Capitol Finance Co. v. McNealy

1936 OK 804, 63 P.2d 940, 179 Okla. 5, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 801
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
DocketNo. 25797.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1936 OK 804 (Capitol Finance Co. v. McNealy) 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
Capitol Finance Co. v. McNealy, 1936 OK 804, 63 P.2d 940, 179 Okla. 5, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 801 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action had its inception in the court of Paul Powers, justice of the p®ace in and for Oklahoma county, Ok'a., where plaintiff sued the defendant Capitol Finance Company and another to recover double the amount of usurious interest alleged to have been charged to and paid by the plaintiff. A change of venue was taken by the defendant to the court of Leo B. White, justice of the peace in and for Oklahoma county, where judgment was rendered against the defendant, Capitol Finance Company, for the amount sued for.

The case was appealed to the district court of Oklahoma county, and later transferred to the court of common pleas of said county; and a trial of the case there resulted in judgment for the plaintiff and against the defendant Capitol Finance Company, which brings the ease here on appeal. For convenience, the parties will be referred to as they appear in the trial court.

Numerous assignments of error arc made by the defendant for a reversal of the case, but it is only necessary that we pass upon three of these, as our disposition of same will eliminate all others. The questions herein decided will be disposed of in the order of their proper sequence.

First, it is contended by the defendant that the trial court did not have or acquire jurisdiction of this action on account of the alleged failure of the plaintiff to make, an adequate cost deposit, or to file, a cost bond or poverty affidavit in lieu thereof. In this connection, the record shows that, in lieu of a cost bond or deposit, the plaintiff filed an instrument in the form of an affidavit, which was duly signed by him, but was not signed by any officer authorized by law to administer an oath. Various contentions are made by the defendant under this assignment, including the following: (1) That the Oklahoma statute with regard to the filing of poverty affidavits in lieu of cost bond or deposit does not apply to actions instituted in the justice court; (2) that the instrument referred to was not an affidavit, since the same was not signed by an officer authorized to administer an oath; and (3) that the allegations of said instrument are insufficient to comply with the statute.

Section 511, O. S. 1931, which is a part of our Code of Oivil Procedure, provides that:

“In any civil action hereafter filed in any court of record before the court clerk shall be required to issue any summons or other process therein, there shall be filed by, or on behalf of the plaintiff, a bond for cost with one or more good and sufficient sureties, one of whom shall be a resident of the county in which the action is filed, or with some bonding company as such surety, conditioned that the plaintiff will pay all costs which njay be adjudged against him, or in case the costs cannot be collected from the defendant, if judgment be obtained against him, then the plaintiff will pay the costs incurred by himself, and such bond shall not be required to contain any other condition. * * * Provided that, in any ease, where the plaintiff claims he has a just cause of action against the defendant and that by reason of poverty, he is unable to pay the cost, or give security therefor, upon the filing of an affidavit by such plaintiff in such action to that effect, no bond, security or deposit shall be required; and provided further that the appeal bonds required by sections 1010 (1019) and 1415 of the Compiled Statutes of Oklahoma. 1921, shall stand in lieu of the cost bond 'and the cost deposit hereinbefore specified, and the court clerk shall not require either cost bond or cost deposit in such appeal eases.”

Under the provisions of our Code relating to civil procedure in justice courts, we find section 845, O. S. 1931, which reads as follows :

“The provisions of the chapter on civil procedure, which are, in their nature, applicable to the jurisdiction and proceedings before justices, and in respect to which no special provision is made by statute, are applicable to proceedings before justices of the peace.”

These sections of our statute originally came to us from the state of Kansas, and under familiar rules of construction we took them subject to the interpretation placed (hereon by the Supreme Court of that state prior to the time of our adoption of them. And in Barnett v. Lark, 45 Kan. 428, 25 P. 869, the Supreme Court of Kansas held that r

*7 “Section 581 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing, in substance, that a plaintiff who has a just demand against a defendant, and who, by reason of his poverty, cannot give security for costs, may maintain his action without a bond for costs, applies to actions commenced before a justice of the peace.”

The statute relating to the filing of poverty affidavits was also applied to justice court action in the earlier Kansas case of Cole v. Hoeburg, 36 Kan. 263, 13 P. 275.

No sound reason or logic has been advanced by the defendant why this beneficent statute should not be held to apply to actions instituted in the justice court, and we can think of none. In our view of the matter, the holder of a just cause of action, coming within the jurisdiction of the justice court, who by reason of his poverty is unable to pay or give security for costs, should be permitted to file his suit upon a poverty affidavit in the justice court, the same as a person holding a larger claim is permitted to file such affidavit in the district court. We therefore hold that the provisions of section 511, supra, with reference to poverty affidavits, apply to actions instituted in the justice court, the same as those filed in courts of record.

It is unnecessary for us to decide the other points urged under this assignment, for the reason that jurisdiction of the justice court did not depend upon the making of a deposit for costs, nor the filing of a cost bond or poverty affidavit in lieu thereof. This is clearly demonstrated by section 846, O. S. 1931, as follows:

“When a person intending to bring an action before a justice of the peace is a nonresident of the county in which he intends to commence such action, the justice shall, previous to his issuing process, and in all other cases, the justice may, either before or after the issuing process, require the plaintiff to give security for the costs of suit, which may be done by depositing a sum of money deemed by the justice to be sufficient to discharge the costs that may accrue in the action, or by giving an undertaking with surety approved by the justice payable to the adverse party, for the payment of all costs that may accrue in the action; where security is required after suit brought, if order for security be not '.'complied with, the justice may dismiss the action at the cost ' of the plaintiff.”

The territorial Supreme Court in Fowler v. Fowler, 15 Okla. 529, 82 P. 923, laid down the following rules of law which are applicable here, to wit:

“Where a plaintiff institutes an action in the district court or in the probate court under the district court procedure, and fails to give security for costs before the summons issues, the* remedy of the defendant is by special appearance and motion to quash the summons, and it is error to dismiss the cause upon such a motion.
“The provisions of the Civil Code (section 4773, Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 804, 63 P.2d 940, 179 Okla. 5, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capitol-finance-co-v-mcnealy-okla-1936.