State Ex Rel. Williamson v. Longmire

1955 OK 89, 281 P.2d 949, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 741
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 29, 1955
Docket36623
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1955 OK 89 (State Ex Rel. Williamson v. Longmire) 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
State Ex Rel. Williamson v. Longmire, 1955 OK 89, 281 P.2d 949, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 741 (Okla. 1955).

Opinions

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The State’s Attorney General, the City of Pryor’s Mayor, and Mayes County’s Treasurer, who appear with the State, and others, as petitioners herein, have been designated in accord-with House Bill 883 of the Twenty-Fourth Legislature, Tit. 62, chapter 3, S.L.1953, for the governmental units they serve, as trustees of the residue of the W. A. Graham estate in Probate Cause No. 3661 of the County Court of Mayes County, Oklahoma, wherein said decedent’s will was admitted to probate; and his estate, valued at $3,500,000.00, has been administered by Baylis L. Graham, Earl Ward and C. D. Mitchell, the duly appointed co-administr.ators with the will annexed of said estate. In this original action they instituted by filing their petition therefor, petitioners seek a Writ of Prohibition to prevent the respondent County Judge from taking -the action hereinafter more fully described. Carl Graham, one of the testator’s nephews, as well as a legatee under the will, has also been named a respondent in said petition. His legacy was the sum of $20,000.

During the course of the administration proceedings Carl Graham and others of the testator’s heirs, legatees and/or devisees, took the position that the probate court could validly distribute no portion of said estate to the governmental units above referred to. They asserted this position both in objections made to approval of an instrument filed by the administrators in said Cause 3661, supra, entitled “Supplemental and/or Final Account and Petition for Determination of Heirs, For Payment of Attorneys Fees and Administrators Fees, and For Distribution”, in an appeal sought to be taken from the probate court’s order referred to as having been entered “January 28-29”, 1954, approving said account, in a previous mandamus or prohibition action instituted in this court against Thomas E. Landrum (the then Mayes County Court Judge), and in a Federal suit filed by Carl Graham.

Thereafter, by a contract and agreement between all of the parties advocate of such decree and those objecting to it, evidenced by a pleading filed August.8, 1954, in said probate Cause No. 3661, supra, seeking the Court’s approval of such settlement, the legatees and devisees who had made such objections, including those referred to as the “Carl Graham Group”, agreed to dis[952]*952miss any and all claims and' causes of action they had been maintaining, or might have, against said estate, for the sum of. $135,000, of which total the Carl Graharii Group’s pro rata share amounted to $15,000. Said settlement-money was to be paid over and above the bequests prescribed for these parties in the will.

By its order entered February 8, 1954, the court gave its approval of said compromise settlement,. but, according to facts represented in paragraph 8 of the “Final and/or Supplemental Account and Petition For Determination, of Heirs and For Final Settlement, and For Approval of Administrators’ Accounts and For Discharge” which was thereafter filed March 2, 1954, such court approval was only tentative, or “subject to final approval” of said court upon its subsequent approval Of said final or supplemental account. Thereafter, at á hearing on said final and/or supplemental account, at which all of the parties were represented, the court, on April 7, 1954, by a journal entry approved by all of the parties’ attorneys, entered its “Order Ap-‘ proving Final and/or Supplemental Ac-' count, Final Settlement, Determination of Heirs, Approval of' Administrators’ Accounts and Decreeing' 'Filial Discharge.”' In said order, the court specifically referred' to the 'above described' compromise agreement theretofore made and submitted to the court for its consideration and approval February 8; and gave its final approval' thereto; and ordered the administrators to pay Carl Graham and 'the other heirs settled with, the above-mentioned $135,000/ in addition to their bequests under the will. Thereupon, such 'payments were made;'to these parties’ attorneys,' who transmitted’ them to their clients, who ■ accepted them. The Carl Graham Group’s acceptance is evidenced by a “Receipt and Release” executed by him on their behalf. ■ Notwithstanding this and his receipt of an administrators’ check in the amount of $15,000 to pay his Group’s pro rata share of the aforesaid settlement total;-' Carl Graham, without any attempt to appeal from • said order under which he had-already received the benefit of the testator’s $20,000 -bequest ■ to him (but had not cashed the above-described administrators’ check for the $15,000 additional payment) filed in said Probate Cause No. 3661, supra, on May 13, 1954, an instrument denominated: “Petition to Vacate and Set Aside Final Order and Decree 'of Distribution, • Allowance of Fees, Claims and Expenses, Approval of Supplemental Account and Order Closing dated January 28-29, 1954, And Order Approving Final and/or - Supplemental Account, Final Settlement, Determination Of Heirs, Approval Of Administrator’s Accounts and Decreeing Final Distribution dated April 7, 1954.”

On August 9, 1954, the date scheduled for the hearing of the above-described petition to vacate, the court indicated, by his remarks from the bench at the close of the hearing, that he had concluded that the orders, whose vacation Carl -Graham sought, were not final and were invalid, as beyond the court’s jurisdiction. He made no order of vacation at that time, however, but continued the hearing until August 23, 1954.

Two days before the latter date, the petitioners filed their “Petition For Writ Of Prohibition”, instituting the present action in which they allege, among other things, that the aforesaid County Judge has indicated that on August 23, 1954, he would- enter such vacation order on his own motion/and alleging that unless he is prohibited from so doing, he will assume “judicial power not granted (him) by law, to the irreparable injury of petitioners” who are without an adequate legal remedy..

By an “Amended Petition For Writ Of Prohibition” more recently filed herein, petitioners seek an order from this Court temporarily restraining the County Judge from proceeding any further, until further order of this court, with said action he is therein alleged to have taken with reference -to removal of two of the administrators and the discharge of the administrators’ attorneys. Since the filing of this pleading, the County Judge has filed no pleading or in- any other manner answered it or affirmed or denied the allegations set forth therein. He has orally agreed, however, that he - will take no further action in regard to such matters [953]*953until this Court has acted upon petitioners’ application for the writ; and, insofar as we are apprised, he has not. We will, therefore, disregard this amended petition and now consider the motion, incorporated in respondent Carl Graham’s demurrer thereto, that this Court dismiss petitioners’ application as to him. Wé think this motion is well taken. Neither petitioners’ petition nor amended petition contains any-prayer for specific relief against Graham. They ask that the writ he directed solely against the County Judge. ' No action, either threatened or proposed, of Carl Graham is sought to he prohibited, and in no respect does it state any cause of action against him. Carl Graham’s motion to dismiss is therefore sustained.

In view of the above, our continued use of the term “Respondent” will apply only to the County Judge. The jurisdiction petitioners herein seek to “invoke” against him is this Court’s power of “superintending control” of all inferior courts, under Art. VII, § 2 of this State’s Constitution.

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State Ex Rel. Williamson v. Longmire
1955 OK 89 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
1955 OK 89, 281 P.2d 949, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-williamson-v-longmire-okla-1955.