Comanche Ice Fuel Co. v. Binder Hillery

1917 OK 618, 172 P. 629, 70 Okla. 28, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1917
Docket8333
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1917 OK 618 (Comanche Ice Fuel Co. v. Binder Hillery) 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
Comanche Ice Fuel Co. v. Binder Hillery, 1917 OK 618, 172 P. 629, 70 Okla. 28, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 462 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

On the 12th day of July, 1915, the plaintiff in error presented a motion to vacate a judgment rendered upon default on the 15th day of November, 1909, establishing a lien in favor of Binder & Hillery, on lots 1, 2, and 3, block 107, of the town of Comanche, Stephens county, Okla., for certain material sold and delivered to the Comanche Ice & Cold Storage Company, in the erection of certain improvements upon said property, and ordering the property sold to satisfy said lien. The motion alleged that the Comanche Ice & Fuel Company was a corporation duly organized under the laws of Oklahoma, and was the owner and in peaceful possession of the property above described : that on May 13, 1908, the defendants. Binder & Hillery, commenced an action against the Comanche Ice & Cold Storage Company to establish a lien and to foreclose the same for certain materials alleged to have been sold and used in -the erection of improvements on said property; that at that time the said Comanche Ice & Cold Storage Company did not own the property or any interest therein, and did not make any appearance in said action; that on November 15, 1909, a decree was entered in said cause on default, establishing a lien as prayed in the petition dnd ordering the sale of t-h'e property to satisfy the same, and that the plaintiffs in said cause are seeking to enforce the de^ cree rendered therein, and are threatening to have an order of sale issued thereon, and will do so unless restrained from so doing by the order of court, etc., and that said decree, so far as it undertook to establish a lien and to foreclose the same, was void, first, because “no sufficient service was ever had upon the defendants in said action to authorize a default judgment: second, that the petition filed by plaintiffs in said action and upon which decree was based, and the only petition ever filed in said cause, did not state facts sufficient to authorize the court to find any lien or to order the sale of said property, or to affect the title or possession in any manner.” The prayer was that the sale be restrained, and on final hearing that the judgment lie vacated.

On the hearing of the motion the movant offered in evidence the petition filed May 13, 3908, by Binder & Hillery in the action to establish their lien, and the decree rendered in that action, and rested. The defendants in error offered in evidence a copy of the ■ petition in the case of Geo. W. Works against W. M. Oates, sheriff of Stephens county, and Wm. Binder and R. H. Hillery, partners. Binder & Hillery filed in the district court of Stephens county July 23, 1910, and resulting in the judgment of November 11, 1910, sustaining a demurrer to such petition. In this petition Works alleged that he was the' owner of the property above described, and that he purchased the same for $13,500 at the foreclosure sale, under the decree of the district court of Stephens county rendered upon the trust deed executed by the Comanche Ice & Cold Storage Company in August, 1907, conveying the property above described to the trustee for the benefit of all of its creditors, and that this trust deed was foreclosed and the sale made in May, 1908. and that the defendants. Binder & Hillery, had caused an order of sale to be issued upon their judgment rendered in November, 1909, against the Comanche Ice & Cold Storage Company, and had placed the order in the hands of the sheriff of Comanche county for execution, and that he had seized the property and advertised it for sale, and would do so unless restrained by the order of the court; that the jwlg- *29 meat of November, 1909, upon which the order of sale was issued, was void for the reason that the materials for which the wame was rendered were not necessary and were not used in the construction and erection of the building upon said property and because said suit was not brought within the time prescribed by the statute, and a restraining order was asked against the sheriff and against Binder & Hillery from making the sale, or any attemi>t to enforce •said judgment. Binder & Hillery appeared and filed a general denial on November 10, 1910. On November 11, 1910, the cause came on for hearing upon a demurrer to the petition. This demurrer was sustained, and the temporary restraining order heretofore granted in said cause was dissolved, and the cost of action assessed against the plaintiff. The demurrer is not in the record. We infer, however, that all of the defendants joined therein, as the journal entry of the judgment recites that the case was disposed of on the demurrer. Although an exception was saved and notice of appeal given, it does not appear that the appeal was perfected, and therefore that judgment sustaining the demurrer became final.

On the 26th day of November, 1915, the motion to vacate the instant case came on for hearing, and the journal entry of the judgment rendered thereon, after reciting the appearance of counsel, proceeds:

“Thereupon the Comanche Ice & Fuel Company offered in evidence a petition filed in this action and offered in evidence a decree of this court, whereupon the attorney for plaintiff to save introduction of evidence of undisputed facts admitted that the only matters in dispute were the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s petition filed in this action to justify the "rendition of the decree complained of, and whether the issues involved in this motion had not been barred by another judgment rendered concerning the sam» matter, and that the petition offered by the Comanche Ice & Fuel Company was the only petition filed by the plaintiff in this action and the only one filed and was the one upon which said decree was rendered, and that the decree offered was the decree sought to be vacated and was the only decree rendered in said action, and that the same had been rendered in plaintiff’s favor and the plaintiffs were seeking to enforce the same against said property. Plaintiff then offered in evidence the decree heretofore rendered in the case of Works v. Cates. Upon the testimony offered and the admissions of parties the court finds that the Comanche Ice & Fuel Company are the owners of said lots subject to said decree; that the said petition states facts sufficient to sustain the decree fixing. finding, and foreclosing a mechanic’s lien on the property described in said motion and charging the same with the payment of said judgment. It is therefore ordered that said motion be and the same is hereby overruled, to which said Comanche Ice & Fuel Company excepts.”

A consideration of this record convinces us that the trial court rendered, the correct judgment, although we are inclined to think that he gave the wrong reason for it, inasmuch as the sufficiency of the petition to sustain the decree in favor of Binder & Hillery rendered on November 15, 1909, was in issue and directly passed upon by the same court, resulting in the judgment of November 11, 1910. The grounds upon which the judgment of November 15, 1909, was attacked were that the judgment was void because the facts set out in the petition were not sufficient to authorize the judgment. That decree has not been appealed from, and therefore became final. Although the Comanche Ice & Fuel Company was not a party to that suit, it is a privy in interest, being a successor in title and is bound by that decree, and the contention of the defendants in error that the decree was res adjudicata in this action was good and should have been sustained. In Pratt v.

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Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 618, 172 P. 629, 70 Okla. 28, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comanche-ice-fuel-co-v-binder-hillery-okla-1917.