Talomase v. Kelly

98 Okla. 212
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 1, 1924
DocketNo. 13035
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 Okla. 212 (Talomase v. Kelly) 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
Talomase v. Kelly, 98 Okla. 212 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, O.

The plaintiff in error, Emma Talomase, in this cause will be referred to as the ward, and Wadley Kelly, the defendant in error, will be referred to as the guardian, in this opinion.

Wadley Kelly was appointed guardian of Emma Talomase, then a minor, sometime prior to the year 1907. It appears from the record that the ward was born in 1900, and that when she was seven years old she went to live at the home of her guardian. She became of age sometime in 1918. It appears that on the 10th of January, 1919, the guardian signed a verified final report of his guardianship and asked to be discharged as such guardian. The report a® filed by the guardian shows a balance on hand, cash in the bank, in the sum of $7.91. This final report was filed in the county court of Okmulgee county on the 18th of August, 1920. On the 22nd of October, 1920. the guardian filed a supplemental final report under oath, showing the ward indebted to him in the sum of $04.57. On (he same day objections were filed to such final and amended report, verified by the ward. On the 23rd of October, 1920. the ward filed objections to the final report and all reports filed by the guardian since 1911. A hearing was had in the county court upon the final and other reports and the objections thereto, on the 28th of October, 1920: and on that date a judgment was entered and journal entry filed, finding Wadley Kelly, the guardian, indebted to his ward in the sum of $3,849.80. From this judgment the guardian prosecuted an appeal both upon questions of law and fact to the district court of Okmulgee county. In March, 1921, the cause came on for hearing and the district court appointed Fred Carter referee, and set the ease for hearing on the 17th of March, 1921. On that date the guard'an appeared and asked leave to file a supplemental report or an amendment to the final report, and upon leave granted filed what he denominated “amendment to final report.” In this amendment he asiked to include three items of account, amounting to $77.30; and also to include two other items, as follows; Compensation for himself in the sum of $1,000 and attorney fees in the sum of $1,000, and prayed for credit upon his account for the sum of $2,000 to cover said last two items. The cause was then heard before the referee upon the reports and supplemental reports as amended, and the objections thereto as filed in the county court; and at the close of the hearing the referee found a balance due the ward from her guardian in the sum of approximately $2,220, against which sum he allowed the guardian credit for $400 for two years services: $200 for attendance upon the district court trial; $400 for his attorney’s services for two years; $250 attorney’s fees for the county court trial; $500 attorney’s fees for the district court trial; and charged one-half of the court costs in the county court to the ward; and charged all of the costs in the district court, including referee and stenographer’s fees, to the ward. This seems to leave a balance due the ward, as figured by the referee in his report, of $471.79. Out of this balance the ward would owe half of the court costs in the county court and all the costs in [214]*214the district court trial, including the referee and stenographer’s fees.

Upon objections presented to the report of the referee the district court modified the findings of the referee to the extent of reducing the allowance to the guardian by striking out the $200 allowed for his attendance upon the trial in the district court; and allowed $150 for the services of the referee and $85 for the services of the stenographer, and provided that such expense should be divided between the guardian and ward, and otherwise permitted' the report of the referee to stand. The order of the district court had the effect of adding to the indebtedness of the guardian to his ward the sum of $200, from which is to be deducted $117.50, half of the referee and stenographer fees, leaving an aggregate sum of $554.29. out of which the ward i's required to pay half of the court costs in the county court trial, and all of the costs in the district court trial, other than referee and stenographer fees: the aggregate amount of such costs not being stated in the record here, and leaving her, of course, to settle with her own attorneys. If she pays them on the liberal basis fixed in the allowance to the attorneys for the guardian she will not only be required to pay out the entire amount found in her favor, but will owe an additional amount of more than $200. If this judigiment is permitted to stand, the ward would better have accepted the amendment to the final report, and made settlement with her guardjan by paying him the balance of $64.57, and would thereby have saved for her-self, out of the wreck, more than $100. It appears that she has the satisfaction of having won her case against her guardian, if it may be called a satisfaction, but it has cost her the entire amount owing to her by her guardian, and something more, to force him to disgorge. The ward is made to pay handsome fees to her guardian’s attorneys to fight her to prevent her, if possible, from having a just settlement with the individual whom the court intrusted with the management of her affairs. It has cost her her balance in the hands of her guardian to establish the falsity of a final report made by her guardian — a report so glaringly false as to, perhaps, justify the conclusion by a disinterested person that it was willfully and flagrantly false. Oould the guardian have been honestly mistaken between the amount of $64.57 that he swore was due him from his ward, and the sum of approximately $2,220 the referee found him owing to his ward ?

From the findings and judgment of -the district court the ward prosecutes appeal. In her petition in error she urges ten assignments of error, which are argued in her 'brief under four subdivisions, as follows :

(1) On a trial de novo in the district court, on appeal in probate matters, the district court has no jurisdiction to try out issues not presented in the county court.

(2) Under the evidence in this case, the guardian was not entitled to any credit for attorney fees because no beneficial service was rendered for the ward by the guardian’s attorneys.

(3) The guardian was not entitled to compensation for his services because he had practiced fraud upon his ward.

(4) The court erred in charging the court costs to the ward.

1. Upon the first proposition there seems to be an almost hopeless and irreconcilable conflict of authorities. It seems that our own court has not passed directly upon the question here presented.

Parker v. Lewis, 45 Okla. 807, 147' Pac. 310, was a case where the appointment of a guardian was sought for a certain minor, and from -the orders of the county court an appeal was taken to the district court, and from the orders there made an appeal was prosecuted to this court. In the district court an amended protest was filed against the guardian appointed by the county court, and in the protest it was sought to have some other person not under consideration in the county court appointed as guardian. On appeal here this court held that the amended protest could not be considered, and the appointment of a person as guardian who had not been under consideration by the court of original jurisdiction could not be upheld.

The court declared the law, in the syllabus, to be:

“1. The county court alone has original jurisdiction of the appointment of guardians of minors.
“2.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Okla. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talomase-v-kelly-okla-1924.