Wortham v. John

1908 OK 222, 98 P. 347, 22 Okla. 562, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 13, 1908
DocketNo. 897, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1908 OK 222 (Wortham v. John) 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
Wortham v. John, 1908 OK 222, 98 P. 347, 22 Okla. 562, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 54 (Okla. 1908).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

(after stating the facts as above. It is contended that the court erred in making the order on July 1, 1907, revoking and annulling the letters of curatorship issued to C. D. Wortham, on April 7, 1906, and removing him as curator of the estates of Robert, Emerson, and Mary John. We do not think so. The order appointing said Wortham as such, in the first instance, is indefensible. The undisputed facts are that at the time said *566 appointment was made Robert and Emerson John were minors over the age of 14 years, and Mary John a minor nnder the age of 14, that their mother was then living, and that said letters were issued to Wortham on his petition without notice, to any of them. Assailing this order, it is contended that the jurisdiction of the court to make it depended on notice to the mother. With this contention we agree. The jurisdiction of the probate court is founded on statutes which should be strictly construed. Shouler’s Domestic Relations (4th Ed.) 499, 450, § 303, says:

“The court of chancery exercises a large discretion. Its authority over the persons and estates of infants, idiots, and lunatics cannot be questioned elsewhere. No tribunal short of the Legislature can interpose a check upon its powers. But it is different with probate courts. Their jurisdiction is founded upon local statutes, maintained in derogation of the common law, made subject to supervision of supreme1 tribunals, and confined to the exercise of special powers sparingly conferred. * * * With special strictness are the powers of probate tribunals scrutinized in matters which do not grow out of the settlement of estates of deceased poersons.”

At the time this appointment was made Mansf. Dig. provided (section .3477 [Inch .T. Ann. St. 1899, § 2'373]) :

“When a minor shall be entitled to or possessed of any estate not derived from the parent who shall be the natural guardian at the time, and it shall be suggested to the court that such parent is incompetent to the care of such estate, or is mismanaging or wasting the same, the court may issue a notice to such person to appear before it at a stated time, and show cause why a curator shall not be appointed or chosen; and, if on due notice no sufficient cause be shown, the court shall appoint a ’curator for the management of such estate for the minor, if under fourteen years of age, or, if over that age, admit the minor to choose one in the same manner and subject to the same .restrictions as provided for the choice or appointment of guardians for minors over that age.”

The notice thus required to be issued by the court was not merely directory, but a condition precedent to the vesting of jurisdiction in the court to make the appointment unless the parent appear voluntarily, and as no notice was given, and the mother *567 clicl not voluntarily appear, the order appointing Wortham was void. Mr. Woerner in his work (American Law of Guardianship), on page 95, says:

“That no guardian can be appointed to the person of an infant having father or mother living, not declared unsuitable by a court of competent jurisdiction, nor a guardian or curator to an infant whose father or mother is entitled, under the law, to take charge of its estate as natural guardian, has already been pointed out as the law in most states. But parents may be adjudged incompetent or unfit to have the custody, care, and education of their children in proceedings for that purpose by a court having jurisdiction, in which proceeding the parents must be made parties, by notice to them enabling them to appear and he heard, unless they appear voluntarily. It is a fraud on the rights of a father to obtain guardianship of his child without his knowledge; and the appointment of a guardian to an illigitimate child, or to a legitimate child, after its father’s death without notice to the mother is void” — citing Sensemann's Appeal, 21 Pa. 331; Bowles v. Dixon, 32 Ark. 92; Bryan v. Lyon, 104 Ind. 227, 3 N. E. 880, 54 Am. Rep. 30.

See, also, Spears and Wife v. Snell, 74 N. C. 210; In re Jacquet, 40 Misc. Rep. 575, 82 N. Y. Supp. 986; Dalton v. State, 6 Blackf. (Ind.) 357.

In Bowles v. Dixon, supra, there was a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, filed by the father to secure the custody of his two minor children from respondent, who had been appointed their guardian by the probate court of C'hicot county, Ark., without notice to him, addressed to the judge of the Eleventh judicial district, sitting in chancery. On appeal the judgment of the lower court granting relief was affirmed by the Supreme Court, which, in substance, held that petitioner was not bound by the 'proceedings of the probate court making the appointment to which he was not a party, and that its judgment was not conclusive against him. We are therefore of the opinion that, before the court could make the order complained of, which, in effect, took from the mother, as the natural guardian, the estate of these two minors, and placed it in the hands of a stranger, it should have issued notice to the *568 mother and given her a day in court to show cause why the same should not be done, and that; the court having improperly made the order in the first instance appointing said Wortham as curator; it very properly set the same aside on petition of the mother and the facts showing that the same was made without notice to her as required by law. The order thus made; being void, was properly assailable by petition after the expiration of the term at which it was made.

This was so expressly held in Redman and Wife v. Chance, Guardian, 32 Md. 42. In that ease appellants filed their petition in the orphans’ court of Talbot county and prayed that the appointment of the appellee as guardian for the infant child of Mary II. Redman, one of the appellants, be revoked, on the ground that it was made without notice to the mother, as required by law. The petition was filed after the term had expired at which the appointment was made. The court dismissed the petition, refusing to send the issue of notice to a court of law for trial, from which order petitioners appealed. Ajppellee insisted that his appointment, being the act of a court of competent jurisdiction, cannot be impeached by a proceeding by petition, but that the remedy of appellant was by appeal directly from the order of the court making the appointment. The only power conferred on the orphans’ court to appoint guardians for infants, if the father or mother was living, was derived from a section of the Code of that state as follows:

* “The orphans’ court shall have the right and power to appoint a guardian to any such infant as aforesaid, although such infant may have a father or mother living at the time of the appointment; provided, notice by the court be given by publication or otherwise, to such father, or mother (if there be no father living), to show cause why such an appointment should not be made.”

The Supreme Court reversed the order of the lower court, 'and in passing, speaking of that provision of the Code, said:

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Bluebook (online)
1908 OK 222, 98 P. 347, 22 Okla. 562, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wortham-v-john-okla-1908.