Steger v. Gibson

287 P.2d 687
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 19, 1955
Docket36350
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 287 P.2d 687 (Steger v. Gibson) 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
Steger v. Gibson, 287 P.2d 687 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Vice Chief Justice.

This proceeding was originated in the County Court of Bryan County, Oklahoma, by W. L. Steger, hereinafter referred to as petitioner, against Harry W. Gibson, Jr., Executor of the Estate of Robert Lee Williams, deceased, hereinafter referred to as executor, to have allowed and paid to petitioner an attorney’s fee for services rendered in connection with the contest of the will of said decedent.

Robert Lee Williams died testate on April 10, 1948. The will was contested in the county court, district court and the supreme court, but was admitted to probate in the county court and district court and judgment affirmed in the supreme court. The will named Harry W. Gibson, Jr., as executor and trustee and W. E. Utterback as attorney for the executor. W. E. Utter-back acted as attorney for the executor through the firm of Utterback and Utter-back until his death September 18, 1950, and thereafter Priscilla W. Utterback, the surviving partner of the firm of Utterback and Utterback has continued to act as attorney for the executor. Another attorney, Mr. C. C. Hatchett, was employed as special counsel for the executor on a quantum meruit basis, under a contract approved by the court, after the will contest was tried in the county court, and participated in the will contest in conjunction with Utterback and Utterback in behalf of the executor until his death in the spring of 1950.

At the time of the institution of the contest of the will, petitioner was city attorney of the city of Durant. Certain benefits will accrue to the city of Durant and its citizens by virtue of the provisions of the will of Robert Lee Williams, and it was therefore in the interest of such city that such will be upheld. Petitioner therefore appeared and participated in the will cpntest in all three courts as attorney for the city of Durant. In December of 1950 petitioner ceased to be city attorney of the city of Durant, but- was requested by the city council to continue to represent the city of Durant in the will contest, which was then pending in the Supreme Court of Oklaho&a. At the same time the city council passed a resolution requesting petitioner to continue to appear in behalf of said city in said litigation and further providing that upon the completion of said litigation petitioner should receive for his services a fee to be fixed by the court based on quantum meruit.

Shortly after the completion of the will contest in the supreme court, wherein the validity of the will of Robert Lee Williams, deceased, was upheld, petitioner filed an application in the county court for attorney fee for extraordinary services in the will contest, which application was contested by the executor.

The county court entered an order directing the executor to pay petitioner $10,-000 for representing the city of Durant in the will contest, and to make such payment immediately and later deduct such sum from the part of the estate to go to the city of Durant. The executor appealed such order to the district court. Petitioner *689 filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, which was overruled, and the matter was then tried de novo in the district court.

The district court rendered a judgment reversing and vacating the order of the county court and petitioner appeals.

As his first proposition of error petitioner urges that the appeal by the executor from the county court to the district court should have been dismissed for the reason that the executor was not a person aggrieved by the action of the county court and had no a!ppealable interest in the controversy.

It is petitioner’s contention that by virtue of 58 O.S.1951 § 772, an appeal to the district court may he maintained only by “a party aggrieved” and that executor is not injured in any way by the order of the county court appealed from and is therefore not a party aggrieved within the meaning of the statute. In support of such contention petitioner cites In re Cartwright, 65 Okl. 176, 164 P. 1148; Swackhamer v. Kline's Adm'r, 25 N.J.Eq. 503; Barnes v. Logsdon, 178 Okl. 645, 63 P.2d 964; Love v. Wilson, 181 Okl. 558, 75 P.2d 876; In re Lee’s Estate, 206 Okl. 275, 243 P.2d 1013; In re Maher’s Estate, 195 Wash. 126, 79 P.2d 984, 117 A.L.R. 91; McLeod v. Palmer, 96 Kan. 159, 150 P. 535, and In re Hand’s Estate, 288 Pa. 569, 136 A. 864.

The foregoing cases, for the most part, merely set out the general rule that an administrator in his representative capacity is not a “party aggrieved” by a decree which merely determines the heirs at law of the estate for which he is administrator and that he cannot maintain in his representative capacity an appeal from such decree. Love v. Wilson, supra, In re Lee’s Estate, supra, In re Maher’s Estate, supra, In re Hand’s Estate, supra. Such rule, however, has no applicátion here. No de-crée determining heirs or order of distribution has been entered in the estate here involved, the estate has not been closed and no property has been distributed to the city of Durant. The appeal taken by the executor here was from an order directing him to pay out a large sum of money from the funds of the estate to petitioner as an attorney fee and not from a decree determining heirs or ordering distribution.

In In re Cartwright, supra, cited by petitioner, we held that a surety on the bond of a guardian could appeal from a decree settling the final account of the guardian. Swackhamer v. Kline’s Adm’r, supra, does not deal with the right of an administrator or executor to appeal, but on the contrary deals with the right of a party who is neither executor, • administrator, heir, dev-isee, legatee or Creditor to appeal from an order made in the course of administration proceedings of an estate in which he had no interest of any kind. It has no application here. McLeod v. Palmer, supra, cited by petitioner, was an action in ejectment and for partition brought in the district court against the executor and heirs of a decedent. The Kansas court held that the executor could not appeal from an adverse judgment in such action because decedent’s will vested no title in him and he had no interest in the. ultimate disposition of the property.. Such holding is contrary to the well established rule in this state and was no doubt occasioned by the differences in the statutes of the two states with reference to the rights and duties of administrators and executors. For our own decisions dealing with the right and duty of an administrator or executor to prosecute or defend actions involving title to or right to possession of real property on behalf of the estate, including the right to appeal from an adverse judgment therein, see Jameson v. Goodwin, 43 Okl. 154, 141 P. 767; Snodgrass v. Snodgrass, 107 Okl. 140, 231 P. 237, 52 A.L.R. 1213. Such cases have no application to the question here presented, however.

The case of Barnes v. Logsdon, supra, cited by petitioner, does not sustain his contention. In that case we held that an administrator was entitled to contest probate of a will later produced and was a “party aggrieved” by an order denying the contest and entitled to appeal therefrom. In so holding we made an extensive review of the authorities concerning the right of an administrator or executor to *690 appeal, and said in the body of the opinion [178 Okl. 645, 63 P.2d 967]:

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Bluebook (online)
287 P.2d 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steger-v-gibson-okla-1955.