Ward v. Cook

1931 OK 575, 3 P.2d 728, 152 Okla. 234, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 691
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 1931
Docket20415
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1931 OK 575 (Ward v. Cook) 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
Ward v. Cook, 1931 OK 575, 3 P.2d 728, 152 Okla. 234, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 691 (Okla. 1931).

Opinions

RILEY, J.

This cause involves a homestead and an interest of a surviving wife in her deceased husband’s estate as a forced heir at law.

Gena Ward, nee Cook, was the wife of William Nye Cook, who died March 12, 1917, and left surviving him the said wife and an infant son and his mother, Mary Cook. Deceased’s estate consisted of 240 acres of land valued at $5,000. By will the deceased tentatively bequeathed to his wife $100, and tentatively bequeathed to his infant son 40 acres of land located in McClain county. All other residue of the estate, without restriction, was left by the *235 terms of the will to the deceased’s mother, whom he appointed as executrix without bond.

.The surviving wife successfully contested the will in county and district courts of McClain county on the ground of undue influence, but on appeal it was adjudged that the will should be admitted to probate. In, re Cook’s Estate, 71 Okla. 94, 175 P. 607. Letters of administration were issued to Mary Cook, and on February 19, 1927, an order of distribution was entered in accord with the provisions of the will, wherein it was adjudged that deceased’s sole and only heirs were his wife, Mrs. Gena Cook, and his son, William Paul Cook, and wherein it was found that Gena Cook had contested the execution of the will, and that, under the terms and restrictions contained in the will, the said surviving wife and infant son should take nothing, but that said Mary Cook was the only devisee, and that she was entitled to all of said estate, both real and personal.

On July 18, 1927, Gena Ward instituted the instant action in the district court of McClain county to recover an interest in the estate by reason of her relationship and to establish and recover possession of a homestead consisting of 160 acres of the land involved. The trial court) sustained objections to the introduction of evidence relative to the interest of plaintiff in the land, but submitted the cause to a jury as to the issue concerning the homestead. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff as to the homestead, and judgment was rendered accordingly. Both plaintiff and defendants have perfected their appeals. The plaintiff below, Gena Ward, seeks to sustain the judgment setting aside the homestead to her and to reverse the judgment against her concerning her alleged interest in the estate as a forced heir at law. The defendants seek to sustain the judgment denying recovery of the wife’s interest in the estate as a forced heir at law, and to reverse that part of the judgment setting aside the homestead to the surviving spouse. The theory of defendants is that the action of plaintiff constitutes a collateral attack upon the decree of distribution entered in the probate proceedings of the said county court, both as to an interest in the estate as a forced heir at law and as to the homestead interest. Whereas, the surviving wife contends that the will of deceased was void as to her; that the decree of distribution based thereon is void and that she. is entitled to assert her right and interest in a court of equity.

Section 11224, C. O. S. 1921, as amended by S. L. 1925, p. 30, provides in part:

“* * * But no spouse shall bequeath away from the other so much of the estate of'the testator that the other spouse would receive less, in value than would be obtained through succession by law. * * *”

Prior to the amendment and at the time the interest in these lands vested in the surviving heirs of deceased by reason of the death of the testator, the statute read:

“No man while married shall bequeath more than two-thirds of his property away from his wife, nor shall any woman while married bequeath more than two-thirds of her property away from her husband.”

In consideration of this statute, this court, in York v. Trigg, 87 Okla. 214, 209 P. 417, said:

“It is admitted that the will of Jerome B. York, under section 8341, R. L. 1910, is void as to the wife of Jerome B. York, the plaintiff in this action. * * * In this situation it is obvious that the wife has a right to elect to take under the will or share as an heir, one-third of all the estate with which the deceased was seized on the date-of his death.”

See, also, paragraph 6 of the syllabus in that case.

The former decision concerning the will of William Nye Cook decided nothing but the factum of the will. It was said in that decision: “The right to make a will includes the right to make it according to the testator’s own desires, subject only to the statutory restrictions.” The case at bar concerns those restrictions.

See In re Allen’s Will, 44 Okla. 392, 144 P. 1055.

In Brock v. Keifer, 59 Okla. 5, 157 P. 88, this court held:

“In a proceeding to probate a will, the court cannot construe or interpret the will or distinguish between valid and void dispositions. If the will be legally executed and proved, and not successfully attacked for want of testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud or duress, it must be admitted to probate.”

The question before us in the case at bar may be stated as follows: Does the decree of distribution issued out of the county court sitting in probate, in contravention of statute, awarding more than two-thirds of the estate in question to a person other tha.n the surviving wife, bar that wife’s recovery of such statutory interest in a court of equity where such proceedings' of. a county court are made the subject of attack and *236 the facts appear upon the face of the record attacked? We decide the query in the negative. Our reason being that on the face of the record of the proceedings in the county court pleaded in the case at bar, it appears that the will of the deceased is invalid as to the surviving wife. By the decree of distribution, it was ordered that the wife take nothing, consequently it could not be said that the wife had any election to take under the will. To the contrary, by her continual objection and action, she forever maintained her right as a forced heir at law.

Defendants below maintain that the instant action is a collateral attack upon the decree of distribution issued out of the county court. There has been much confusion as to what constitutes a direct or collateral attack. We can find no good purpose in the case at bar for determining whether this action constitutes a collateral or direct attack, but conceding, without deciding, that it is a collateral attack, we hold that it may be maintained, for it is our view that the proceedings of the county court sitting in probate are void upon the face of the record-; so being, they are subject to attack of every nature.

In Esch v. Calloway, 123 Okla. 58, 251 P. 1028, this court said:

“A collateral attack on a decree of distribution made by a county court having jurisdiction of the estate being administered, can prevail only where the proceedings are void upon the face of the record, in the absence of fraud.”

It is apparent, in viewing the proceedings of the county court, that the surviving wife therein designated was a forced heir at law, and it is obvious that the will was invalid as to her share of an interest in the estate there being administered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 575, 3 P.2d 728, 152 Okla. 234, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-cook-okla-1931.