Corliss v. Davidson & Case Lbr. Co.

1938 OK 475, 84 P.2d 7, 183 Okla. 618, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 4, 1938
DocketNo. 28438.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1938 OK 475 (Corliss v. Davidson & Case Lbr. 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
Corliss v. Davidson & Case Lbr. Co., 1938 OK 475, 84 P.2d 7, 183 Okla. 618, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 373 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The Davidson & Case Lumber Company obtained a judgment foreclosing its materialmen’s lien against certain *619 property owned by George E. Corliss. Thereafter, and during the same term of court, Mr. Corliss filed a motion in that proceeding, seeking to vacate the judgment on jurisdictional grounds. A hearing was had on that motion, at which all parties were present; the court heard argument and overruled the motion. Mr. Corliss then filed a motion for new trial, and same was likewise argued and overruled, whereupon he gave notice of appeal, and had the case-made prepared and filed same in 'the office of the district court clerk. Prior to expiration of the period in which he could have perfected the appeal, which he now appears to have abandoned, he filed the present action in the same district court, it being a separate action, by petition, naming himself as plaintiff. In the present action he seeks to vacate the judgment in the former action, on the same jurisdictional grounds which formed the basis of his overruled motion to vacate in that action.

After setting forth such grounds the petition in the present case contains the following statement:

“Plaintiff further states that he has used all diligence to obtain relief from the aforesaid illegal, unlawful and void judgment by filing motion to set the same aside, motion for a new trial, and finally notice of appeal by reason of the refusal of the trial court to grant to this plaintiff the relief to which he is entitled, viz., judicial nullification of said judgment, fraudulently secured as herein alleged.”

■To the above petition the defendant lumber company (plaintiff in the former action) and the defendant Ered Roach (purchaser at the sheriffs sale under the execution issued on that judgment) filed a pleading which they captioned a “Motion to Strike”. The ground set forth in said pleading was that the petition showed on its face that the matters sought to be litigated therein were involved and pending before that same court in the other action, wher&in the present defendant was plaintiff and the present plaintiff was one of the defendants: that is, pending preparatory to appeal from the order overruling the motion to vacate. The trial judge sustained said pleading, denominated “Motion to Strike”, and dismissed the present action, from which the plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff asserts in his brief that a motion to strike was not the proper pleading and that it cannot be used for the same purpose as a demurrer. Evidently, however, the trial judge construed the pleading to be a demurrer instead of a motion to strike, and this was correct in view of our prior decisions to the effect that it is not what the pleading is called, but the facts and matters alleged, which determine its character. Robinson v. Anderson, 88 Okla. 136, 212 P. 121; Hocker v. Rackley, 90 Okla. 83, 216 P. 151; State v. City of Muskogee, 70 Okla. 19, 172 P. 796.

The pleading set forth that there was another action pending between the same parties for the same cause. Section 201, O. S. 1931, 12 Okla. St. Ann. sec. 267, reads:

“The defendant may demur to the petition only when it appears on its face, either: * * * Third. That, there is another action pending between the same parties for the same cause. * * *”

Section 202, O. S. 1931, 12 Okla. St. Ann. see. 268, provides that the demurrer shall specify distinctly the grounds of objection to the petition, and that unless it does so it shall be regarded as objecting only that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. As will be seen hereinafter, under the ruling in Dardenne v. Daniels, 101 Okla. 201, 225 P. 152, it is immaterial whether we call this pleading a general demurrer or a special demurrer, since the result would be the same in either case. Regardless of the title of the' pleading, or its designation, it was a demurrer in substance, and we so treat it.

Another proposition of the plaintiff is that the court erred in concluding that the issues presented by the petition had previously been adjudicated by the order overruling the motion to vacate, in the former action. Under this proposition the plaintiff discusses at length certain alleged discrepancies between the petition, the material-men’s lien statement, and the judgment in the former action, but fails wholly to set forth any difference between the issues presented by the motion to vacate in that action and the issues which would be raised by the present action. According to the allegations of the present petition the plaintiff “used all diligence” to vacate the judgment, in the motion filed in the other case. He alleges that the judgment therein was illegal, unlawful, and void and that the motion to vacate same was for judicial nullification of said judgment, “fraudulently secured as herein alleged”. It is clear that he presented the same matters in that motion which he now presents; and nowhere in his brief does he contend otherwise. The issues are the same, the subject matter is the same, the parties are the same so far as the present plaintiff and the lumber company defendant are concerned. The defendant purchaser is of course in privity *620 with the lumber company. As a general rule it is immaterial that in the former action there were more or fewer parties than in the present action, if the parties to the present action litigated the present issues, as between them, in the former action.

The plaintiff emphasizes the oft-repeated assertion that a void judgment may be vacated at any time, and that it is always subject to attack. But that principle does not mean that the question whether a judgment is void may repeatedly be litigated by the parties. The principles of “another action pending” and res judicata are still applicable to actions adjudicating whether or not the judgment is void. In other words, granting that a void judgment is subject to attack at any time, if parties litigate that very question (that is, whether it is void or should be voided), then the question is settled and it is no more the subject of repeated and vexatious suits between the same parties than is any other disputed question of fact or law. If this were not the ease, then there would be no end to actions between the same parties to determine the validity of a former judgment.

When the plaintiff (former defendant) filed iii the former action his motion to vacate, and was joined in hearing thereon by the adverse parties, and the court considered the issues and overruled the motion, such was an adjudication of identically the same issues as are sought to have determined herein. The plaintiff had his right of appeal, and went so far as to complete the case-made and file it with the district court clerk. Thus complete and adequate relief was available to him in that action. It therefore clearly was “another action pending” (see American Surety Co. v. Baldwin, infra) when the present action was filed. This brings the case squarely within Dardenne v. Daniels, 101 Okla. 201, 225 P. 152. In that case the unsuccessful party filed a petition to vacate the judgment. The petition, however, was filed in the original action, after judgment. While the same was pending he filed an independent action to vacate the judgment, as in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 475, 84 P.2d 7, 183 Okla. 618, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corliss-v-davidson-case-lbr-co-okla-1938.