Cusher v. Ricketts

1919 OK 90, 179 P. 593, 72 Okla. 168, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1919
Docket9019
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1919 OK 90 (Cusher v. Ricketts) 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
Cusher v. Ricketts, 1919 OK 90, 179 P. 593, 72 Okla. 168, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 337 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Carter County by Martha Ousher, as plaintiff, against B. C. Ricketts and the First National Bank of Ardmore, defendants, to cancel a deed to certain land and to recover possession, of same from Ricketts and to cancel a mortgage held by the defendant bank on the said property. On the trial of the cause in the district court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The trial judge sustained the defendant’s motion for a new trial, from which the plaintiff appealed to- this court. No supersedeas bond was given, and no order made by the district judge staying *169 .Re proceedings pending tire appeal, and no order of tire Supreme Court staying proceedings in the ease below was obtained. Thereafter said cause was dismissed by the trial court for the reason that an order to deposit additional amount of money for cost in the case had not been complied with. No exceptions were taken to the order dismissing the cause, and the same was not appealed from. Subsequently the appeal to the Supreme Court was dismissed for failure to prosecute, and thereafter the plaintiff filed her motion in the district court of Carter county to set aside and vacate the order dismissing said cause, and to reinstate the case on the district court docket. A demurrer was filed to her motion, and the demurrer sustained, and the motion was dismissed, and from the order dismissing the motion she appeals to this court.

This is a transcript appeal, and the only question presented to this court for determination is wheiher, under the statute of this state, a proceeding in error from an order granting a new trial without giving a supersedeas bond, or obtaining an order of the trial court staying proceedings, and without obtaining an order of the Supreme Court staying proceedings in the case below, operates to stay all proceedings in the case in the court below, and renders void the action of the trial court in further proceedings.

.Plaintiff in error contends that the appeal having been regularly filed in the Supreme Court, the trial court was without jurisdiction to dismiss the case, or to make any‘order in said case, in the lower court, and that the order dismissing the same was therefore void. The defendant in error in reply contends that no supersedeas bond was given or no order of 'the district court made staying said proceedings pending the appeal, and no order of the Supreme Court having been made staying the proceedings in said ■case, pending the appeal, therefore the trial court was not divested of jurisdiction to proceed with the case, and had jurisdiction to dismiss said cause-; that the order of dismissal, not having been appealed from, became final, even though it might have been erroneously made.

Section 5257 of the Revised Laws of 1910 provides as follows:

“Execution of the judgment or final order of any judicial tribunal, other than those enumerated in this article, may be stayed on such terms as may be prescribed by, the court or judge thereof, in which the pro-’ ceeding in eror is disposed of.”

This court, in the case of State ex rel. Hogan v. District Court of Thirteenth Judicial District, 25 Okla. 871, 108 Pac. 375, speaking through Justice Hayes, said:

“The institution of a proceeding in error in the Supreme Court to reverse an order granting a new trial does not of itself, without a supersedeas bond or order of the Supreme Court staying proceedings, operate to suspend-further proceedings in the case in the court below, nor does it entitle the plaintiff in error, as a matter of right, to continue in the court below, until said proceeding in error is disposed of.”

Plaintiff in error suggests that this case has been in effect overruled in the case of Egbert v. St. Louis & S. F. Ry. Co., 50 Okla. 623, 151 Pac. 229; but with this we cannot agree. The Egbert Case was a case wherein the 'St. Louis & San Francisco Railway had appealed from a decision rendered on the merits and the final adjudication of the ease. The defendant appealed. The opinion does not disclose whether a supersedeas bond was filed to stay execution, but we might presume that the same was; otherwise, execution would have issued and the judgment have been collected and satisfied. If the bond to stay the execution of the judgment was filed, then the district court could not-have proceeded further in the case on the question being litigated on the appeal until the mandate from the Supreme Court had been issued and had been spread of record in the district court. This is the holding of the cc-urt in the Egbert Case.

Plaintiff in error then cites the case of Short v. Chaney, 66 Okla. 258, 168 Pac. 425. The opinion by Commisioner Rummons in this case is in conflict.with the decision rendered in the case of Siddell v. McMillan, District Judge. 45 Okla. 800, 146 Pac. 911, and is also in direct conflict with the case of Philip Carey Co. v. Vickers, 53 Okla. 569, 157 Pac. 299, and the case of State ex rel. Hogan v. District Judge Thirteenth Judicial District, supra. Said opinion does not refer to any of said decisions, but attempts to follow the decision in the case of Egbert v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co., supra. The Egbert Case correctly states rne law, but the facts in the case of Chaney v. Short do not come within those facts. The case of Short v. Chaney is overruled, in so far as the same is in conflict with the case of State ex rel. Hogan v. District Judge Thirteenth Judicial District, and in so far as the same is in conflict with this opinion.

In the case at bar, plaintiff in; error appealed from an order overruling the motion for new trial. This right to stay the proceedings is based on section 5257, Revised Laws 1910. The plaintiff in error had a *170 right to apply for an order from the lower court staying further proceedings in compliance with the terms of the statute, or to present her petition in the Supreme Court ashing that said proceedings he stayed. This was not done; no order of any kind was made staying said proceedings, or no supersedeas bond of any kind given. Therefore the further proceedings in the lower court were not stayed pending the appeal. The appeal from the order sustaining the motion for new trial would not stay the proceedings, unless the party had complied with the statute by obtaining some order to the effect that further proceedings be stayed. This was not done. This case is controlled by the case of State ex rel. Hogan v. District Court of Thirteenth District, and if the trial court had a right to proceed to trial, as in the Hogan Case, he likewise had authority to set said case down for trial, and if the plaintiff in error failed to comply with the order of the court to make a deposit for the costs or give a bond for the same, the court had jurisdiction to dismiss the action.

The plaintiff in error further contends that no notice of the order was given to her as required by law, and for that reason the cause should be reversed. The motion contained the further allegation:

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Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 90, 179 P. 593, 72 Okla. 168, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cusher-v-ricketts-okla-1919.