Spurrier v. Spurrier

1925 OK 506, 238 P. 956, 111 Okla. 242, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1925
DocketNos. 14559, 14838, 14839, Consolidated
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1925 OK 506 (Spurrier v. Spurrier) 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
Spurrier v. Spurrier, 1925 OK 506, 238 P. 956, 111 Okla. 242, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 488 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

These three causes of action grew out of an effort on the part of John R. Spurrier to (gain control of his minor children and an effort on the part of J. W. Spurrier and Mrs. J. W. Spurrier, father and mother of John R. Spurrier, to retain custody and control of the minors, their 'g,randohil'dren.

On June 5, 1923 J. W. Spurrier filed his petition in the district court of Rogers coun *243 ty, against John It. Spurrier, and alleged that plaintiff is in lawful custody of the minors by agreement with the defendant and has had thei custody of the minor children, to wit, Alice E. Spurrier, aged 8 years, Margaret Spurrier, aged 6 years, and James R. Spurrier, aged 5 years, for fouir and one-half years and defendant by force, threats, and intimidation, seeks to taike possession, custody and control of the minors, and prays that defendant be enjoined from molesting and disturbing the plaintiff in his lawful and peaceful possession of the minor children.

The court granted a temporary restraining order, and defendant filed his motion to dissolve the same, alleging that he was the only surviving parent oí the children, and was by the county court of Osage county duly appointed the guardian of the persons and property of the minor children, and attached copies of the proceedings of his appointment. Defendant further alleged plaintiffs were preparing to take the children outside the jurisdiction of the court. The court thereupon made an order restraining plaintiffs from removing the minors from the jurisdiction of the court, and on June 8, 1923, John R. Spurrier filed in the district court his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging the grandparents unlawfully held the minor children and setting up his paternity and guardianship; that for the four and one-half years the minors had béen with J. W. and Mrs. J. W. 'Spurrier, he, the father, had paid $150 per month to the grandparents for the maintenance of the children, and now he had a home and prayed the children be restored to him. The causes were consolidated in the district court, and it was stipulated the testimony be considered as the testimony in the injunction suit. The court denied the writ of habeas corpus to John R. and granted a permanent injunction to J. W. Spurrier, and enjoined John' R. from going upon J. W.’s premises or interfering with his custody of the children, and John R. filed notice of appeal. John R. Spurrier thereafter, and on July 24, 1923, filed his original petition for a writ of habeas corpus in this court against J. W. and Mrs. J. W. Spurrier, and this court, upon assuming jurisdiction of the case, continued it indefinitely, pending the filing of the records in the two cases from Rogers county, atnd on November 27, 1923, this court ordered the three causes consolidated and the order provided the parties should brief the three causes in cause No. 14559, the briefs to be considered as filed in, and applicable to, all three cases, the three cases to be heard, considered, and decided together.

The only question to be decided in these three cases 'is, “Is John R. Spurrier, the surviving parent and the duly appointed legal guardian of the persons and estates of the minor children, entitled to the custody of his children and wards, as against J. W. Spurrier and Mrs. J. W. Spurrier, parents of John R. Spurrier, and grandparents of the minor children”?

Throughout this opinion John R. will be designated as “petitioner” and J. W. and Mrs. J. W. Spurrier will be called “respondents. ”

We have carefully read, and considered the briefs and all the records in these cases; and find as follows: Petitioner and his wire, who was She mother of the minors, lived at Bigheart, Okla.,. and petitioner was called to the U. S. service and stationed at Et. Sill, Okla.,- where his wife joined him, and upon the death of a -brother-in-law, the petitioner obtained a furlough, and with his wife returned to Osage county, and when he returned to camp, his wife did not accompany him. He was discharged on December 25, 1918, after the armistice was signed, and returned to Bigheart suffering from the “flu,” but did not find his wife there, but learning her whereabouts and that she was' ill, immediately went to her bedside, and petitioner’s wife died December 28, 1918, and he requested respondents to take care of the children until he could provide a home for them, and agreed to pay respondents $25 per month each for the care of the children. This continued for one year, when respondents told petitioner, “We are due $150 a month for taking care of these children, for their maintenance and for services and looking after them, and I want it.” (This was the testimony of the grandfather.) Thereupon, the petitioner gave his personal check for $900 to the respondent, and ever after or for three and a half years paid the respondents $150 per month for the care of the minors, notwithstanding respondents testified they were living in the minors’ home an eight-room house, and farmed 80 acres of the minors’ land and paid no rent, “but just made their home there.”

Respondent claimed a one-fourth interest in the house as against the minors’ throe-fourths interest, and when asked if he owned a one-fourth interest, he made evasive replies, such as “Well, I got a deed for it,” and when required to answer direct, he said,

“Yes, I own it.” Subsequently, six checks •we.re introduced showing the petit’oner had *244 purchased respondents’ interest for the minors, the checks reciting on their face “For 1-4 interest in Claremore house.” These checks were made payable to J. W. Spurrier, and signed by John R. Spurrier, as guardian, and indorsed by J. W. Spurrier, and the testimony of respondents does not impress this -court very favorably.

Petitioner is engaged in business as an oil operator, and has an income of $4,000 per annum from the TJ. S. government apart from his business income, and the minors have an income from the U. S. -government of $2,000 each per annum, and the respondent testifies he has an income of but $700) or $800 per year, and as he receives $1,800' per year for the care of the children and has 80 acres and a house, belonging to the minors, we might indulge a surmise as to why he is so anxio-ud to retain the custody of them. Through all these cases respondents charge their 30 year old son, the petitioner, with being a drunkard, with brutality, with embezzlement of the minors’ funds, and with immorality.

Twenty-five witnesses were sworn and testified for either side. Bankers, lawyers, doctors, merchants, real estate dealers, and oil operators testified they had known petitioner for periods ranging from three months-to- ten years, and had never seen him drunk, or neveit saw him take a drin-k, -and it is safe to assume that in a town the size of Bigheart, if petitioner had been the “village drunkard,” it would not have been a hard task to prove the same.

Steen -Spurrier, aged 27, brother of petitioner, called for respondents, testified that John R. had told him (Steen) that he had taken two drinks in the Mid-Con. office, two drinks at a restaurant, or at his hotel, and one drink of port wine at Shreveport, La., and that whisky- madel him denlthly siok. Steen further testified he never saw petitioner take a drink of liquor, but when he called petitioner, the night he was at the Mid-Con. office, petitioner’s voice over the phc-ne was not in his opinion “normal.” One of the witnesses who- was present at the Mid-Con.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 506, 238 P. 956, 111 Okla. 242, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spurrier-v-spurrier-okla-1925.