Bilby v. Gibson

1928 OK 658, 271 P. 1026, 133 Okla. 196, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1042
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 20, 1928
Docket17377
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1928 OK 658 (Bilby v. Gibson) 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
Bilby v. Gibson, 1928 OK 658, 271 P. 1026, 133 Okla. 196, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1042 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

LEAOH, C.

Kelly F. Gibson, defendant in error, commenced this action in the district court of Tulsa county, wherein he, as plaintiff, sought to recover of and from the defendants, J. Ed Bilby, N. V. Bilby, and R. I. Bilby, the sum of $15,000 for alleged services rendered by him for the defendants. The petition filed by plaintiff stated, in part and in substance, that on the 24th day of April. 1920, the defendants R. I. Bilby and N. V. Bilby were under a binding, legal obligation to assist with their means in satisfying the legal debts .of J. Ed Bilby; that there was then pending in the state of Kansas a suit against J. Ed Bilby upon certain of his legal obligations, notes and mortgages, involving the sum of $265,000; that the ae-fenaants employed plaintiff to servel them in the settlement, compromise and disposition of such action; that the employment was oral, but was upon, the terms that he, plaintiff, was to be paid a reasonable sum tor his services in settling said suit; that he was given a maximum limit of settlement and authorized to use in such settlement all the real and personal property sought to be foreclosed and the sum of $25,U00, the latter to be furnished by the defendants N. V. and R. .1. Bilby; that, under the terms of his employment, the greater would be his services and the larger necessarily the amount that he would earn in settlement, the lower the settlement could be made within the terms of said maximum amount of settlement. Upon said terms plaintiff undertook said settlement as the employee and agent of defendants and made and effectuated an agreement for settlement which was consummated and carried into effect within 90 days, and thereupon plaintiff became due a reasonable amount, not less than '$15,000, for his services; that said settlement was made upon terms considerably within the fixed limits, and was brought about and consummated by th’e direct efforts of plaintiff under said employment, and he saved to the defendants the whole of the said sum of $25,000, as well as a large part of the personal property, at least $5,-000 thereof, by them offered for said settlement; that because the employment .of said plaintiff therein was to be paid for only in contingency of success, it was understood and agreed that his compensation wap to be many times larger than if it had beer paid for by the day or week, and it wap understood and agreed that his compensation was to be made in accordance with the size of the project and the relative proportion that the settlement bore to the indebtedness owed; that the entire amount of mon'ey and property accepted by plaintiffs and in-terveners in said suit in Settlement of the same did not exceed the sum of $90,000, and •plaintiff was able to settle said indebtedness for practically one-third thereof.

Plaintiff further alleged a demand for payment of the services which was refused, and he prayed judgment for $15.000 with interest. Personal service of summons was had upon the defendant J. Ed. Bilby, in Tulsa county, and upon N. V. Bilby. in Hughes county. The defendant N. V. Bilby, who appears to have been a resident of Hughes county, Okla., at the time of the *198 service of summons upon him, filed a motion to quash, set aside and vacate the pretended service of summons, giving as grounds and the reason therefor:

“That the same was not issued, served and returned according to law, and is insufficient to confer jurisdiction on this court,”

—which (motion to quash was overruled, and h’e filed a motion to make plaintiff’s petition more definite and certain, also a motion to strike certain portions thereof, and later a demurrer was presented to the petition, all of which were overruled and excepted to, whereupon the defendant N. V. Bilby filed an answer in the nature of a general denial. The defendant It. I. Bilby, being a nonresident of Oklahoma, entered his appearance in the cause and filed an answer in the nature of a general denial. The defendant J. Ed Bilby filed an answer in the cause, admitting that the plaintiff effected a settlement and compromise of the suit pending against him in the state of Kansas, but specifically denied that the plaintiff was acting as agent for him, or under any contract of employment with him, and alleged that the services rendered by the plaintiff were at the requ’elst and on behalf of the other defendants.

Upon a trial of the cause a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Gibson, against N. Y. and B., I. Bilby, for the sum of $6,000, with interest th’ereon, and a verdict in favor of the defendant J. Ed Bilby absolving him of liability.' Judgment was entered in accord with the verdict, from which N. V. and B. X. Bilby bring this appeal, and allege and set forth in their joint petition in error Several grounds for reversal.

The first assignment of error argued and presented in the brief of plaintiffs in error, No. 11, in their petition in error, relates to the order of the court overruling the motion of the defendant N. V. Bilby to quash the summons/ We will consider such assignment in connection with their Seventh assignment of error in the petition in error, which is:

“That th'e court was without jurisdiction to render a judgment in favor of plaintiff against N. V. and B. I. Bilby or either of them.” ' 'T

It was the contention of the plaintiffs in error that the action was a joint one. and that since the jury found in favor of the defendant J. Ed Bilby, the action could not then be maintained in Tulsa countv as against the defendant N. V. Bilby, who was a resident of Hughes county, Okla., and that no judgment could be entered upon the verdict as against N. Y. and B. I. Bilby because the action was a joint one. The plaintiffs in error rely upon the holding in the case of Fisher v. Fiske, 96 Okla. 36, 219 Pac. 638, the syllabus of which is as follows:

“Sections 207 and 234, Comp. Stats. 1921, create an exception to the general rule that a defendant may be sued only in the jurisdiction of his residence. But, in order to give the court jurisdiction over joint defendants who are nonresidents of the county where the suit is brought and for whom summons has been issued to another county, the averments of the petition and the proof on the trial must show that the plaintiff has a valid joint cause of action against the resident defendants on whom valid service is had as well a® against the nonresident defendants.”

If the motion of the defendant N. V. Bil-by to quash the summons was meritorious and sufficient in form to raise the question of th'e jurisdiction of the court on account of his being a nonresident, the error, if any, in overruling such motion is not properly before this court because he failed to present the same in his motion for new trial. He assumes that the assignment, “Errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by defendant,” in the motion for new trial and in petition in error is sufficient to cover and include the order and ruling of the court in overruling his motion to quash the summons, but such is not the rule, and the same is not sufficient under the holding of this court in the following cases: Sarlls v. Hawk, 46 Okla. 343, 148 Pac. 1030; Akin v. Bonfils, 47 Okla. 492, 150 Pac. 194; Baker v. Citizens’ State Bank, 74 Okla. 182, 177 Pac. 568; First Nat. Bank v. Farmers’ State Guaranty Bank, 62 Okla. 30, 161 Pac. 1063; W. T. Rawleigh Co. v. Riggs, 123 Okla. 42, 252 Pac. 428; C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Warren, 132 Okla. 107, 269 Pac. 368; Clark v. Herbert, 132 Okla. 272, 270 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 658, 271 P. 1026, 133 Okla. 196, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilby-v-gibson-okla-1928.