Groseclose v. Rice

Decision Date24 October 1961
Docket NumberNo. 39259,39259
Citation366 P.2d 465,1961 OK 251
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court
PartiesFlorence R. GROSECLOSE, Plaintiff in Error, v. Luetta RICE, Defendant in Error.

Syllabus by the Court

1. In so far as probate residence and domicile are concerned an incompetent ward may change his residence from one state to another without permission of his guardian or the court which appointed the guardian if the ward has sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature and effect of his act.

2. To effect change of residence or domicile, there must be actual abandonment of first domicile, coupled with intention not to return to it, and there must be a new domicile acquired by actual residence in another place or jurisdiction, with intention of making the last acquired residence a permanent home.

3. Question of fact of residence is for determination of the trier of the facts, and such determination is conclusive upon appeal unless clearly against the weight of the evidence.

4. In proceeding for probate of will, court must determine jurisdictional fact of testator's residence at death regardless of foreign court's judgment, full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution (Article 4, § 1) being inapplicable.

Appeal from District Court of Harmon County; W. P. Keen, Judge.

Petition by Luetta Rice for the admission to probate of will of Joseph L. Sherrill, deceased; opposed by Florence R. Groseclose. The county court found that it did not have jurisdiction. Upon trial de novo the district court reversed and the contestant appeals. Affirmed.

Tolbert & Gillespie, Hobart, Raymond E. Peterson, Casa Grande, Ariz., for plaintiff in error.

Montgomery & Montgomery, Hobart, Hicks & Fancher, Hollis, for defendant in error.

HALLEY, Justice.

Luetta Rice, hereafter referred to as proponent, filed in the County Court of Harmon County a petition to probate the will of Joseph L. Sherrill who died in that county on February 12, 1960. Florence R. Groseclose, hereafter referred to as contestant, filed a petition for contest of the will. The county court dismissed the probate for lack of jurisdiction, stating that Sherrill was not at the time of his death a resident of Harmon County. Proponent appealed to the District Court of Harmon County which court reversed the decision of the county court and remanded the matter to county court for further proceedings. This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court and from an order overruling motion for new trial.

On and before September 23, 1957, Joseph L. Sherrill was a resident of Pinal County, Arizona. On that date the Superior Court of said county adjudged him incompetent by reason of old age and senility and appointed contestant as guardian of his person and estate. In December, 1957, Joseph L. Sherrill, hereafter referred to as the incompetent, entered the Veterans Administration Hospital at Whipple, Arizona. Upon his release in January, 1958, he made his home in Arizona with proponent, with whom he returned to Oklahoma in May, 1958. In December, 1958, he was adjudged incompetent by the County Court of Harmon County, Oklahoma, and a guardian of his person and estate was appointed by that court. After returning to Oklahoma he lived at the homes of two nephews in Harmon County until his death nearly two years later.

The contestant contends that the residence of the incompetent remained in Pinal County, Arizona, from September 1957, until his death and that therefore there can be no jurisdiction for probate in Oklahoma. In her brief she devotes four propositions to this contention which may be treated together as follows: Contestant states that there is no probate jurisdiction in Oklahoma because an Arizona resident who has been adjudged incompetent, or non sui juris, in Arizona cannot effectively change his residence or domicile to Oklahoma without the consent of his Arizona-appointed guardian and without an order of the Arizona court which made the appointment.

In speaking of residence within the meaning of 58 O.S.1951 § 5, subdivision 1, providing that wills shall be proved in the county in which decedent was a resident at the time of his death, this Court has not recognized any distinction between the words residence and domicile, but has treated the words as interchangeable and synonymous. Richards v. Huff, 146 Okl. 108, 293 P. 1028.

Contestant cites the Arizona statute which provides that the guardian may fix the residence of the ward in any county within the State, but not elsewhere without permission of the court. Title 14, Arizona Revised Statute Annotated § 806. Such statute is in words almost identical with the Oklahoma Statute, 30 O.S.1951 § 15.

The case of Laughlin v. Williams, 76 Okl. 246, 185 P. 104, is cited by contestant to show that the language of the statute is controlling. The case holds that an attempt by an incompetent ward to change his residence from one county to another within Oklahoma without the knowledge or consent of his guardian is ineffective. That case is correct in stating the rule concerning an attempted intra-state change of residence by an incompetent ward. But the case at bar has to do with an attempted change of residence from one state to another. Therefore the Laughlin case is not in point. The Arizona statute referred to above could not have extra-territorial force and effect and prevent the incompetent ward from acquiring a residence outside the State of Arizona, if he had the requisite mental capacity and meets the requirements which we will hereafter discuss.

The contestant also cites In re Estate of Gray, 119 Okl. 219, 250 P. 422, 424, which involved a claimed lack of jurisdiction of the County Court of Osage County to probate the will of a deceased incompetent ward who had died while in a hospital in Colorado. In that case it was questioned whether the guardian had been authorized by court order to change the residence of the ward to Colorado, and whether the guardian made such change. The trial court answered both questions in the negative. This Court weighed the evidence and held that the findings of the trial court were not clearly against the weight of the evidence. Our opinion in that case went further, however, and indicated that the ward might be said to have established a new residence in Colorado if there had been testimony 'that after leaving the sanitorium he (the incompetent ward) intended to continue his sojourn in...

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7 cases
  • In re Initiative Petition No. 379
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • December 12, 2006
    ...v. Norris, 1935 OK 1036, ¶ 0, 51 P.2d 736; City of Enid v. Warner-Quinlan Asphalt Co., 1916 OK 1010, ¶ 0, 161 P. 1092. 43. Groseclose v. Rice, 1961 OK 251, ¶ 4, 366 P.2d 465; Richards v. Huff, 1930 OK 547, ¶ 6, 293 P. 1028. 44. Moore v. Hayes, 1987 OK 82, ¶ 8, 744 P.2d 934; Groseclose v. Ri......
  • Phillips' Estate, In re
    • United States
    • California Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
    • February 14, 1969
    ...969, 116 N.E. 746); Massachusetts (Talbot v. Chamberlain, 149 Mass. 57, 59, 20 N.E. 305, 306--307, 3 L.R.A. 254); Oklahoma (Groseclose v. Rice, 366 P.2d 465, 468); Texas (Ferguson v. Ferguson, Tex.Civ.App., 128 S.W. 632); Vermont (In re Hanrahan's Will, 109 Vt. 108, 127, 194 A. 471, 480--48......
  • Jacobs, Matter of
    • United States
    • New Jersey Superior Court
    • March 18, 1998
    ...In re Estate of Peck, 80 N.M. 290, 454 P.2d 772 (1969), cert. denied 396 U.S. 942, 90 S.Ct. 376, 24 L.Ed.2d 242 (1969); Groseclose v.. Rice, 366 P.2d 465 (Okla.1961); and the cases cited in Annotation, "Change of State or National Domicil of Mental Incompetent", 96 A.L.R.2d 1236 (1964). The......
  • Sherrill's Estate, In re
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • July 12, 1962
    ...has held that existence of a guardianship did not deprive the decedent of the capacity to acquire a new state domicile, Groseclose v. Rice, 366 P.2d 465 (Okl.1961). The lower court therefore erred in rejecting appellant's offered evidence for the reasons that appellee as guardian had full c......
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