Blair v. Board of Regents ex rel. Oklahoma Agricultural & Mechanical Colleges ex rel. Oklahoma State University of Agricultural & Applied Sciences

1966 OK 250, 421 P.2d 228
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1966
DocketNo. 41468
StatusPublished

This text of 1966 OK 250 (Blair v. Board of Regents ex rel. Oklahoma Agricultural & Mechanical Colleges ex rel. Oklahoma State University of Agricultural & Applied Sciences) 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
Blair v. Board of Regents ex rel. Oklahoma Agricultural & Mechanical Colleges ex rel. Oklahoma State University of Agricultural & Applied Sciences, 1966 OK 250, 421 P.2d 228 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice:

The principal issue involved in this appeal is whether or not a State fishing license secured from the State Game and Fish Department as prescribed in Tit. 29 O.S.1961, § 201, and a motor boat license obtained from the State Planning and Resources Board (which said Board has been the “Oklahoma Industrial Development and Park Department” since the effective date of Tit. 74 O.S.1965 Supp. § 1102) authorize their holder to fish in, and use a motor boat on, Lake Carl Blackwell, without payment of the fees to Oklahoma State University of Agricultural and Applied Sciences, which said University has scheduled for such activities and requires to be paid to it by members of the public who attempt to use said Lake for those activities.

This issue was joined in the present action, which was commenced in June, 1964, on behalf of said University by the Board of Regents for the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges, hereinafter referred to as “plaintiff.” Those named “defendants” in said plaintiff’s petition were one Marion Coble and Lois Blair. In said petition, plaintiff alleged, in substance, among other things, that it, rather than the State of Oklahoma, owns Lake Carl Blackwell, and other real estate referred to therein merely as the “Lake Carl Blackwell properties”; that the Board of Regents for such colleges has the authority to prescribe rules and regulations for the operation of these properties, and, in accord with its power to do so, had promulgated a schedule of fees, set forth in the petition, to be charged persons desiring to fish, in, and boat on, said Lake, for permits to do so. The plaintiff further alleged, in material substance, that on certain named days in May and June, 1964, the defendants had put their boats in the water of said Lake and proceeded to fish therein without any such permit; that said University’s lake manager, a Mr. Cathey, demanded of defendants that they purchase such permits, but they refused; that defendants threatened to again come upon plaintiff’s said property, and use it for those sports, without such permits from plaintiff, and unless restrained and enjoined from doing so, plaintiff will suffer irreparable injury for which it has no adequate remedy at law. The plaintiff prayed for both a temporary restraining order and a judgment perpetually restraining and enjoining defendants from coming upon the property, and for “all other proper and equitable relief and costs.”

After the court had issued a temporary restraining order against defendants, as prayed for in plaintiff’s petition, the defendant Blair filed a motion to dissolve the order and dismiss the action. Said motion was overruled in October, 1964, subject to subsequent reconsideration; and, in an answer thereafter filed, said defendant renewed the same plea, and additionally denied, both generally and specifically, all of the material allegations of plaintiff’s petition, except those admitted in a stipulation the parties had previously filed.

[230]*230After trial of the case upon the stipulated facts, the court filed certain written conclusions of law, and thereafter entered judgment for plaintiff against the defendant Blair, adopting the written conclusions, finding all of the issues in plaintiff’s favor, and perpetually restraining and enjoining said defendant from coming upon, or entering, plaintiff’s property, for boating or fishing on Lake Carl Blackwell, unless and until he has first obtained the boating and/or fishing license required therefor by plaintiff. In the journal entry of said judgment, the court, in effect, dismissed the action as to Marion Coble, and, upon re-considei'ation of the defendant Blair’s plea for dismissal, again overruled it. After the overruling of said defendant’s motion for a new trial, he perfected the present appeal on original record. Our further use of the word “defendant” will refer to Lois Blair, only. '

Under his first proposition for reversal of the trial court’s judgment, defendant asserts (as he did in his motion to dismiss below) that plaintiff lacks the capacity to bring this action because the Board of Regents of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges never made a request of this State’s Attorney General therefor, nor relied upon him, if he found merit in such request, to file the action in the name of the State of Oklahoma, on the relation of said Board. Defendant takes the position that by exercising its own initiative in causing the action to be filed by an attorney in its regular employ (without any connection with the office of the State’s Attorney General) plaintiff has violated Tit. 74 O.S. 1961, sec. 18c with reference to the employment of attorneys by State officers, boards, and commissions. Defense counsel points to the provisions of said section, stating “no State Officer, Board, or Commission * * ”, (except those named therein) “ * * * shall have authority to employ or appoint attorneys to advise or represent them * * in any matter”, and further stating that:

“At the request of any State Officer, Board or Commission (except a group of named ones, which does not include plaintiff)
the Attorney General shall have authority to institute suits in the name of the State of Oklahoma on their relation, provided after investigation he is convinced there is sufficient legal merit to justify the action.

Defendant argues, in substance, that, in rejecting applicability of the above quoted statute to plaintiff in this case,' the trial court ignored the Oklahoma Constitution’s Article VI, section 31a, which his counsel say created the Board of Regents for Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges, and, in so doing, made of it “a Board”' of this State within the meaning of that word as used in said statute. The decision of the trial court on this feature of the case is reflected in “PROPOSITION NO. ONE” of its written conclusions of law, as follows :

“O.S.U.

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1956 OK 110 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 250, 421 P.2d 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-board-of-regents-ex-rel-oklahoma-agricultural-mechanical-okla-1966.