Allied Paint Mfg. Co. v. Banes

1953 OK 49, 253 P.2d 826, 208 Okla. 119, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 17, 1953
Docket35523
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1953 OK 49 (Allied Paint Mfg. Co. v. Banes) 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
Allied Paint Mfg. Co. v. Banes, 1953 OK 49, 253 P.2d 826, 208 Okla. 119, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 720 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is a consolidated action, consisting of four cases by plain *120 tiff, Allied Paint Manufacturing Company, each of such cases being based on a materialman’s lien filed by the plaintiff against four separate parcels or real estate owned, one each, by four separate man-and-wife joint tenancy defendants.

Each of these four properties consisted of residences which had been constructed by Aired Construction Company and H. M. Aired, the then owners, and after construction one of them had been sold to each of the four defendant joint tenancy owners.

The plaintiff furnished the paint and wallpaper to Aired for the construction of these improvements, and on March 26, 1951, filed materialman’s liens for the said paint and wallpaper bill on the four properties.

On April 7, 1951, the plaintiff released all four of the properties from-the liens.

Later, on August 20, 1951, plaintiff filed the four separate actions herein consolidated, alleging that its lien releases filed on April 7, 1951, had been procured without consideration. Plaintiff prayed that the lien releases be set aside for lack of consideration, and that the liens be reinstated and that they be foreclosed.

In these four separate actions, plaintiff made Aired a party, and asked for personal judgment against him, as owner and builder, and made the four separate joint-owner groups parties, because, in the meantime, they had purchased the properties. Plaintiff made ihe Deming Investment Company a ■party, because prior to plaintiff’s releases of liens Deming Investment Company had taken a mortgage on each of the four properties.

Deming Investment Company, by its .attorneys, filed identical answers in each of the four cases, setting up its mortgagees, not asking foreclosure, but alleging priority over plaintiff. The defendants, William A. Brown and Viola Brown, by their attorney filed a separate answer, and the defendants, James S. Banes and Marien Banes, Mayes Odell Brown and .Orlene Brown, and Marcus A. Wells, Jr., and Celestine Wells, by their attorney, filed identical answers and each asked in the prayer for title to be quieted.

The court, by agreement of the parties consolidated all four of the cases.

Before the time of trial the plaintiff dismissed all four of its petitions in the four separate cases and released and quitclaimed all four of the properties involved in the four separate actions.

When the case came on for trial, plaintiff moved the court to dismiss the actions as to all parties.

The defendants, Deming Investment Company and the four joint-owner groups, objected to dismissal as to their separate answers and demanded that they be permitted to go to trial for affirmative relief on the issues raised by their answers.

The court overruled the motion of the plaintiff to dismiss as to all parties and, thereafter, the four joint-owner defendants and the Deming Investment Company filed motions for judgments on the pleadings.

The consolidated cases came on for trial on February 18, 1952, and the court sustained said motions over the objections of the plaintiff; then, without the introduction of any evidence, rendered judgments in favor of the four joint-owner defendants and the mortgage company against the plaintiff, quieting title in them against the plaintiff, and adjudging that by plaintiff’s dismissal and releases of lien the plaintiff had confessed judgment and that the defendants were entitled to have their titles quieted against the plaintiff and to have attorneys’ fees against the plaintiff, under the mechanic’s and material-man’s lien statute, and rendered $75 attorney fee in each case.

The plaintiff contends there is no affirmative issue raised by the answers of any of the defendants amounting to a cross-petition upon which to base a judgment quieting title in them. In each *121 of the cases the defendants rely upon the prayer of their answer as constituting a cross-petition upon which they can be given affirmative relief, to wit:

“Wherefore, premises considered, defendant prays that the plaintiff take nothing by this action; that the court establish the mortgage of this defendant, set up and herein described to be a first, valid, and subsisting lien upon the real estate prior and superior to the lien and claim of the plaintiff; that it recover its costs herein expended and the sum of $150.00 as attorneys’ fees incurred by defendant in the defense of this action; and that this defendant have such other, further, and equitable relief as it may be entitled to, premises considerd.”

In the answer of William A. Brown:

“Wherefore, having fully answered, defendants ask that plaintiff take nothing by its petition and that the court quiet the title of the defendants herein as to the said plaintiff, or as to any one claiming under or through it, and that the defendants recover their costs herein expended.”

The prayer in the answer of the rest of the defendants is identical to the following, to wit:

“Wherefore, defendants James S. Banes and Marien Banes, pray that the plaintiff be denied relief in so far as it seeks to have the alleged lien reinstated and foreclosed as to the interest of these defendants; that these defendants’ title and interest in and to said above described property be quieted as against the claims of said plaintiff; and that said defendants be allowed their costs herein expended together with a reasonable attorney fee and such other relief as may be just and proper.”

The right of the plaintiff to dismiss is defined in 12 O. S. 1951 §§683, 684.' and 685:

“An action may be dismissed without prejudice to a future action *** by the plaintiff before *** final submission *** to the jury or to the court, where the trial is by the court.”

“* * * A plaintiff may at any time before trial is commenced, on payment of the costs and without any order of the court, dismiss his action, after the filing of a petition in intervention or answer praying for affirmative relief, but such dismissal shall not prejudice the right of the intervenor or defendant to proceed in the action * *

“In any place where set-off or counterclaim has been presented, the defendant shall have the right of proceeding to the trial of his claim, although the plaintiff may have dismissed his action or failed to appear.”

The plaintiff in its brief cites Haley v. Brown (Tex. Civ. App.) 70 S. W. 2d 348, from which we quote:

“The right of a plaintiff to take a non-suit (dismiss without prejudice) upon his own cause of action was considered of sufficient importance by the Legislature to be given express recognition.

“Owing to unexpected contingencies that may occur during a trial, it is a privilege which it may become necessary for the most careful and diligent litigant to exercise, and it is important that the substance, and not the shadow alone, of the right shall be preserved.

“It is only when the defendant, by a counterclaim, seeks some ‘affirmative relief’ that the right of the plaintiff to discontinue the entire cause is forbidden.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ring v. Public Service Co. of Oklahoma
775 P.2d 1356 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
McDaniel v. Moyer
1983 OK 39 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1983)
Firestone Tire & Rubber Company v. Barnett
1970 OK 93 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Swan-Sigler, Inc. v. Black
1966 OK 90 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)
Butler v. Prokop
1958 OK 11 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1958)
Hursh v. Weliever
265 P.2d 372 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 49, 253 P.2d 826, 208 Okla. 119, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-paint-mfg-co-v-banes-okla-1953.