Tate v. Robertson

1970 OK 133, 472 P.2d 905
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 7, 1970
Docket42449
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1970 OK 133 (Tate v. Robertson) 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
Tate v. Robertson, 1970 OK 133, 472 P.2d 905 (Okla. 1970).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal concerns proceedings, under 12 O.S.1961, § 176, to open a previous action for the partition of two 40-acre tracts of land in Logan County, which belonged to one William Tate at the time of his death, previous to 1953.

By a probate decree, entered that year, determining said intestate’s sole and only heirs to be his widow, Lillie Tate, and a brother, Jim Henry Tate, this real estate was distributed to the widow, Lillie, with the provision that if any of it remained at her death, one-half of said remainder should descend to the intestate’s heirs, and the other one-half to the said Lillie’s heirs.

When Lillie Tate thereafter died, this property was distributed solely, and equally, to her heirs, Milton Rankin and Jettie Mason, under a subsequent probate decree entered in 1956, that made no mention of Jim Henry Tate, or his heirs, or any other heirs of her deceased husband, the aforementioned intestate, William Tate.

Thereafter, in 1957, Jettie Mason conveyed all of her interest in the surface, and an undivided 10-acre interest in the minerals, under the two tracts, to the defendants in error, R. A. Robertson and Mildred Robertson.

Thereafter, in 1964, the Robertsons instituted this partition action, as plaintiffs, claiming no more, by Jettie Mason’s conveyance to them, than an undivided one-fourth interest in the surface, and the additional undivided 10-acre mineral interest, in the two tracts. The “unknown” heirs of Jim Henry Tate, deceased, were among the “defendants” that the Robertsons named in said action. Thereafter, an order for partition of the two tracts, as prayed for in the Robertsons’ petition, was entered in January, 1965, without service on Jim Henry Tate, or his heirs, other than by publication. In said order, any and all such heirs, “known and unknown”, were recognized as being in default; but it was also recognized that Jim Henry Tate had inherited an undivided one-half interest in the land at the death of the aforementioned Lillie Tate (along with the undivided one-fourth interests that Jettie Mason and Milton Rankin had each inherited) and it was directed that the final decree entered in the probate proceedings covering Lillie’s estate, above referred to, be amended to order said interest’s distribution accordingly-

Thereafter, pursuant to the aforementioned Order for Partition, Commissioners were appointed to partition the land, or, if that could not be done, to appraise it. The Commissioners thereafter determined that the land could not be partitioned in kind, and that its value was $7,000.00. Thereupon, one of the two plaintiffs, R. A. Robertson, elected to purchase the land at its appraised value; and on April 21, 1966, the court entered judgment approving the Commissioners’ Report, and, in recognition of Robertson’s election to take, ordered a Sheriff’s Deed to the land issued to Robertson upon his payment into court of the $7,000.00, determined, as aforementioned, to be said real estate’s appraised value. From this $7,000.00, court costs and attorneys’ fees were thereafter deducted; and one-half of the remainder of said sum was divided between the Robertsons and Milton Rankin; and the remaining one-half (of said remainder) was deposited with the Court Clerk, awaiting its being claimed by some heir, or heirs, of Jim Henry Tate, deceased.

*907 Thereafter, in the same month (April, 1966), Robertson conveyed the real estate to one Rex Moore and Rosalind Moore Miller, who thereafter, in December, 1966, mortgaged it to this State’s Commissioners of the Land Office.

Thereafter, in December, 1966, plaintiffs in error appeared in the partition action and instituted the only proceedings directly involved in this appeal, by filing therein a pleading denominated “PETITION TO OPEN AND SET ASIDE ALL JUDGMENTS, ORDERS AND DECREES IN THIS CASE”. In said petition, these parties, hereinafter referred to as “applicants”, alleged, among other things, that they were the sole and only heirs of the aforementioned Jim Henry Tate, deceased. They further alleged that they had no notice of the pendency of the partition action until April 26, 1966, and did not know they had inherited an interest in the property involved therein, until after that date. Applicants further alleged, among other things, that they were entitled, under Section 176, supra, to “be permitted to come into the case and have all of their rights determined.” With said petition, these applicants filed their separate affidavits in support of their allegations, and also answers, in which, among other things, they denied that the petition, theretofore filed by the Robertsons, hereinafter usually referred to as “respondents”, stated a cause of action for partition, and asked that it be denied.

Thereafter, on January 13, 1967, the court denied applicants’ above described petition, deciding to treat it as a motion to distribute their share of the aforementioned remainder of the land’s sale proceeds on deposit in the Court Clerk’s office. To said ruling, applicants were allowed exceptions, and, a few days later, they filed a motion for a new trial and to reconsider. Before this motion was heard, applicants also filed an amended answer and cross-petition, on which they apparently hoped to predicate their opposition to the land’s previously-ordered partition, in the event that the court, upon reconsideration of its previous ruling, decided to let them in to defend their claimed rights. In said amended pleading, in addition to the allegations set forth in their previously proffered one, applicants alleged that the appraised value of the property (as previously determined by the Commissioners) was substantially lower than its true value, and alleged, among other things in substance, that if they had been present, or represented in the action, when the matter of whether or not the land should be sold had been before it, the court would not have ordered that done. Applicants further alleged that, by having been denied their claimed right to oppose the land’s partition, they, at the same time, had been denied the right to file exceptions to the Commissioners’ Report and to elect to purchase the land at its appraised value, or to bid on it at a public sale of the property, if some other of the litigants, owning interests in it, had also elected to purchase it (at private sale). After both the applicants and the respondents had filed briefs in support of their respective positions, the court, on March 24, 1967, overruled applicants’ motion for a new trial and to reconsider. They thereafter lodged the present appeal on the original record.

For reversal of the trial court’s order and/or judgment, applicants contend that in the filing of their hereinbefore described application to be let into the partition action, to defend their rights against the land’s partition (that the court had previously therein ordered) and by their filing of the papers accompanying said application, they met all of the requirements, necessary under Section 176, supra, to have obtained the granting of said application; and that, under Cox v. Henthorn, 201 Okl. 689, 209 P.2d 681, and Richards v. Baker, 186 Okl. 533, 99 P.2d 118, the trial court had no alternative but to grant the application. These requirements, as set forth in the second paragraph of the syllabus in the Cox case, are shown in said syllabus (quoted in applicants’ initial brief) as follows:

“Under the provisions of 12 O.S.A.

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Bluebook (online)
1970 OK 133, 472 P.2d 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-robertson-okla-1970.