Johnson v. Nelson

Opinion by

JARMAN, C.

Raymond Nelson was the duly appointed, qualified, and acting guardian of the estate of Leonard D. Ingram, a minor, in a guardianship proceeding pending in the county court of Muskogee county. On July 16, 1923, said guardian and Glen Alcorn and P. E. Gumm, attorneys, .procured an order from -said county court for the payment, out of the estate of Leonard D. Ingram, of the sum of $2,000 to the guardian for services rendered said estate and $1,500 each to Alcorn and Gumm as attorneys’ fees for services in representing said guardian. At the time said order was made, and prior thereto, Minerva Jones and Campbell C. Johnson were the duly qualified and acting guardians of the estate of said Leonard D. Ingram, a minor, having been appointed -as such by the District of Columbia, and said foreign guardians had made application -to the county court of Mus-. kogee county and had ta-keni the proceedings, as prescribed by law, to remove the personal property of said ward, situated in the state of Oklahoma, to Washington, D. C. Said foreign guardians had no notice of, and were not parties to, the special proceedings had in the county court of Muskogee county twiherein the order was made for the payment of fees to the guardian and the attorneys, as hereinabove set out. Within the statutory time the foreign guardians filed an affidavit, as required by section 1412, Comp. St. 1921, wherein they set forth that they were the foreign guardians of the estate of the minor and were entitled to the personal property of said- minor within the state of Oklahoma, and had filed the necessary proceedings to have said property removed to AVashington, D. C., the jurisdiction .in which they were guardians, and that by reason thereof they had, as such guardians, an interest in the funds -affected by the order of court directing the payment .of .fees to 'said guardian and attorneys, and alleged that, by reason thereof, they had a right, t.o. appeal from said order to the district court of Muskogee county. At- the same' time, and in connection with said affidavit; the foreign guardians-filed, in due form as;required- by section -1414, Comp: Stat, 1921, a.-written notice of their .intention, to-: appeal.-toé the .district. court of.. Muskogee: .county- on- ;both *52questions of law and fact, and ako filed an appeal bond, as required by section 1415, Comp. St. 1921, which' was duly approved by the county judge, and the case whs certified to the district court. The local guardian filed a motion in the district court to dismiss said appeal, which was sustained, and from this judgment the foreign guardians have appealed.

Several grounds were assigned in the motion to dismiss the appeal, but the. defendants in error Nelson, Alcorn, and Gumm .rely upon two propositions to sustain the action of the district court in dismissing said appeal, as follows:

(1) That, the plaintiffs in error, the foreign guardians, did not have an appealable interest.

(2) The appeal bond was insufficient to vest jurisdiction in the district court.

It is insisted that there was no appealable hiterest on the part of the plaintiffs in error, “because foreign guardians cannot sue in another state unless expressly authorized by the statute of that state.” The defendants In error contend that the authority of the foreign guardians to act for their ward is restricted to the jurisdiction of the District of Columbia, where they were appointed as guardians, and does not extend to the state of Oklahoma, and cite, in support of this contention, Morgan v. Potter, 157 U. S. 197. Concede that a foreign guardian cannot sue in another state unless expressly authorized to do so by the statute of that state, the rule woxild have no application here. This is not an attempt on the part of the foreign guardians to sue the defendants in error, but it is an attempt to appeal from the order of the county court, by reason of their being interested in, as foreign guardians, the funds affected by the order of the county court. Section 1412, Comp. St. 1921, authorizes any person, whether within or without the state of Oklahoma, who is interested in the estate or funds affected by the decree or order of. the county court to appeal therefrom, and the plaintiffs in error clearly and plainly come within the purview of this section, when they show that they are the regularly and duly appointed, qualified, and acting foreign guardians, having a right to the personal property of the minor situated in the state of Oklahoma.

Since the record shows, and the' case is submitted here on the theory, that the plaintiffs in error are the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardians of the estate of said minor, and, as such, are entitled to the possession of the personal property of the minor situated in the state of Oklahoma, it is obvious that said guardians would be unable to protect the interests of their ward and discharge the duties of their trust if they could not appeal from an order which takes away the property they are entitled to receive; and their duty, in this respect, .is emphasized by the fact that the minor’s interests must be protected by the foreign guardians, since the local guardian is a party to the proceedings by which the minor is aggrieved.

On the next proposition, it is urged that the appeal bond was insufficient to vest jurisdiction in the district court, for the reason that the same was executed by the said Campbell C. Johnson and Minerva Jones individually, and not as guardians. The argument is that the appeal was not being taken by these persons individually, but as guardians. Clearly, this contention is without merit,’ for the bond was filed in this guardianship proceeding in the county court of Muskogee county in connection with the affidavit and the notice of appeal, both of which instruments recited that the appeal was being taken by Campbell C. Johnson and .Minerva Jones, as guardians, and the appeal bond was approved by the county judge, evidently with that understanding, and the failure to place the word..“guardian” after (•lie, names of the principals was an oversight or a mera irregularity or technical defect, which the district court should have permitted to be cured by amendment. It (dearly appears from the proceedings in perfecting the appeal that it was intended that the' appeal bond was such a one as required by the statute, and the same was sufficient to vest jurisdiction in the district court. Thompson v. Grider Implement Co., 36 Okla. 165, 128 Pac. 266; In re Barnes’ Estate, 47 Okla. 117, 147 Pac. 504. The plaintiffs in error sought to correct this defect by amending the appeal bond, but the district court refused to permit them to do so. Besides, the' two sureties on the- bond could not escape liability thereon by reason of this irregularity, and the bond, as to them, would be good regardless of whether it was signed at all by either of the principals. Clark et al. v. Bank of Hennessey, 14 Okla. 572, 79 Pac. 217.

The judgment of the trial court dismissing the appeal is reversed, and the cause remanded; and let the same proceed in the name of the ward. Leonard D. Ingram, who has arrived at his majority and has been substituted as plaintiff by order of this court.

By the Court: It is so ordered.