Worten v. Burris

128 Okla. 179
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1927
DocketNo. 17518
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 Okla. 179 (Worten v. Burris) 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
Worten v. Burris, 128 Okla. 179 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for attorney’s fees allowed to A. B. Burris, defendant in error, for representing the executor named in a will in' resisting in a contest against the probate of such will.

As the court made a finding of all facts material to the issues in the case and upon such findi|ng based his judgment, we adopt the court’s finding, which is as follows ;

“To wit on the — day of - Wah-kon-tah-he-um-pah, Osage allottee No. 482, died in Osage county, leaving a last will and testament in which she constituted A. A. Exendine as her executor; that the said A. A. Exendine employed A. R. Burris as his attorney to procure the approval of said will by the Secretary of the Interior, which the court finds was necessary in order to admit said will to probate, and to represent him in the matter of the probate of said will; that pursuant to the terms of such employment the said A. B. Burris appeared before the Superintendent of the Oságe Indian Agency in the taking of testimony in support of said will and before the Secretary of the Interior; that certain other parties claiming an interest in the estate of the decedent appeared in opposition to said wi 1 and objected to and contested the approval of said will; that the Secretary of the Interior in due course approved said will and the said A. A. Exen-dine, by his attorney, A. B. Burris, presented the same to the county court of Osage county for probate, at which time the same parties appeared in opposition to said will and filed their contest to the probate thereof, after which said matter was duly tried in the county court of Osage county and an order made and entered admitting said will to probate from which the contestants appealed to the district court of Osage county; that said A. A. Exendine, executor, by his attorney, A. B. Burris, appeared in the district court and prosecuted his petition for the probate of said will and the contestants appeared in opposition thereto and after trial in the district court judgment was entered denying the probate of said will, from which judgment the ex-e."utor. A. A. Exendine. by his attevney. A. B. Burr’s, prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, where judgment was "endered reversing the judgment of th° district court and directing the probate of said wil1. Thereupon the [181]*181contestants filed their motion ror a rehearing in the Supreme Court, to which the executor and his attorney objected, and judgment was rendered by the court denying the petition for rehearing; that m the hearing of said cause in the Supreme Court the said A. B. Burris prepared and filed a printed brief and appeared and argued said cause orally; that final judgment of the Supreme Court was rendered, remanding the cause to the district court, directing the probate of said will, and in due course the proper order pursuant thereto was entered in the district court, and the cause was remanded to the county court for proceeding in accordance therewith; that after said will was duly admitted to probate, the said A. B. Burris at all times represented the executor, A. A. Exendine, in the administration of said estate, pursuant to the terms of said will, which has been done and completed except the matter of the allowance of the attorney’s fees for the executor.
“The court finds that the services rendered the executor by his attorney, A. B. Burris, were necessary in the matter of the probate of said will and the administration of said estate, and that such services are reasonably worth the sum of $7,500; that during the course of administration the said A. B. Burris has been paid the sum of $2,362.50, which should be credited on the said sum of $7,500, leaving a balance now due the said A. B. Burris of $5,137.50.”

And upon siich facts the court rendered the following judgment, to wit:

“It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged that the said A. A. Exendine and A. B. Burris have and recover the sum of $7,-500 less said credit of $2,362.50, being a balance of $5,137.50, for the use and benefit of the said A. B. Burris for his services as such attorney, and that they recover the costs of this proceeding.”

From this judgment plaintiff in error has appealed, contending that the court erred in allowing any fees to be paid out of the estate for attorney’s services, and defendant in error files his cross-petition claiming that under the evidence he was entitled to a greater amount than the court allowed him. The cause was submitted on oral argument and briefs, and was ably presented by counsel for the respective parties.

It presents three questions, a determination of which is essential to a decision, viz.:

(1) Was the executor authorized by law to employ an attorney?

(2) Was it necessary under the circumstances to have an attorney?

(3) If he had authority to employ an attorney, and it was necessary to have one, was the fee allowed such attorney a reasonable one?

The first is a question of law, the second and third are questions of fact.

Plaintiff in error contends that the claim of A. B. Burris filed with the county court for compensation for his services was not signed by A. B. Burris, as attorney for the executor, nor signed by A. A. Exendine, as executor of the estate, but was simply signed A. B. Burris, A. A. Exendine, in their individual capacity. This contention, it seems to us, is too ultratechnical to be sustained. The claim was filed in the matter of the estate of the deceased, Mrs. Red Corn, and shows on its face that the attorney, A. B. Burris, had been employed by A. A. Exen-dine, executor of the estate of deceased, and had rendered services in the discharge of his duties to- said executor, setting forth the character and extent of such services.

The record showed A. A. Exendine to De the executor and A. B. Burris the attorney of record and the court was charged with knowledge of the contents of the record. Hence, the fact that the attorney’s application for his fees w;as not signed by A. B. Burris, attorney for the executor, nor signed by A. A. Exendine_ as executor of the estate of deceased, but was signed simply, A. B. Burris, A. A. Exendine, could not, in our judgment, affect the substantial rights of any party to the suit, esnecially where the fact that Burris was such attorney and Exendine was such executor is not disputed.

It is also contended that the court was without jurisdiction to allow the fees to the attorney for the reason that the executor had no authority under the statutes to employ an attorney, citing sections 11216, 1197, 1096, and 1321; and contending that A. A. Exendine, as executor, himself being an attorney, had no authority and was not under any circumstances entitled to assistant counsel, citing Needham v. Needham (Idaho) 200 Pac. 346. We observe, however, that the portion of said opinion quoted by plaintiff in error recognized the right to assistant counsel if the circumstances showed a necessity for same.

The language of the court quoted by plaintiff in error is as follows:

“An administrator who is also a lawyer is required to exercise professional skill to conduct the business of the estate himself without extra compensation and without legal assistance, unless a necessity is shown for employment of such assistance.”

The case is not in point here except to [182]

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Bluebook (online)
128 Okla. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worten-v-burris-okla-1927.