99 P.2d 522 | Okla. | 1940
This action was brought by plaintiffs, Lorene Reirdon and Mary Byrd French, against G.W. Taliaferro and B.N. Taliaferro, individually and as executors of the will and trustees of the estate of D.B. Taliaferro, deceased, and Madill National Bank, to cancel the transfer of 15 shares of stock of the defendant bank by the executors to G.W. Taliaferro, and reinvest title thereto in the estate, to enjoin the further transfer of such stock by G.W. Taliaferro, and to restrain the defendant bank from paying dividends thereon to G.W. Taliaferro, and for a receiver to take charge of such stock. The trial court rendered judgment canceling the stock and ordering the bank to issue a new certificate to the executors. Defendants appeal.
The facts are undisputed. The bank stock was the property of the estate. The plaintiffs and the defendants, G.W. Taliaferro and B.N. Taliaferro, were the beneficiaries under the will. The estate was in process of administration in the county court of Marshall county, where a final report by the executors was being contested by the plaintiffs. In the final report the stock was not shown as an asset of the estate, and an exception to the account because of the failure to list it as an asset was filed by plaintiffs. Then, for the first time, the facts concerning its transfer were disclosed, and plaintiffs' demand that it be transferred to the estate was refused. Both in the county court and in this case the executors admitted the transfer of the stock, that such transfer was without consideration and without authority from the county court, and the defendant G.W. Taliaferro claimed to hold the stock in trust for the estate. The asserted reason for the transfer was to enable G.W. Taliaferro to act as director of the defendant bank. The county court refused to order the return of the stock to the executors, and continued the hearing on the final report for an indefinite period. Plaintiffs brought a mandamus action in this court to compel the county court to proceed with the distribution of the estate (State ex rel. Reirdon v. County Court of Marshall County, 1938,
1. The sole question presented is one of jurisdiction, the point of conflict being the adequacy of plaintiffs' remedy in the county court. The jurisdiction of the county court over the executors is unquestioned, but plaintiffs contend that at previous hearings in the county court the executors had exhibited such unwillingness to return the stock to the estate that removal proceedings would be required, and that in the event they were removed a suit would then have to be brought by their successor against the bank and G.W. Taliaferro individually to accomplish the desired result, and that therefore the remedy would not be speedy and adequate, but would involve a multiplicity of proceedings which would be long extended and expensive. They rely chiefly on In re Kelly's Estate (1928)
Defendants assert that G.W. Taliaferro does not claim title to the stock, but expressly admits that he holds it in trust for the estate, and that therefore the rule announced in Re Kelly's Estate is inapplicable, and that the county court of Marshall county is clothed with full power and authority to grant to plaintiffs all necessary relief, and in support of such assertion they call attention to In re Wagner's Estate (1936)
That the original probate jurisdiction of county courts of this state is exclusive is settled beyond question. King v. Hepburn, supra; Dillard v. Franklin (1936)
2. Can it be said, in such a situation, that the county court, in the probate cause, had jurisdiction to grant adequate relief to plaintiffs? We think not. Inadequacy of legal remedy may be disclosed by the fact that, in its nature, it is not fitted or adapted to the accomplishment of the desired purpose. 19 Am. Jur. 115. Inadequacy exists where the case demands preventive relief, as for instance, the prevention of a multiplicity of suits or the prevention of serious or irreparable injury. 10 R.C.L. 277; Minnetonka Oil Co. v. Cleveland Vitrified Brick Co. (1910)
"* * * It has been held that where there are peculiar circumstances of embarrassment in administration, and assumption of jurisdiction by a court of equity would prevent great delay, expense, inconvenience, and waste, and thus conclude by one action and decree a protracted and vexatious litigation, such assumption of jurisdiction is sustainable."
We conclude that the district court did not err in holding that it was vested with jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause, and its judgment was amply sustained by the evidence.
Affirmed.
BAYLESS, C. J., and RILEY, GIBSON, and DANNER, JJ., concur.