Braden v. Gulf Coast Lumber Co.

1923 OK 227, 215 P. 202, 89 Okla. 215, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1048
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 1, 1923
Docket11145
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1923 OK 227 (Braden v. Gulf Coast Lumber Co.) 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
Braden v. Gulf Coast Lumber Co., 1923 OK 227, 215 P. 202, 89 Okla. 215, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1048 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

MASON, J.

This action, was instituted by ■the defendant in error, as plaintiff below, against the plaintiff in error, Jess Braden, sole trader under the name of Braden* Lumber Company, for balance due in the sum of $236.80 for lumber sold by the plaintiff and purchased by the defendant. Hereafter, for convenience, the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Thereafter, the defendant filed a demurrer to plain tiff’s petition, which was later withdrawn, and his answer was filed, in •which he admitted that he purchased the lumber of plaintiff as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, and that the balance due thereon, as sot forth in plaintiff’s petition, had not been paid.

The defendant also filed a counterclaim and set-off. consisting of two causes of action. In the first cause of action he. alleges that tie plaintiff shipped one car of lumber intended for the defendant, but billed to itself. to Miami, Okla.; that through, the negligence and carelessness of said plaintiff no bill of lading was sent to the defendant, and that he was not notified of the arrival *216 oí. said car of - lumber for several we-fifs thereafter; that by reason of said negligence and carelessness of plaintiff, the defendant; was compelled -to pay the demur-rage to the railroad company in the sum of $70.80.

In the second cause, of action the defendant alleges that, on the 2d day of November, 1917, he placed an order with, the plaintiff for certain lumber, which order was thereafter accepted and acknowledged by said company; that subsequently the price of said lumber advanced and the plaintiff notified the defendant that, on account of I he scarcity of labor at their Sour Lake Mill, they were no longer operating their planer at that point and- were obligedf to decline to make the shipment under said order ; that a few weeks subsequent the plaintiff quoted defendant prices on the same kind and quality of ¡lumlbe(r which iwere greatly in excess of the prices under the above contract. The defendant further ál-leges that, by reason of the failure on the part of plaintiff to deliver said, order, he was damaged in the sum of $1(50.

The defendant further alleges that he has paid all of said account to plaintiff except the amount of damages he is entitled to under his first and second causes of action of his set-off and counterclaim. The defendant prays judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by 'said action, and that the defendant have judgment on his first cause of action in the suan of $76.80; and on his second cause of action in the sum of $236.80, and that said sums be set off against the sum found due the plaintiff.

Thereafter, on March 8, 1919, the plain'tiff filed its reply, denying all of the allegations of the defendant’s answer, except such as was admitted in plaintiff’s petition.

Thereafter, on the 21st day of March, 1919, the trial court, upon motion of plaintiff, permitted the plaintiff to file its motion to strike the counterclaim and set-off from the answer of defendant, upon the grounds that said causes of action were entirely' redundant and immaterial to the cause sued on by the plaintiff, and were not assertions of any claim or cause of action arising out of, or in any way1' connected with the original cause of action sued on by the plaintiff herein.

The record discloses that, on April 14, 1919, the motion to strike the first cause of action of the counterclaim and set-off. relating to said sum of $76.80 for demur-rage. was overruled, and the same was sustained' as to the* second cause of action, and - the same was stricken from tbo answer of defendant, for the reason that said claim was unliquidated.

It further appears that, on the 21st day of October, 1919, 'the case was called for trial and, after a jury was duly selected to try said cause, the plaintiff moved for judgment in the grant of $160, with interest and cost, the same being the amount sued for by the plaintiff, less $76.80, the amount prayed for in defendant’s first cause of action, which the plaintiff confessed, which motion was by the court sustained, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff for said amount of $160, from which judgment the defendant appeals.

Plaintiff in error relies upon several assignments of error for reversal in this ease, the second of which is all we deem necessary to consider. In the second specification of error he contends that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion of plaintiff to strike the second cause of action in defendant’s counterclaim and set-off. Therefore, the main • question for our consideration is. “Whether or. not said second cause of action of defendant’s answer was a proper item of set-off." If so, the trial court errqd in sustaining the motion to strike said cause and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff.

The 3d paragraph of section 273, Comp. Okla. Stat. 1921, in part, provides as follows:

“* * * ijijjg defendant may set forth, in his answer, as many grounds of defense, counterclaim, set-off, and for relief, as he may have, whether they be such as have been heretofore denominated legal, or equitable, or both,. Each must be separately stated and numbered, and they must refer, in an intelligible manner, to the causes of action which they are intended to answer.”

Section 274, supra, in part, reads as follows :

“* * * Provided, that either party can plead and pi’ove a set-off or counterclaim of ■the proper nature, in defense of the liability sought to be enforced by the other party, and it shall not be necessary that such set-off shall exist as between all parties plaintiff and defendant in such suit, but any party may enforce bis set-off or counterclaim against the liability sought to be enforced against him. Such set-off or counterclaim shall not be barred by the statutes of limitations until the claim of the plaintiff is so barred.”

'Section 275, supra, provides as follows:

*217 “A set-off cart only be pleaded in an action founded' on contract, and must be a cause of action arising upon contract or ascertained by tbe decision of a court.”

These statutes are clearly applicable to this case. The defendant in error having declared upon a contract, upon which he seeks to recover in this ease,, the plaintiff in error was entitled to offset the claim arising to him by virtue of any contract due by the defendant in error.

It appears from the record that the trial court sustained the motion to strike defendant’s second cause .of action from his answer on the ground that the claim was un-liquidated, “and an improper set-off because of the fact that it is unliquidated.”

It is to be observed that no further qualification is required by the statute than that the action in which a set-off is pleaded must toe “an action founded on contract,” and that the set-off pleaded in such an action “must be a cause of action arising upon .contract.” Whether the action of the plaintiff is a liquidated or an unliquidated claim is Wholly immaterial. Likewise, whejher the set-off of the defendant is liquidated or unliquidated is wholly immaterial, as the statutes do not require either.

In the case of A. L. Stevens v. Thomas Able, 15 Kan. 584, we quote from the syllabus, as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 227, 215 P. 202, 89 Okla. 215, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braden-v-gulf-coast-lumber-co-okla-1923.