Carlton v. Boardman Co.

1925 OK 883, 241 P. 151, 115 Okla. 151, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 3, 1925
Docket15430
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1925 OK 883 (Carlton v. Boardman 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
Carlton v. Boardman Co., 1925 OK 883, 241 P. 151, 115 Okla. 151, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 289 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The plaintiff, the Boardman Company, a corporation, commenced its action in the district court of Kiowa county, seeking a writ of mandamus against the defendant P. W. Carlton, as county clerk of Kiowa county, to compel the said defendant to attest a warrant ordered issued by the board of county commissioners of Kiowa county. A hearing was had upon the petition, and on about the 5th day of December, 1923, the petition was sustained and the writ ordered issued against said defendant. The defendant took steps to appeal the case from the judgment of the trial court. Before the appeal was filed in this court, defendant P. W. Carlton died, and Mary Carlton became his successor as county clerk of the said county. On March 31, 1924, and before the appeal was filed in the Supreme Court, there was filed in the case a purported .journal entry attempting to substitute Mary Carlton for her deceased predecessor as a party to the action. Later the record was filed in the Supreme Court with petition in error. The defendant in error, the Boardman Company, has filed a motion in the Supreme Court to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the original defendant has died, and the attempted substitution of Mary Carlton was abortive and of no effect.

Crigler, County Clerk, v. Nichols, 51 Okla. 707, 152 Pac. 343, is a case wherein an officer of a school district sought a writ of mandamus against the county clerk to require him to issue a warrant. The writ was granted, and the county clerk prosecuted an appeal. A motion was lodged in the Supreme Court to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the county clerk against whom the action was directed had ceased to occupy the official position because his term of office had expired. The motion to dismiss the appeal was sustained, the court holding that:

“An action against the county ' clerk to compel him to issue a warrant on the county treasurer is against him personally to compel the performance of an -official act, and on the termination of his official authority his successor cannot be substituted.”

This case was followed in State ex rel. DeAtley v. Alexander, 77 Okla. 87, 186 Pac. *152 1080, and the same declaration oí law there made. It seems that under the holdings of this court in the cases cited the attempted order of substitution of Mary Carlton for her deceased predecessor in office, P. W. Carlton, is unauthorized and a mere nullity, lit also appears from the cases cited that the action was personal to P. W. Carlton in his official capacity, and since his decease, the question of whether or not the writ of mandamus was properly issued against him by the trial court has become abstract and moot, and a determination of such question here would be entirely unnecessary and of no effect.

For the reasons stated, the motion to dismiss should be sustained, and the appeal dismissed.

By the Court: It is so ordered.

Note. — See under (l) 4 C. J. p. 577, § 2383.

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Related

Johnston v. Board of Education
148 P.2d 195 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)
State Ex Rel. Hunzicker v. Pulliam
1934 OK 371 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 883, 241 P. 151, 115 Okla. 151, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlton-v-boardman-co-okla-1925.