Perkins v. Middleton

1917 OK 373, 166 P. 1104, 66 Okla. 1, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1917
Docket7932
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1917 OK 373 (Perkins v. Middleton) 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
Perkins v. Middleton, 1917 OK 373, 166 P. 1104, 66 Okla. 1, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 98 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUMMONS, C.

The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the court helo'w. Eva Middleton and May Middleton, the plaintiffs, are Choctaw Indians of less than one-half blood, and each received an allotment situated in Jefferson county, Okla. Charles Middleton, the father of the plaintiffs, was duly appointed their guardian by the county court of Bryan county, and qualified and acted as such guardian. A petition was filed by him as such guardian in the county court of Bryan county for an order of sale of the allotments of plaintiffs. Such order was duly signed, and the allotments were sold thereunder. Eva Middleton’s allotment was bid in by W. A. McLagon for $1,450, and May Middleton's allotment was bid in by W!. W. Peniston for $1,600. The guardian made return of the sales to the county court, and the same were, on February 22, 1910, confirmed by said court, and the guardian was ordered to execute guardian’s deeds conveying said allotments to the respective purchasers. McLagon and Penis-io.i ma o default in the payments of the purchase price of the respective allotments, and refused to pay for the same. The guardian by his attorneys then began negotiations with the defendants for the purpose of procuring the defendants to take these allotments at the prices bid for them by McLagon and Pen-iston. The negotiations resulted in an agreement between such guardian and the defendants by which it was agreed that the defendants were to.take the allotments sold to Mc-Lagon and Peniston at the price bid for them, and that the guardian was to take a conveyance from the defendants of two lots in the town of Bokchito, Bryan county, upon which a hotel building was erected, for $2,200 of the purchase price of said allotments. Pursuant to this agreement the guardian made application to the county court for an order authorizing him to invest $2,200 of the funds of his wirds arising from the sale of their allotments in the hotel property at Bokchito. ■On March 11, 1910, the county court of Bryan county approved the investment of the sum of $2,200 in said hotel property and ordered the guardian to pay said sum for said property and take a deed therefor to his wards. On March 31, 1910, said guardian executed his guardian’s deed, conveying the respective allotments to McLagon and Pen-iston. McLagon and Peniston quitclaimed said allotments to the defendants, or to a grantee designated by defendants. Defendants conveyed, or caused to be conveyed, the hotel property in Bokchito to the plaintiffs. There Was evidence tending to show that the balance of the purchase price of said allotments, the sum of $850, was paid, part to the guardian and in the payment of costs and attorney’s fees for conducting said sale. On July 21, 1914, Eva Middleton, who arrived at her majority on ’September 25, 1913, for herself and as next friend for May Middleton, who was still a minor, began this action in the district court of Bryan county against the defendants. The petition of plaintiffs alleged the facts above set out, and alleged that such fae.ts constituted a fraud upon the county court of Bryan county and upon the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs alleged that the transaction between their guardian and the defendants was unauthorized by law; alleged that the reasonable value of their allotments was $4,000, and that the value of the property in Bokchito was $1,000; that no cash consideration was ever paid for said allotments; that the guardian of plaintiffs had expended the sum of $200 for repairs on said Bokchito property and that the title to the allotments of the plaintiffs had passed into the hands of innocent purchasers. Plaintiffs then prayed judgment against the defendants for the sum of $2,200, being the purported consideration of said lots, for the sum of $200 for the repairs made on the building upon said lots, together with such other sums as would compensate plaintiffs for the general and special damages suffered by plaintiffs, and prayed that the court divest plaintiffs of the title to the lots in Bokchito and vest the same in the grantors, set forth in the deed to plaintiffs, of said lots. Defendants answered, denying any fraud on the part of the guardian or the defendants, and pleading the action of the county court of Bryan county, ordering the investment of $2,200 in the Bokchito property. Defendants further pleaded that the guardian of plaintiffs charged himself as" such guardian with the purchase price of He nhofments of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs further pleaded the statutes of limitation. Plaintiffs replied, putting in issue the allegations of the answer,. The cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of $2,305. Defendants in due time moved for. a new trial, and, their motion being overruled, excepted, and bring this *3 proceeding in error to reverse the judgment of the trial court.

The defendants’ first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict in favor of the defendants. Under this assignment it is contended by-counsel for defendants that the testimony as to the real nature, of the transaction between the guardian of plaintiffs and the defendants was incompetent, and that, as the proceedings in the county court of Bryan county, respecting the sale of the allotments of plaintiffs and the reinvestment of $2,200 of the proceeds of such sale in the Bokchito property, appeared regular upon the face of the record, the same could not be impeached in a collateral proceeding such as this, it is further urged in support of this assignment, that there Was evidence tending to show that the county court of Bryan county, when it made the order for the reinvestment of the funds of plaintiffs in the Bokchito property, was fully advised as to all the facts surrounding the transaction, and that the entire proceeding was regular and authorized by law.

The authority of a guardian to sell his wards’ real estate rests entirely upon the statutes, and such real estate cannot be sold or conveyed by the guardian except for the purposes and upon the terms and conditions prescribed by the statutes. 12 R. C. L. 1126-1137; Baken v. Fox, 57 Okla. 544, 157 Pac. 340. 342. Section 6567, Rev. Laws 1910, is as follows:

“All sales of. real estate of wards must be for cash, or for part cash and part deferred payments, not to exceed three years, bearing date from date of sale, as, in the discretion of the county judge is most beneficial to the ward. Guardians making sales must demand and receive from the purchaser a bond and mortgage on the real estate sold, with such additional security as the judge deems necessary and sufficient to secure the faithful payment of the deferred payments and the interest thereon.”

The purposes for which real estate of the ward may be sold are set out in sect' ons 6553, 6554, Rev. Laws 1910, as follows:

“6553. When the income of an estate under guardianship is not sufficient to maintain the ward and his family, or to maintain and educate the ward when a minor, his guardian may sell his real or personal estate for that purpose, upon obtaining an order therefor.
“6554. When it appears to the satisfaction of the court, upon the petition of the guardian, that for the benefit of his ward his real or personal estate, or some part thereof, should be sold, and the proceeds thereof put out at interest, or invested in some productive stock, or in the improvement or security of any other real estate of the ward,' his guardian may sell the same for such purpose, upon obtaining an order therefor..-”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 373, 166 P. 1104, 66 Okla. 1, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-middleton-okla-1917.