Odle v. Baskins

1942 OK 105, 126 P.2d 276, 190 Okla. 664, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 10, 1942
DocketNos. 30030, 30031.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1942 OK 105 (Odle v. Baskins) 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
Odle v. Baskins, 1942 OK 105, 126 P.2d 276, 190 Okla. 664, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 179 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

These two actions were commenced in district court by George Baskins and Cleo Baskins, respectively, against Nellie Odie and others to recover undivided interests in certain land, and for accounting. The causes were consolidated for trial, and judgment rendered in each case for the plaintiff therein. Nellie Odie has appealed, and the cases have been consolidated for review.

In 1912 William Baskins died testate in Oklahoma county leaving surviving as his only heirs at law his widow, Sarah A. Baskins, and seven children and the children of a deceased child. *665 By his will he disinherited the children of the deceased child, devised to his widow a life estate, and to each of his living children an undivided l/7th interest in the land in question, with the provision, however, that the land be sold by the executor and the proceeds divided among the children accordingly.

The living children aforesaid were the defendant Nellie Odle, the plaintiff George Baskins, and Ed Baskins, since deceased, and of whom the plaintiff Cleo Baskins is the only heir, Leslie Baskins, Lewis Baskins, Bertha Struble, and Anna Pettyjohn.

Some years later the will was duly admitted to probate, but, on January 23, 1930, prior to determination of heirs and final distribution, Sarah A. Baskins died intestate without having elected whether to take under the will or by succession. Said intestate left surviving the children and grandchildren aforesaid and another daughter, Ada Jorgen-sen, apparently by another marriage.

Prior to the death of Sarah A. Bas-kins the said Ed Baskins quitclaimed his l/7th interest to his brother Leslie, who in 1928 quitclaimed a l/7th interest to defendant Nellie Odle. And in 1924 George Baskins, the plaintiff aforesaid, quitclaimed his l/7th interest to Nellie Odle, all of which, she says, gave to her an undivided 3/7ths interest.

On May 9, 1932, final decree determining the heirs of William Baskins and ordering distribution of his estate in compliance with his will was entered in county court. The decree approved executor’s sale of the land to Nellie Odle pursuant to agreement of all the children as named in the will, except George Baskins and Ed Baskins were not parties thereto.

In the meantime, however, and subsequent to the death of Sarah A. Bas-kins, Ada Jorgensen above mentioned, and Arthur Hoover, one of the grandchildren named in the will as aforesaid, commenced an action in district court against all the heirs of Sarah A. Baskins, except George Baskins and Ed Baskins, with the apparent purpose of recovering their interest in the l/3rd undivided interest allegedly left by Sarah A. Baskins. Only the journal entry of judgment in that case appears in the record. It was entered July 27, 1932, subsequent to the final decree in the William Baskins case.

In the district court action, above, which we refer to herein as the Jorgen-sen Case, each of the seven children aforesaid was decreed to be the owner of 50/378ths interest in the land, or l/7th of 2/3rds plus l/9th of l/3rd, and Ada Jorgensen 14/378ths or l/9th of l/3rd interest or l/27th, and each of the two grandchildren a 7/378ths or l/54th interest.

Subsequent to that judgment, and on August 1, 1932, a final decree determining heirs and directing distribution was entered in the matter of the estate of Sarah A. Baskins. The estate purportedly distributed was the l/3rd interest of the deceased in the lands here involved which she was alleged to have inherited from William Baskins, her husband. The heirs named in the decree and to whom the estate was distributed were the seven children of William Baskins and Sarah A. Baskins, and Ada Jorgensen, and the two grandchildren aforesaid. The interest of Anna Pettyjohn, who had died, was distributed to her estate. Each of the children of Sarah A. Baskins, including Ada Jorgensen, was decreed to be heir to a l/9th interest in the l/3rd interest in the land, and the two grandchildren to be heirs to l/18th interest each in the said l/3rd interest.

By the present actions, respectively, George Baskins seeks to recover from Nellie Odle the l/7th of the 2/3rds interest inherited by him from his father, and the l/9th of the l/3rd interest inherited from his mother, or 50/378ths interest in the whole, together with certain rents and profits. Cleo Baskins, as the only heir of Ed Baskins who died in 1936, seeks to recover a like interest with rents and profits.

*666 Plaintiffs take the position that the executor’s sale to Nellie Odie was valid so far as 2/3rds interest in the land was concerned, but that by reason of the agreement, among the heirs as aforesaid she held the separate interests of the heirs therein in trust for said heirs. No attack is made on the quitclaim deeds executed by George Baskins and Ed Baskins that would seem on their face to convey all the interest they then had in the land as devisees of William Baskins.

The assertion that Nellie Odie still holds the interests of George Baskins and Ed Baskins in trust for them and their heirs seems to be based upon the final decree of the county court rendered in the William Baskins case finding them to be entitled to a l/7th distributive share each in said estate, and upon the judgment in the Jorgensen Case, supra, wherein George Baskins and Ed Baskins were each held to be the owner of 50/378ths interest in the entire tract. Apparently plaintiffs consider those decrees as res judicata of their respective claims to a l/7th interest in the 2/3rds interest as devised to George Baskins and Ed Baskins by William Baskins. We are not presently considering the l/3rd interest allegedly inherited by the Widow, Sarah A. Bas-kins. That interest will be considered later herein.

In its formal findings of fact the trial court found that the final decree of heirship and distribution in the matter of the estate of William Baskins designated George Baskins and Ed Baskins as heirs and entitled to a l/7th distributive share each in said estate; that a pretended sale of the land was made as directed by the will, and the title transferred to Nellie Odie in trust for all the devisees as directed by the order of the court; that she had conveyed to all the devisees their respective interests except George Baskins and Ed Baskins, or to Cleo Baskins as heir of the latter, and that Nellie Odie had excluded the plaintiffs from their interests in the land.

The trial court concluded as a matter of law that said final decree was conclusive and binding and a determination by the county court as to who were the heirs of William Baskins and what their respective interests were, that the same was not appealed from and was binding on the court, and conclusive as to the rights of plaintiffs and defendants. The judgment of the court was that each plaintiff was entitled to recover from Nellie Odie a l/7th of the 2/3rds interest devised by the will.

In its findings of fact and conclusions of law the court made no reference to the district court judgment rendered in the Jorgensen case, above. Neither did the court mention the quitclaim deeds executed by George Baskins and Ed Baskins to Nellie Odie. So far as the interest affected by the will of William Baskins was concerned, the court based its judgment entirely on the alleged finality of the county court decree aforesaid awarding a l/7th interest each to George Baskins and Ed Baskins.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 105, 126 P.2d 276, 190 Okla. 664, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odle-v-baskins-okla-1942.