Southern Surety Co. v. Enfield

1924 OK 156, 229 P. 446, 103 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 5, 1924
Docket14594
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1924 OK 156 (Southern Surety Co. v. Enfield) 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
Southern Surety Co. v. Enfield, 1924 OK 156, 229 P. 446, 103 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 259 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM. C.

The parties will be designated in this opinion as they were designated in the court below.

The plaintiffs filed their petition in the district court of Garfield county against the defendant as surety to recover from it as *117 surety of the executor’s bond of one A. D. Howard, as executor of the estate of P. H. Bradley, deceased, which suit upon the said bond is based upon the breach of conditions by A. D. Howard, executor, contained in the bond, which bond was given to and approved by the county court of Garfiel'd county, Okia.

To this petition the defendant filed its demurrer, which being overruled defendant filed its answer, to which an amendment was afterward filed, and thereafter plaintiffs filed their reply.

The cause was called for trial in the district ciuirt. a inry being waived, and at the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence the demurrer of the defendant to their evidence was overruled. At the conclusion of all of the evidence the cause was taken under advisement, and on February 17, 1923, the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and entered judgment for the plaintiffs for $14,000, the face of the bond, and interest.

Motion for a new trial, was filed and overruled. Notice of appeal was given and supersedeas bond fixed, which was filed within the time provided by law. The cause comes regularly on appeal to this court.

The defendant has assigned numerous specifications of error in its petition in error, which are presented and argued in the brief of defendant under three propositions.

Under the first proposition it is contended in the brief of plaintiff in error that this suit could not be maintained in the trial court against the surety upon the bond until after the executor, A. D. Howard, filed his final account, and until there was a final decree of final settlement on the final account in the county court.

It is argued that the trial court, in its findings of fact and conclusions of law, held that the district court as a court of equity had jurisdiction to settle the account of Howard, as executor of the estate of Bradley, deceased; to determine the question of debts of the estate, both in this state and in Iowa; to determine the amount due from Howard to the residuary legatees, and then to render judgment on the bond; that no final settlement in the county court was necessary nor was a decree of the county court on final settlement adjudging the amount due the residuary legatees a condition precedent to maintaining this action.

It appears from the findings of fact found by the court that P. H. Bradley died testate in Greene county, Iowa, and his will was regularly admitted to probate in the district court of that county, there being real and personal property located there, and said A. D. Howard gave bond as executor to cover the estate in the state of Iowa, and that letters testamentary were issued to him out of that court as to the Iowa property, and that there was a farm located in'Garfield county, Okla., which the deceased owned at the time of his death.

That under the terms of said will the debts, funeral expenses of the deceased, and certain direct legacies mentioned in the will were to be first paid, then by the residuary clause in the said will all the residue and remainder of the estate, wherever situated and whatever the same may consist of, was willed and directed to' be divided as follows:

“One-third thereof to my sister, Emma En-field, and two-thirds thereof to Winona White, Otto Enfield, Iva Meyer, and Rosella En-field, share and share alike.” — plaintiffs in this ease.

That the said residuary clause covered the farm owned by the deceased. P. H. Bradley, situated in Garfield county, Okla.

That all the debts, expenses, and direct legacies were paid out of the Iowa estate except a little court costs in Iowa, but there was a fund from the Iowa estate more than sufficient to pay said court costs there.

That in 1920 Howard probated in the county court of Garfield county the will of P. H. Bradley as a foreign will, and was appointed executor. He qualified by taking his oath and filing a bond of $14,000 with the Southern Surety company as surety, and designating in writing H. G. Sturgis, in Garfield county, as service agent. Thereafter he sold, through the county court in Garfield county, the land in that county for $17,900. the proceedings being conducted by Sturgis, as attorney for Howard, who was never personally in the state. The purchase price of the land was paid to Sturgis, who, after deducting the court costs and attorney fees, remitted the balance of $17,000.20 to A. J. Howard, in Iowa and California; that Howard filed no final account in the county court of Garfield county.

On May 25, 1921, the plaintiffs filed in the county court of Garfield county a petition for citation against Howard to require him to give additional security and show cause why he should not be removed as executor.

Citation was issued requiring Howard to appear to answer the petition. This was served on Sturgis as resident agent of Howard, as executor.

*118 On May 31, 1921, the case was continued to June 8, 1921, at which time the county court entered a decree in which it found Howard indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $17,-000.20: that he had failed to account for said sum; that he had absconded; and removed him as executor.

The county court upon said hearing, ordered, adjudged, and decreed:

“That the said A. D. Howard as executor of the estate of P. H. Bradley, deceased, is indebted to Emma Enfield, Winona White, Otto Enfield, Iva Myer and Rosella Enfield, in the total sum of $17,000.20; coming to them as the proceeds of the executor’s sale of the farm situated in Garfield county, Oklahoma, which the said A. D. Howard received and has not accounted for. and which does not include any proceeds of property situated in Iowa which was devised to these petitioners as residuary legatees, the said A. D. Howard, not appearing in response to said citation and his having filed an additional bond, and his not filing any final account, and his not paying the proceeds into the court, the court further ordered that the said A. D. Howard as the executor of the estate of P. H. Bradley estate in said court was removed and his authority was cancelled to represent the estate as executor thereof in said court thereafter.”

The decisive question in this case, as we view it, is whether the district court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter of the liability of the defendant on the bond of the executor, in view of the fact that no final account had been filed by the executor, A. D. Howard, in the county court of Garfield county.

The trial court, in its findings of fact and conclusions of law, held that as a court of equity it had jurisdiction in the light of the facts and circumstances of the case to determine the amount due from Howard, the executor, to the residuary legatees, plaintiffs in this ease, and then to render judgment on the bond.

After finding the facts, the court concluded as a matter of law:

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Related

Durant v. Changing, Inc.
891 P.2d 628 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1995)
Howard v. Jeffrey
1953 OK 387 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
American Surety Co. of N. Y. v. Wilson
1935 OK 377 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Spencer v. Hamilton
1932 OK 87 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 156, 229 P. 446, 103 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-surety-co-v-enfield-okla-1924.