Champlin Refining Co. v. Le Force

1936 OK 14, 54 P.2d 190, 176 Okla. 48, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 937
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 14, 1936
DocketNo. 23961.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1936 OK 14 (Champlin Refining Co. v. Le Force) 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
Champlin Refining Co. v. Le Force, 1936 OK 14, 54 P.2d 190, 176 Okla. 48, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 937 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The defendant in error, Frank DeForee, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff, brought his action and recovered judgment in the district court of Noble county against Ohamplin Refining Company, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, for malicious prosecution.

The prosecution which was the basis of the action charged the plaintiff with disposing of an oat crop on which the defendant held a chattel mortgage. The complaint in the criminal action was sworn to by one *49 H. W. Carey, who, it was alleged in the amended petition, “was at ail times herein involved the duly appointed, qualified and acting agent of each of the above-named defendants, and all his acts hereinafter alleged to have been done by the said H. W. Carey were done as the agent of the Cham-plin companies and for and on their behalf.” (The pleadings originally made two corporations by the name of Champlin Refining Company, one a Maine and one a New Mexico corporation, defendants, but by stipulation it was agreed that the New Mexico corporation was the successor to the Maine corporation, and that thereafter “the pleadings, orders and judgments * * * shall treat simply the Champlin Refining Company, a corporation.”)

The answer of the defendant denies generally and specifically the allegations of plaintiff’s amended petition. The answer further alleges:

“That the information filed with the county judge of Noble county, Okla., charging the said Frank LeForce with the commission of a certain offense against the criminal laws of the state of Oklahoma, to wit: with having disposed of certain oats, the same being oats on which the defendant held a mortgage in the sum of $165, and that the said Frank LeForce, without the permission of this defendant, did dispose of said oats, intending to cheat and defraud this defendant in violation of the laws of the state of Oklahoma, was true and that a full and true disclosure of the facts supporting such information was honestly and in good faith laid before the duly elected, qualified and acting county attorney in and for the county of Noble and state of Oklahoma, and that the said county attorney did advise this defendant that in his opinion the offense set forth in said information had been committed and warranted the prosecution of the said Frank LeForce and thereupon and relying and acting upon such advice, the said information was signed and filed.”

The answer specifically denies hatred or malice and pleads the truth of the charges contained in the information.

It is.to be noted that the answer of the defendant is unverified, and hence, under the provisions of section 220, O. S. 1931, the agency of H. W. Carey is admitted.

Plaintiff replied to the answer by denying all allegations of the answer inconsistent with those of the amended petition.

All acts complained of in the amended petitition were those of H. W. Carey, who was made codefendant in the case with the Champlin Refining Company and filed substantially the same answer as was filed by the Champlin Refining Company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Champlin Refining Company only. There was apparently no decision as to the issue between the plaintiff and H. W. Carey, who, under the facts and circumstances of the ease, would be liable if the Champlin Refining Company were liable. However, no point is made by either party to this appeal because of this inconsistency in the verdict.

The issues were submitted to the jury on the testimony offered on behalf of the plain-Itiff, the defendant offering no evidence on its behalf.

The record in the criminal case, introduced in evidence, shows that the complaint was filed before the county judge of Noble county August 3, 1929, and bears approval of the county attorney. The return on the warrant shows the arrest of the defendant August 28, 1929.' Information was -filed in the district court September 16, 1929, at which time plaintiff, defendant in that action, filed a motion to dismiss because of ¡insufficiency of evidence at the preliminary hearing. • The case came on for trial October 5, 1929, when it was dismissed on motion of the county attorney, with the approval of the court.

The record of the county court in these criminal proceedings was incomplete in that at failed to show that the county judge, acting as committing magistrate, had made any indorsement on the complaint, as provided by section 2806, O. S. 1931, finding that there was sufficient evidence to believe the defendant, plaintiff in the civil action, guilty of the offense charged. Neither was there any commitment, as provided by section 2810, O. S. 1931.

During the trial of the case at bar, the ¡plaintiff was permitted by the district court ■to withdraw the files in the criminal action, and these omissions from the record were sought to be supplied by nunc pro tunc order of the county judge, who was the same person as conducted the preliminary hearing. Timely objections were made by the plaintiff to this procedure and as to the competency of the record as amended by the nunc pro tunc order. These objections were overruled and exceptions allowed.

There was also introduced at the trial a motion which the plaintiff had filed- in the criminal proceedings to quash the information based on the insufficiency of the evidence at the preliminary hearing. Attached *50 to this motion was the testimony of the two witnesses who testified before the committing magistrate, one of whom was the agent, Carey, and the other the plaintiff’s father-in-law, John R, Beck, Sr.

Neither the record in the criminal case nor the testimony in the case at bar shows a ruling on the motion to quash. Presumably, it was overruled before the case came on for trial. If such were the case, it would ■constitute an adjudication by the. district court that the evidence taken at the preliminary hearing, and attached to the motion, was sufficient to show probable cause of guilt.

Plaintiff at the trial did not dispute the giving of the note and mortgage and did ’not claim that anything had been paid on ;the note. He contended, however, that a full disclosure of all the facts had not been made to the county attorney, in that Carey had failed to tell him that plaintiff occupied land on which the mortgaged oat crop was grown under departmental Indian lease, giving a lien to the .lessors for the payment of rent. In this connection, a letter from the 'county attorney was introduced, reading as follows:

“September 13, 1929
“Mr. H. W. Carey
“Champlin Refining Company
“Enid, Oklahoma
“Dear Sir : Re: State vs. Frank LeEorce
“I have decided to dismiss the above-entitled case. If there was a Government lease on that land, the lease would come in ahead of your chattel mortgage, and if there was not enough to pay the lease money, then your rights, or the rights of the Champlin Co. would not be injured.
“Furthermore, it seems John R. Beck, Sr. did most of the disposing of that crop, and we can’t blame Prank very much for keeping his stock alive.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 14, 54 P.2d 190, 176 Okla. 48, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champlin-refining-co-v-le-force-okla-1936.