Boland v. Boland

1935 OK 380, 43 P.2d 79, 171 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1935
DocketNo. 24761.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 380 (Boland v. Boland) 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
Boland v. Boland, 1935 OK 380, 43 P.2d 79, 171 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 237 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Pottawatomie county denying the motion of the plaintiffs below for judgment upon the. pleadings, and awarding judgment upon such motion for the defendant below for costs and attorney fees. The parties occupy the same position in this court as they did in the lower court.

Plaintiffs filed their amended petition in the lower court in reliance upon section 9519, Okla. Stats. 1931, for the recovery of double the amount of interest paid the defendant upon a contract which was alleged to be usurious. Such amended petition and the attached exhibits refer to a promissory note given by the plaintiffs to the defendant on September '20, 1928, for the principal sum of $3,948, due March 20, 1929, and bearing interest at 10 per cent, per annum from its date until paid, and to a written contract between the parties of the same date, which recites that the plaintiffs were indebted to the State National Bank of Shawnee, Okla., in the sum of $3,306, their debt being secured by second mortgage upon certain described real estate in Pottawatomie county, formerly owned by them, but which mortgage had been foreclosed by the holder .thereof in the district court of that county, judgment rendered therein on January 30, 1928, the land sold at sheriff’s sale under such judgment and purchased by said bank. This contract further provides that the defendant was discharging this indebtedness to said bank and allowing the plaintiffs six months’ additional time in which to repay the same; that plaintiffs had on the date thereof executed their warranty deed to the defendant covering such real estate, and that the same would be placed, with the contract, in escrow, and that if such note were not paid on or before its due date, the deed would become absolute, but that if such note were paid on or before maturity, such deed would be inoperative to convey title. The note so referred to in the sum of $3,-948 represented the sum total of the amount due the bank of $3,306, taxes due on the real estate in the sum of $142, and an additional sum of $500 which the plaintiffs claim was, together with the interest accumulating on such note at the rate specified on its face, taken or reserved as interest, while the defendant contends it was a bonus to him for handling the transaction. The contract refers to it as follows:

“It is understood and agreed that the note herein provided for, in the sum of $3,-948 covers the indebtedness due the State National Bank, the taxes on land for 1927 (amounting to $142) and a $500 bonus to party of the first part for handling this transaction.”

The contract further provided that the delivery of the deed to the defendant by the escrow’ holder upon failure of the plaintiffs to pay such note, should “constitute a complete and absolute payment and cancellation of the indebtedness of” the plaintiffs represented by such note. To this amended petition the defendant filed his answer, the *439 first paragraph of which denied all allegations of the amended petition except those which were thereafter specifically admitted, and the remaining portions of which denied specifically all of the allegations of such amended petition except the execution of the note and contract above described; specifically denied that the $500 to be paid to him, and included in the note was a charge of interest on the transaction, and alleged that the transaction was one for the purchase and sale of the real estate .therein described, and not a loan of money, and that such $500 item was, as stated in the contract, an amount agreed upon between the parties to be paid .the defendant for his services in handling the transaction. The note was not paid and was turned over to the plaintiffs at the time their deed • was delivered to .the defendant.

The plaintiffs then filed their motion for judgment on the pleadings, and on January 18, 1933, such motion was denied and judgment awarded the defendant for costs, including an attorney’s fee prayed for in his answer.

1. The defendant has filed his motion in this court to dismiss the appeal, assigning the following grounds in support thereof ;

A. Irregularity in the signing and settling of the case-made;

B. That such case.-made does not contain all of the record required.

This motion to dismiss should .be first disposed of.

Under the first proposition, it appears from the journal entry of judgment entered on January 18, 1933, that the plaintiffs were allowed 30 days (or until February 17, 1933) within which to make and serve case-made; the defendant was allowed five days thereafter (or until February 23, 1933, the last day of such period being a holiday), in which to suggest amendments thereto; and such case-made was to be signed and settled on five days’ written notice by either party. Such case-made was served on the defendant on January 23, 1933, on the same day said defendant was served with written notice that the plaintiffs would present such case-made to the district judge for s’gning and settling on March 6, 1933, at 9 a. m. No amendments were suggested by the defendant and no objections were filed by him to the signing and settling of such case-made until March 6, 1933, and on that date the same was signed and settled by the district judge.

In support of this proposition, the defendant cites the cases of Bradfield et al. v. Black, 143 Okla. 185, 287 P. 1026, and Kolb et al. v. Hightower, 155 Okla. 1, 8 P. (2d) 23, which hold:

“The time within which to suggest amendments to a case-made begins to run, not from the date of service of the case-made, but from the expiration of the time allowed within which to make and serve the same.”

Many other decisions of this court might be cited to the same effect, none of which do we consider in point, since it will be noted that the case-made in the case at bar was not signed and settled until some time after the expiration of the time allowed the defendant to suggest amendments, viz., February 23, 1933. We consider the rule and reasoning of this court in the case of American Surety Co. v. Wolsey, 163 Okla. 270, 20 P. (2d) 158, in which it is held;

“Where, after a ease-made for .the Supreme Court has been duly served and due notice of the time and place of settling and signing has been given to the adverse party, such' party cannot ignore such notice, or treat it as a nullity, although the time fixed in such notice for settling and signing such case-made be earlier than the case-made could properly be settled and signed. And where the judge of the court, in the absence of the adverse party, and without any objection from him or from any other-person, settles and signs the case-made upon such a notice, and nothing further is done concerning the same, the Supreme Court will, in the absence of other irregularities, treat the case-made as valid”

—to apply more forcibly and directly to ■ the present case, where it will be noted, although the notice of signing and settling the case-made was given and served before the expiration of .the time allowed to make and serve the same, yet the time allowed in such notice does not attempt to shorten the time fixed by the court within which to suggest amendments.

2. Upon the second proposition, the brief of defendant in error complatos that the case-made does not reveal what action or if any. action was taken by the.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 380, 43 P.2d 79, 171 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-boland-okla-1935.