Parish v. Ned

1953 OK 379, 264 P.2d 762, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 22, 1953
Docket35286
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1953 OK 379 (Parish v. Ned) 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
Parish v. Ned, 1953 OK 379, 264 P.2d 762, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 645 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Plaintiffs in error are sons, daughters and a daughter of another deceased daughter of Robert and Eliza Parish, full blood Choctaw Indians, now deceased. After these sons and daughters were born to Eliza she instituted a divorce action against Robert in the District Court of Pittsburg County, in 1925, but did not obtain the divorce until 1927. In the interim she gave birth to a child named Elsie Ned, whose putative father was another Choctaw full *764 blood Indian named John Ned. When John Ned died he left a will devising his Indian allotment “to my daughter, Elsie Ned” as his only heir. This will was duly probated in Cause No. 2051 of the County Court of Carter County, Oklahoma, and by an instrument denominated “Order Approving Final Report, Determining Heirs and Discharging Administrator”, entered in said proceedings November 6, 1930, title to said allotment was vested in the said Elsie Ned. Thereafter, in 1942, the United States Probate Attorney commenced Cause No. 3302, in the same court on behalf of the said Elsie Ned to determine the heirs of the said John Ned, deceased, which terminated in a decree wherein Elsie was found to be said deceased’s daughter as well as his sole and only heir. Neither of these decrees of the probate court were ever appealed from, but in 1951, after Elsie Ned’s death, plaintiffs in error instituted the present action in the same county court against 'the unknown heirs, executors, etc., of Elsie Ned, deceased, and John Ned’s brother, Ernest Ned, together with the Oklahoma Tax Commission, as defendants, to quiet their title as heirs of Elsie Ned to the land originally allotted to John Ned, and theretofore devised and set over to Elsie Ned, as above described.

Plaintiffs in error and Ernest Ned, the defendant in error, will -hereinafter be re-fered to as plaintiffs and defendant, as they appeared below.

At the trial of this cause in the county court, the parties entered into a stipulation of- facts recognizing the previous two proceedings in said court, above mentioned, and agreed that the records in said proceedings could be considered a part of the record in this case. It was further stipulated that Elsie Ned died intestate and without issue, while a resident of Carter County, Oklahoma, on November, 17, 1950, and that at the time of her death she was the owner of the land in controversy. It was further stipulated “that John Ned was her father, and that he acknowledged himself publicly to be her father, and that her mother was Eliza * * * Parish; that Elsie Ned was the illegitimate child of Eliza * * * Parish, ..and John Ned * * At the close of the trial the court entered judgment for defendant upon finding that Elsie Ned was the illegitimate daughter of Eliza Parish and John Ned, and that the defendant Ernest Ned was John Ned’s brother and there were no other persons related to Elsie Ned “in the same degree or any closer degree of blood.” The judgment followed the court’s conclusion as a matter of law that Ernest Ned is the sole and only heir of Elsie Ned, deceased, and that plaintiffs were not her heirs and, upon her death, inherited no interest in her estate.

When plaintiffs appealed from said county court judgment to the district court, they attempted, by the filing of an amended petition, to lay claim to the land in controversy as heirs of Elsie Ned, under Title 84 O.S.1951, § 216, which provides that the estate of an unacknowledged illegitimate child goes to his mother and in case of her death to her heirs. At the trial in the district court, the attorney for the defendant introduced' in evidence, over the objection of plaintiffs’ attorney, the stipulation that had been entered into in the county court trial, together with the proceedings in Causes Numbered 2051 and 3302, supra. The only witness called to testify was the defendant, Ernest Ned. At the close of the trial, the district court entered judgment affirming the previous judgment of the county court.

Plaintiffs have perfected this appeal to review the judgment of the district court, sometimes hereinafter referred to as the “trial court.”

The first question we will consider is whether or not the trial court erred in admitting, over plaintiffs’ objection, the stipulation of facts they had entered into with defendant in the. previous county court trial of the cause, and in also admitting, over a like objection, the will probate proceedings and determination of heirship proceedings in Causes Numbered 2051 and 3302, respectively. Plaintiffs say that all of such evidence was incompetent, but they .cite no authorities to support this contention. The admissibility of the fact stipulation was settled at an early date in this jurisdiction by Blankinship v. Okla *765 homa City Light & Water-Power Co., 4 Okl. 242, 43 P. 1088. The holding- in that • case has been approved and- followed by this Court in the more recent case of Yamie v. Willmott, 184 Okl. 382, 88 P.2d 325. In accord with these decisions, which have never been reversed or disapproved by this Court, the district court committed no error in admitting the stipulation entered into in the county court trial between the parties to this controversy. This is true, even though the appeal to the district court was in the nature of a trial de novo, and was not necessarily restricted to the evidence introduced in the county court trial. As to the court records of the will probate proceedings, plaintiffs cannot urge their inadmissibility for we note they were the ones who offered them. It is axiomatic that he who has brought about such an error, if error it was, cannot gain advantage of it on appeal. Midland Savings & Loan Co. v. Cheves, 59 Okl. 85, 158 P. 362; Dudley v. Meggs, 54 Okl. 65, 153 P. 1121, and other cases cited in 2A Oklahoma Digest under Appeal and Error, <g=5882(l); 3 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error, § 879,

The portion of the -heirship determination proceedings, in Cause No. 3302, in which the court found that Elsie Ned was John Ned’s daughter tends to refute plaintiffs’ contention that under the presumption of legitimacy statute, title 10 O.S.1951, §§ 1-3, incl., they must be considered full brothers and sisters of Elsie Ned. The only statute cited in plaintiffs’ brief that in any way appears likely to support their contention that this evidence was inadmissible is Section 3 of said Title, which provides that the presumption of legitimacy can be disputed only by the husband or wife or the descendant-of one or both of them. As the defendant, Ernest Ned, is a descendant of neither Robert nor Eliza Parish, they say this statute renders him powerless to overcome the statutory legitimacy presumption and to prove that Elsie Ned was the illegitimate daughter of John Ned rather than the legitimate daughter of Robert Parish. Under the rule governing this court’s review of errors in the admission of evidence, any error in admitting the determination of heirship proceedings must be considered harmless, if, under the record before us, such evidence was merely cumulative, and Elsie Ned’s illegitimacy was sufficiently established by other evidence. See cases cited in 2A Oklahoma Digest under Appeal and Error, ^1051(1).

This brings us to plaintiffs’ contention that the trial court’s judgment was not justified on the basis of competent evidence. They claim there was no competent proof that John Ned was Elsie Ned’s true father, or that he ever legally recognized her as such.

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Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 379, 264 P.2d 762, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parish-v-ned-okla-1953.