Salvation Army v. Morris

421 F.2d 805, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10803
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1970
Docket237-68
StatusPublished

This text of 421 F.2d 805 (Salvation Army v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salvation Army v. Morris, 421 F.2d 805, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10803 (10th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

421 F.2d 805

The SALVATION ARMY, a Georgia corporation,
Plaintiff-Appellant, Cross Appellee,
v.
Thomas J. MORRIS, Defendant-Appellee, and Kathryne Morris
Leverett, Gertrude Morris Hudspeth, Daisy Morris Moore
Duvall, and Ruth Morris Zelief Dunkin, Defendants-Appellees,
Cross Appellants, and Phillips Petroleum Co., Mobil Oil
Corporation, the British-American Oil Producing Company, P.
G. Lake, Inc., Sinclair Oil and Gas Company, Cities Service
Oil Company, and Mid-American Oil Company,
Defendants-Nominal Appellees.

Nos. 236-68, 237-68.

United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.

Feb. 9, 1970.

A. Paul Murrah, Jr., of Andrews, Mosburg, Davis, Elam, Legg & Kornfield, A.P.C., Oklahoma City, Okl., for plaintiff-appellant, cross appellee.

William G. Paul, Oklahoma City, Okl. (C. Harold Thweatt and Crowe, Dunlevy, Thweatt, Swinford, Johnson & Burdick, Oklahoma City, Okl., were with him on the brief) for defendants-appellees, cross appellants.

Before LEWIS, Circuit Judge, FAHY,* Senior Circuit Judge, and SETH, Circuit Judge.

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma dismissing the appellant's suit for lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter.

By its complaint, the appellant seeks to impose in its favor a constructive trust upon the estate of J. W. Morris, probated in 1959 and presently held, pending the outcome of this litigation, by Thomas J. Morris, the residuary legatee and executor under the will and one of the defendant-appellees in this action. Prior to the commencement of the 1959 probate proceeding in the County Court of Murray County, Oklahoma, the appellee Morris entered into an oral agreement with the other legatees, half-brothers and -sisters of the deceased and co-appellees in this action, by which all were to receive equal shares in the estate, thereby avoiding the terms of the will which bequeathed to each named legatee the sum of $1.00 and the remainder to the residuary legatee. Subsequent to the entry of the final probate decree, which distributed the property according to the terms of the will, but before the initiation of this action, the validity of the family settlement agreement was upheld in an action brought in the state courts by the named legatees against the residuary legatee. The decision was affirmed on appeal, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma holding that the forbearance of the nominal legatees in not revealing to the probate court the possibility of the existence of another will was sufficient consideration to enforce the settlement agreement but was insufficient to constitute a fraud on the probate court. See Morris v. Leverett, Okl., 434 P.2d 912.

It is appellant's contention that the agreement vesting all of the legatees with equal shares violated the terms of the codicil to the will which stated that should any of the named legatees engage in any 'borrowing or lending' of their shares among themselves or 'attempt to contest the terms of (this) will or * * * codicil' then they were to take nothing and their shares bequeathed to the Salvation Army.1 The appellant, a named legatee, was given no personal notice of the probate proceeding and consequently has had no prior opportunity to obtain an adjudication of its claim arising under the will. The fraud alleged in the complaint was not-- as the decision of the Oklahoma Supreme Court indicates-- a fraud upon the court and accordingly, if fraud at all, was extrinsic to the probate proceeding. Therefore, the appellant argues, subject matter jurisdiction lies to bring an independent action in equity to entertain the imposition of a constructive trust upon the estate. We agree.

Equitable relief from a judgment may be obtained on the ground of extrinsic or collateral fraud. Fraud is regarded as extrinsic or collateral where it prevents a party from having a trial or from presenting his cause of action or his defense, or induces him to withdraw a defense, or operates upon matters pertaining not to the judgment itself, but to the manner in which it was procured. Chisholm v. House, 10 Cir., 160 F.2d 632 at 643

The appellant has alleged that because of the forfeiture provision in the codicil a concerted, fraudulent effort was made to avoid informing Salvation Army of the probate proceedings and that, for the same reason, the parol agreement was not revealed to the probate court. The record on appeal and the facts established in Morris v. Leverett, supra, provide more than threshold support for this characterization of the conduct of the appellees. Moreover, the Oklahoma courts2 have consistently characterized substantially similar conduct as extrinsic fraud, thereby according jurisdiction to provide relief from final judgments when equitably indicated. The inadvertent failure of the administratrix to divulge to the probate court the possibility of a missing heir was held, in Phillips v. Ball, Okl., 358 P.2d 193, to warrant the imposition of a constructive trust in favor of that missing heir in an independent action brought ten years after the final probate decree. See also Cook v. Morrison, 202 Okl. 693, 217 P.2d 810. In the instant case the failure to serve notice upon Salvation Army, whether inadvertent or not, would seem to contravene the Oklahoma statutory requirement which states that 'written * * * copies of the notice of the time appointed for the probate of the will, must be * * * (mailed) to the heirs, legatees and devisees of the testator * * *.' Okl.Stat.Ann. tit. 58, 26 (1965). Whatever else may be concluded from this failure to serve notice, when coupled with the suppression of the oral agreement, it demands application of the rule providing equity jurisdiction to entertain the kind of cause asserted here.3

The argument of the appellees, accepted by the court below, is that to entertain the relief sought by Salvation Army would, of necessity, operate to modify, vacate or set aside the fully executed judgment of a state court. Were it necessary to characterize the fraud alleged by appellant as intrinsic, this argument would prevail. See Droppleman v. Horsley, 10 Cir.,372 F.2d 249. However, as we have indicated, the fraud involved herein, when measured by the applicable criteria, must necessarily be characterized as extrinsic and therefore subject to collateral review. In Morris v. Leverett,supra, the appellees named as nominal heirs rendered the probate decree nugatory insofar as it serves to determine any of the legal rights and interests involved in this litigation. As a consequence, it is no disservice to the principle of res judicata to allow the appellant to now assert its right to the same equitable remedy accorded the parties to the oral agreement.

The order of the court below was based alternatively upon the absence, in its view, of the requisite jurisdictional amount.

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1960 OK 145 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1960)
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Salvation Army v. Morris
421 F.2d 805 (Tenth Circuit, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
421 F.2d 805, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvation-army-v-morris-ca10-1970.