Wise v. Cutchall

1935 OK 97, 41 P.2d 864, 171 Okla. 60, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
DocketNo. 23007.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1935 OK 97 (Wise v. Cutchall) 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
Wise v. Cutchall, 1935 OK 97, 41 P.2d 864, 171 Okla. 60, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 83 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal by William A. Wise¡ from the final order of the district court of Tulsa county on appeal from the county court, fixing his expenses and compensation as administrator of the estate of Isaiah Richard Cutchall, deceased.

William A- Wise was appointed as such administrator in June, 1925, and on January 14, 1929, filed his final report as such, which, after approval by the county court, was appealed to the district court, result *61 ing in the approval thereof with the exception of the disallowance of $425.50 of the expenses claimed.

Thereafter, the administrator continued to act as such until September 10, 1930, at which time he filed a supplemental report covering the intervening period, together with applications for final allowance of attorney flees, compensation, and expenses. To this report and application, Láveme B. Cutchall, a minor, by guardian, being one of three heirs entitled to inherit the estate, filed specific and general exceptions, which were denied, the report approved and the attorney fees, compensation, and expenses fixed. By reason of prior distribution of the estate to the heirs, these orders established a deficit of $2,003.49 due to the administrator. The objecting heir appealed from the judgment to the district court; the remaining heirs filed. an election to abide the judgment of the county court, and paid to the administrator their proportionate share of the deficit as established.

The appeal on the supplemental report came on for hearing on May 5, 1931, resulting in a judgment disapproving the same.

The details of the surcharge made as credits on the report thereto and disallowance of debits claimed therefrom form the basis of the appeal to the district court and then to this court, and for clarity must be stated. The administrator was charged with $857.98 shown in the report as cash on hand, with the amounts of $116.03, $108.70, and $85.60, admitted rental collections, which is claimed to be set forth in the supplemental report, the sum of $425 disallowed as expenses on appeal on the final report, and unaccounted for in the supplemental report, the sum of $225 admitted proceeds from sale .of personal property unaccounted for, and the sum of $1,335.66 being the amount paid by the other two heirs as their proportional share of the deficit established by order of the county court on hearing the supplemental report. There was disallowed as debits claimed to the account the sum of $1,100, at $50 per month, for extraordinary services.

The court allowed the administrator full statutory compensation for ordinary services, together with certain expenses in connection therewith.

A great number of the legal difficulties involved in this appeal arises by virtue of the fact that the decision of the court was rendered May 8, 1931, a motion for new trial filed by the appellant May 11, 1931, which was overruled May 23, 1931, and a proceeding had on the settlement of the journal entry of judgment on June 29, 1931, which was not signed until then; a new motion for new trial filed by appellant on June 2, 1931, which was overruled on July 17, 1931.

By appropriate assignments of error, the appellant attacks the judgment of the district court in so far as it varies from the decree of the county court. These numerous assignments of error are presented in six propositions, which need not be set out here, but which substantially raise the legal questions of the sufficiency of the evidence, the jurisdiction of the district court to pass on various matters on appeal from . thle county court, and that the judgment reflects matters neither considered nor decided at the trial.

For the purpose of brevity the specific items of $857.98 appearing in the report as cash on hand, and the amounts of $116.03, $108.70, ' and $85 appearing in the report as rentals collected, may be grouped and eliminated. These items appearing in the supplemental account had to occur prior to the filing thereof, and therefore were proper matters to consider on appeal in a trial de novo. These items were verified by the appellant to be correct, both in the account proper and in his testimony. The first suggestion by the appellant that they were’ incorrect was at the time the journal entry of judgment was settled, at which time he offered to show that on that date, not the date of the supplemental account, he had only $713.57, instead of the amount shown, and that this sum included the $225 with which the account was surcharged as proceeds from the sale of personal properly and unlisted items of expenses were deducted. The appellant further contended that the three rental' items were included in the cash on hands shown in the supplemental account. The court refused the offer, but gave the appellant ten days in which to file a pleading to correct the journal entry showing any sums spent or received other than what had been introduced in the record. The appellant did not avail himself of the opportunity granted, but predicates error on the action of the court.

An altogether sufficient, answer to the contention is that if the court on appeal, in a trial de novo, had jurisdiction to determine issues arising after the filing of the supplemental account, the offer of additional evidence comes too late; if, on the other hand, the issues are limited to mat *62 ters transpiring prior to the filing of the account, the remedy of the appellant is to file a new supplemental account in the county court covering the intervening period. As a corollary to the proposition, it is urged that these items were not considered in the trial, but inasmuch as they appear in the account proper, this contention is without foundation in the record.

The disallowance from debits claimed in the account of $1,100 paid for bookkeeping, $300 of expenses claimed, and $1,650 as compensation to the administrator for extraordinary services falls in the same category, and can be grouped. All of these items appear in the account filed and were within the issues to be tried, and were considered by the court, and the only question, therefore, is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the disallowance.

During the period embraced by the account, the administrator received $11,325.12, according to his report; the bookkeeping charge of $1,100 is nearly ten per cent, of the income, which upon its face, in absence of special circumstances, is excessive. In the general expenses, the administrator sought to make charges for trips from his home in Sapulpa to Tulsa, managing the affairs of the estate. The record presents some question as to the amount charged, the necessity therefor, and, more important, the propriety of accepting the trust in another county and attempting to charge for trips to the county where the estate was situated. Without question, under the state of the record, the disallowance of these expenses was within the discretion of tlie court, and is supported by a fair preponderance of the evidence if we apply the rule in law cases, and is by no means against the clear weight of the evidence, if we apply the rule in equity cases. In re Estate of Wah-kon-tah-he-ump-ah, 128 Okla. 179, 261 P. 973. The fact that an allowance as bookkeeping expenditure was made on appeal on the final account, before the distribution of property, does not justify the assumption that a like sum should be allowed during the period covered by the supplemental account. Section 1330, O. S.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 97, 41 P.2d 864, 171 Okla. 60, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-cutchall-okla-1935.