Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. McDowell

1928 OK 656, 271 P. 1017, 133 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1048
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 20, 1928
Docket18734
StatusPublished

This text of 1928 OK 656 (Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. McDowell) 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
Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. McDowell, 1928 OK 656, 271 P. 1017, 133 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1048 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

Joe C. McDowell brought suit in district court of Hughes county against W. J. Thurber, Arkansas Fuel Oil Company, and Arkansas Natural Gas Company to foreclose a lien for work and labor done and materials furnished upon a certain oil well and equipment. Numerous other parties intervened asking that their claims and liens be adjudicated and declared against the same property.

Upon the trial of the case the court rendered judgment against said Thurber, as principal defendant, in favor of plaintiff and the several claimants for work and labor done and for materials furnished said Thurber in the drilling of said well.

It appeared in the case that the Arkansas Natural Gas Company and the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company were the owners of certain oil well casing which they had loaned to and which was used by said Thurber in the enterprise, and the judgment of the court declared said casing subject to a lien for the benefit of all the claims adjudicated, *215 and also ordered said casing to be sold to satisfy such lien.

No money judgment was rendered against either the Arkansas Natural Gas Company or Arkansas Fuel Oil Company, but these companies appealed to the Supreme Court from so much of the decree as adjudged t.heir casing subject to the lien of said judgments, and upon such appeal gave bond with the Aetna Casualty & Surety Company as their surety.

Said bond was conditioned that:

“Tf the said obligors shall have forthcoming the property ordered to be sold herein so that the same may be proceeded against, or will pay the value of any property taken by them and not forthcoming to satisfy the judgment of the court, and will abide by and perform the judgment of the appellate court in case the judgment or final order shall be adjudged against them, in whole or in part, and will pay said obligees all costs and damages that may be adjudged against these plaintiffs in error, then said obligation shall be void.”

It later having been made to appear to the court that said companies desired to remove and use their casing, the court, upon application of such parties, on October 11, 1924, caused the said property to be appraised. The appraisal was accordingly made, and the report thereof, duly verified, was filed showing the value of the casing to be $3,007.47. The appraisal was made before the owners aforesaid were permitted to remove the property.

The parties hereto are numerous, and for the purpose of clarity, and for the reason hereinafter appearing, the Arkansas Natural Gas Company and the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company will be designated as plaintiffs, and the other parties will be designated herein as defendants.

The case on appeal to this court was affirmed July 20, 1926, and, after the coming down of the mandate, the defendants, on January 29, 1927, filed a pétition to set aside the order of the court of October 11, 1924, directing appraisement of the property on the ground that such appraisement was made without notice to them, and that the property was appraised at much less than its real value. Two of the defendants, Joe C. McDowell and L. C. Mitchell, also filed a separate and independent suit against the plaintiffs and their bondsmen on the bond aforesaid. On February 21, 1927, plaintiffs paid in to the court clerk of Hughes county, for the purpose of satisfying their obligations under said bond, the full appraised value of said casing with interest thereon to date of payment, and made application to be discharged from said bond.

By agreement of all parties, and under direction of the court, the motion to set aside the order of appraisement, the pending suit for judgment on the bond, and the application of plaintiffs to be discharged as aforesaid, were all consolidated for the purpose of having the entire matter heard and disposed of at one time and in the same proceeding, and later the entire matter came on for hearing on March 25, 1927, at which time all parties appeared in person or by counsel, and the matter was heard by the court without a jury, and the following proceedings were had: The court clerk informed the court that plaintiffs had paid in to him the full appraised value of said property together with interest thereon to date of payment. It was agreed between the parties that the several judgments rendered in the first-named suit aggregated $8,859.14, and that the total amount remaining in the hands of the court clerk, after deducting certain costs and expenses, was $5,950. Thereupon the court ordered the clerk to distribute the last-named sum to and among the defendants ratably, and in accordance with the prior judgments in the case, which left a deficiency amounting to $2,909.14, for which amount judgment was rendered against the plaintiffs and their bondsmen. It is from this judgment that plaintiffs appeal.

Was the judgment rendered supported by evidence or authorized by law? We are constrained to answer this question in the negative. First. It appears that plaintiffs had no interest in this controversy save to repossess themselves of their personal property which they had loaned to and which had been used by W. J. Thurber in the drilling of an oil well, and if possible to hare it released from liens which had fastened upon same in behalf of the several defendants who had claims against Thurber. Second. In the original suit no personal judgment was taken in favor of either of claimants against either of these plaintiffs. Third. They were not nécessary parties to said suit for any purpose as shown by the judgment, other than to have the judgments rendered in the first suit made liens upon the personal property of plaintiffs by reason of the fact that it was upon the premises and was used in connection with the lease upon which the well was drilled by Thurber. Fourth. They were not sued in the case at bar upon personal obligations other than the bond, which was in the nature of a forthcoming obligation for the return of personal property *216 claimed by plaintiffs or for its value. Fifth. No petition demanding a money judgment against plaintiffs was filed in the present proceeding except the one on the forthcoming bond.

So that, in no event and under no theory, can we seem to see any reason why a personal judgment was rendered against these plaintiffs, unless they were in default upon said bond. From an inspection of the record it appears that this bond was not given to supersede the money judgment, or any part of it, but only to assure the return of this personal property upon which the court had fastened a lien or to account for its value. And since all the parties were before the court, McDowell and Mitchell as parties plaintiff to the suit upon the bond in question, the other defendants upon their application to set aside the order of ap-praisement made by the court October 11, 1924, and the plaintiffs representing their motion to be discharged from liability on the bond and as defendants in the McDowell-Mitchell suit and in the nature of defendants in opposition to the application of the other defendants to vacate the order of appraisement, all of the various rights and demands could properly be finally disposed of. All of these proceedings having been consolidated and brought to the attention of the court and tried as one action, the parties in this court will be held to that theory. Milliken v. Smith, 120 Okla. 211, 251 Pac. 84. What, therefore, were the rights of the parties under the record as disclosed? First.

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Milliken v. Smith
1926 OK 863 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 656, 271 P. 1017, 133 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-fuel-oil-co-v-mcdowell-okla-1928.