argument the case of Ada-Konawa Bridge Co. v. Cargo, 163 Okl. 122, 21 P.2d 1, is cited. “But a reading of the language-used by the court in that case convinces us that the question could be properly raised by answer only if that were the first pleading filed * * * ”. Summers v. Williams, 206 Okl. 164, 242 P.2d 139, 141. In the case at bar, ever}'- pleading, filed by defendant, raised the question of jurisdiction of the court over his person. We see no reason why filing the motion to quash changes, the rule although it did not properly raise said question. A close examination of the cited cases and others on the same point, leads to the conclusion that the rule established in this jurisdiction would be more clearly expressed by putting in the following language: An objection, by a defendant to the jurisdiction of the trial court over his-person, may be raised and preserved by a special plea thereto or by objection included in the first pleading, filed by him which) would otherwise be a general appearance in defense. This the defendant Mock did in the case at bar. Therefore, any judgment *251 against him in personam was erroneous. Wilkinson v. Whitworth, 169 Okl. 286, 36 P.2d 932.

The defendant bank, although a foreign corporation, did not stand in the same position as Mock, having entered its general appearance without objection to the jurisdiction over its person.

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Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 90, 315 P.2d 247, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mock-v-stricklin-okla-1957.