Thomas v. Wilson

252 P.2d 126, 207 Okla. 629
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 6, 1952
DocketNo. 35239
StatusPublished

This text of 252 P.2d 126 (Thomas v. Wilson) 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
Thomas v. Wilson, 252 P.2d 126, 207 Okla. 629 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

This action, was brought by Wilbur G. Wilson, administrator of the estate of Pearl O. Wilson, deceased, against A. H. Thomas and Clara M. Thomas, being Cause No. 81116, District Court of-Tulsa County, Oklahoma, to enjoin defendants from conveying certain real property, encumbering or disposing thereof, unless and until a certain judgment obtained by plaintiff against defendant, Á. H. Thomas, is fully satisfied; that the deeds executed by A. H. Thomas to-his wife, Clara M. Thomas, covering the property described in plaintiff’s petition be vacated and set aside and A. H. Thomas be adjudged to be the owner of said real property, subject to the lien of plaintiff’s judgment against A. H. Thomas in Cause No-.. 77187, District Court of .Tulsa County, Oklahoma.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court. •

■ It appears from the plaintiff’s petition that, on February 8, 1950, in an action referred to as No. 77,187 in the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, the plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant, A. H. Thomas, in the sum of $3,000, and the judgment became final and became a lien on all property belonging to the defendant, A. H. Thomas, situated in Tulsa County; that an execution was issued on said judgment and was returned unsatisfied, with the endorsement marked “no property found”; that the judgment was listed with the County Assessor under the intangible tax law; and that the tax when due would be paid thereon. That immediately prior to the rendition of said judgment in Cause No-77,187, the defendant, A. H. Thomas, conveyed and assigned all his property, both real and personal, to the defendant, Clara M. Thomas, his wife; that said conveyances included farm lands and city property, mineral interest, bank accounts and an ■automobile, thereby divesting defendant, A. H. Thomas, of all assets upon which plaintiff could levy to satisfy said judgment; that the conveyances and assignments were entered into collusively by said. defendants and were made without any consideration and with' the purpose of defeating the collection of said judgment. Claiming -the conveyances and assignments are fraudulent and void and that the defendant A., H. Thomas is the real owner of the various properties described, plaintiff prays that his judgment lien be foreclosed to satisfy said judgment

[128]*128The defendants seek to defeat a recovery by plaintiff under the following allegations of their answers: That:in Case No. 19362, styled, “In the matter of the estate of Pearl O. Wilson, deceased” pending in the County Court of Tulsa County, in which proceeding this plaintiff was the administrator, an order was entered decreeing heirship and closing said estate save and except that the administrator was authorized to prosecute Cause No. 77,187, referred to in plaintiff’s petition, to a final judgment, and to account for any recovery obtained therein; that plaintiff, under said order, is not authorized to maintain the present action.

Defendants further plead that a certain action was filed in the District Court of Okmulgee County in which the administrator of the estate of Pearl O. Wilson, deceased, was plaintiff, and A. H. Thomas, was defendant, Said cause being designated No. 22,286, and in which case plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant, A. H. Thom'as, which judgment said defendant paid in full; that after satisfying said judgment in Case No. 22,826, and before the filing of the action in Case No. 77,187, the defendants A. H. Thomas and Clara M. Thomas, in consideration of marriage, entered into a written antenuptial contract and that all of said conveyances and assignments of real and personal property made by A. H. Thomas to- his wife were in pursuance to said antenuptial agreement. .A copy of this agreement .is attached to the answer.

Defendants by an amendment to said answer allege that the County Judge of Tulsa County, in Case No. 19,362, supra, entered an order approving a contract entered into by the administrator of the estate of Pearl O. Wilson, deceased, with counsel for plaintiffs in. Cause No. 77,187 covering the payment of a contingent fee to counsel upon a recovery in said cause, and that said attorneys are -necessary and indispensable parties to the present action. Also, that the heirs of Pearl O. Wilson, deceased, to-wit: Wilbur G. Wilson and Peggy Wilson, are necessary and indispensable parties to the present action.

By reply plaintiff denied that an ante-nuptial agreement was entered into by defendants and alleged that the purported agreement was concocted and signed by defendants long after the purported date thereof and subsequent to their marriage, and was entered into to defraud and defeat the collection of plaintiff’s judgment -in said Cause No. 77,187.

Upon these issues the trial was had without the intervention of - a jury. The trial court found in Cause No. 77,1'87 that plaintiff, on February 8, 1950, obtained a judgment against the defendant, A. H. Thomas, in the sum of $3,000; that after said judgment became final an execution was issued thereon and returned unsatisfied; and that no part of said judgment has been paid.

The court further found from the evidence that on or about the 28th day of January, 1950, said defendants filed of record in the office of the County Clerk of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, a certain deed made by the said A. H. Thomas as grantor to the said Clara M. Thomas, as grantee, wherein and whereby the former ostensibly conveyed to the latter the city lots described in the petition; that said deed was not actually executed and delivered until the month of January, 1950, although ■ it purports to bear the date of March 10, 1948, which was not the true date of the execution of said deed; that the court further found that the defendants filed of record a deed made by the said A. H. Thomas and the said Clara M. Thomas as grantors to the- said Clara M. Thomas- as grantee 'wherein and whereby the said A. H. Thomas ostensibly conveyed to the said Clara M. Thomas the farm lands described in plaintiff’s petition.

The court further found from the evidence that the deeds above referred to were made, given and delivered with the intent on the part of the defendant, A. H. Thomas, to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiff in collecting the judgment hereinabove mentioned; that such deeds were given and placed of record as stated without any lawful consideration being paid therefor by the said Clara M. Thomas; that the antenuptial agreement pleaded by the defendants was not sufficient in law to justify the validity of said deeds insofar as the rights and remedies of the plaintiff herein may be con[129]*129cerned; that the parcels, tracts and lots of land purportedly conveyed by said deeds at and prior to the time of the rendition of the judgment in said Cause No. 77,187 were and still are properties belonging to the defendant, A. H. Thomas, and that said judgment became a lien on said lands from and after the rendition and docketing thereof and that as a matter of law the plaintiff has the right to proceed by execution to subject said lands to the payment of said judgment unless the same be satisfied prior to execution being levied on said lands or any portion thereof; that said deeds are found to be fraudulent and void under the law insofar as the rights of plaintiff are concerned, and he is declared to have the right to subject said lands or the necessary portion thereof subjected to the payment of said judgment as by law provided; the court further found that in attempting to make.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P.2d 126, 207 Okla. 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-wilson-okla-1952.