Scoufos v. Fuller

1954 OK 363, 280 P.2d 720, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 753
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 1954
Docket36051, 36052
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 1954 OK 363 (Scoufos v. Fuller) 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
Scoufos v. Fuller, 1954 OK 363, 280 P.2d 720, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 753 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

HALLEY, Chief Justice.

A statement of the principal facts from which these actions arose appears desirable for an understanding of the issues involved in this appeal.

July 19, 1939, J. D. Fuller -and Martha Jackson, a, full-blood restricted Indian, were married.

On February 16, 1940, J. D. Fuller filed a petition for divorce and $50,000 alimony in the District Court of Okfuskee County, alleging serious grounds for divorce and that Martha had about $200,000 on deposit with the Department of Interior and other property and praying for $50,000 alimony. Martha, filed an answer and cross-petition praying for a divorce.

About .10. days after J. D. Fuller had filed his petition for a divorce he suffered a serious head injury and was confined to a hospital for about five weeks, the first two weeks of which he was in a state of coma.

After J. D. Fuller was released from the hospital he went to the home of his father, A. N. Fuller, ¡in Johnston County and on May 23, 1940, the County Court of that County appointed A. N. Fuller the guardian of J. D. Fuller as an incompetent. On June 12, 1940, the guardian filed an amended petition in the divorce action praying for judgment for $50,000 alimony, alleging that he was penniless, afflicted with disease and unable to earn a living. The amended petition did not contain a prayer for divorce, but was amended at the time it was heard by praying for a divorce. The court appointed a guardian ad litem who adopted the pleading of the guardian of J. D. Fuller -as an incompetent.

' On July 17, 1940, the divorce action was ''tried and J. D. Fuller was granted a divorce and support money in the sum of $10,000. This money judgment was later settled for $5,000 with the approval of the County Court appointing a guardian for J. D. Fuller, an incompetent.

January 29, 1942, the County Court of Atoka County adjudged J. D. Fuller to be insane and committed him to the. State Hospital at Vinita from which he was rer leased April 12, 1949, but he has never been restored to competency.

October 17, 1944, some four years after the divorce decree was entered, Martha married Bus.ter Chisholm, with whom she lived as his wife until her death on July 9, 1949. Buster Chisholm filed an .application to probate her will, but he died July 21, 1949 and Harry Scoufos was apjpointéd administrator of his estate.

L. V. Hollis petitioned to probate a later will of Martha’s and the guardian of J..D. Fuller filed objections to the probate of Martha’s will and claimed that he was the surviving husband of Martha. L. V. Hollis answered that J. D. Fuller had been divorced from Martha in 1940. The County Court admitted the will to probate and denied the claim of J. D. Fuller. This judgment was not appealed from and became final, but the only real issue involved'was the factum of the will.

L. V. Hollis, as executor of the will of Martha Jackson Chisholm filed a final report and petition for determination of heirs under Martha.

May 2, 1951, the guardian of J. D. Fuller filed a petition to vacate the divorce decree *723 of July 27, 1940, more than 10 years after1 it was rendered.

The guardian of J. D. Fuller filed an answer to the petition to determine the heirs of Martha and again set up that J. D. Ful-’ ler was her surviving husband. The County Court held that the divorce decree of 1940 was void on the face of the record and' that J. D. Fuller was the surviving husband and “forced” heir of Martha.

The administrator of the estate for Buster Chisholm appealed to the District Court and on November 24, 1952, the District Court held the divorce decree void on the face of the record and vacated the divorce’ decree.

The finding in the will case that J. D. Fuller was the surviving husband of Martha and the decree holding that the divorce decree was invalid necessarily resulted to the same effect, which is, that J. D. Fuller was the husband of Martha after their marriage in 1939 and is now her surviving husband and heir because there had been no valid divorce decree dissolving their marriage. t

It is clear that unless the divorce decree is void on the face of the record, or judgment roll, it cannot be attacked after it has remained unchallenged of record for more than 10 years.

Section 1031, 12 O.S.1951, sets out the-power of a District Court to vacate or modify its judgments. Section 1038, 12 O.S. 1951, provides limitations controlling when judgments may be vacated or modified. The last sentence- of this section is as follows :

“A void judgment may be vacated at any time, on motion of a party, or any person affected thereby.”

This Court has held in numerous cases that in order for a judgment to be void as provided in the Statute just quoted, it must be void on the face of the record, and that extrinsic evidence is not admissible to show judgment is void on the face of .the record.

In Steiner v. Smith, 115 Okl. 205, 242 P. 207, 209, it was said in the body of the opinion: -

“We think the rule is too well established to require the citation of authorities that, where the judgment is sought to be vacated on the grounds that it is void upon its face, the defects must be patent on the face of the record and no outside testimony is permissible to show its invalidity.”

Harry Scoufos, as administrator of the estate of Buster Chisholm, deceased, has appealed and contends that the divorce decree is valid; that J. D. Fuller is estopped from attacking a decree which he obtained; that the court erred in admitting extrinsic evidence; that the judgment of the County Court in the probate case in holding that J. D. Fuller was not Martha’s husband is res judicata; that J. D. Fuller did not overcome the presumption that the marriage of J. D. Fuller and Martha was legally dissolved; and, that Buster Chisholm inherited one-half of her property, except restricted lands.

Is the divorce decree void on the face of the record? The rule as to what defect must appear on the face of the record in order to render a decree void and to subject it to attack at any time is aptly set out in State ex rel. Commissioners of Land Office v. Keller, Okl., 264 P.2d 742, where it is announced that for a judgment to be void on the face of the record it must appear on the face of the judgment roll or record, that the court rendering the judgment lacked (1) jurisdiction over the parties, (2) jurisdiction over the subject matter, or (3) jurisdictional power to render the particular judgment rendered.

Here the court had jurisdiction over the parties, the 'subject matter and power to render the divorce decree. But it is contended that the District Court of Okfuskee County was divested of the power to render judgment because prior to the rendition the County Court of Johnston County had adjudicated J. D. Fuller an incompetent and a guardian had been appointed for him. It is admitted that J. D. Fuller was competent when he filed his divorce action. The defendants 'in error assert that J. D. Fuller was insane at the time the divorce decree was rendered, despite the fact that he ap-

*724 peared in that action by a guardian ad litem and by his regular guardian as an incompetent.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 363, 280 P.2d 720, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scoufos-v-fuller-okla-1954.