Dusbabek v. Local Bldg. & Loan Ass'n

1936 OK 769, 63 P.2d 756, 178 Okla. 592, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 904
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 8, 1936
DocketNo. 27063.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1936 OK 769 (Dusbabek v. Local Bldg. & Loan Ass'n) 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
Dusbabek v. Local Bldg. & Loan Ass'n, 1936 OK 769, 63 P.2d 756, 178 Okla. 592, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 904 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

George F. Dusbabek and wife appeal to this court from the judgment of the district court of Garfield county, Okla., granting an interlocutory, and later, a permanent mandatory injunction to them to restore to certain real estate certain attachments taken therefrom. The action of the district court was taken in response to an application filed by the Local Building & Loan Association, a corporation, plaintiff in 'a foreclosure action wherein the Dusbabeks were defendants.

A statement of the course of the lawsuit will aid in understanding the controversy and issues. The association instituted an action against Dusbabeks et al. to foreclose a mortgage upon certain residence real estate in Enid. During the pendency of the action a receiver for the property was appointed, who took charge thereof. Judgment was rendered in the action establishing the mortgage lien and ordering a sale of the property in the manner prescribed by law. Dusbabek thereafter applied to a judge of the court for the discharge of the receiver, fraudulently representing to the judge that he was arranging to refinance the mortgage debt, and that it was necessary for him to be in possession of the property to accomplish this plan. The judge entered such an order, and in August, 1935, Dusbabek got possession of the real estate. August 27, 1935, the property was sold by the sheriff and the association, as judgment creditor, purchased. Dusbabek made objection to the confirmation of the sale, and when the same was denied he made and preserved a record for an appeal. However, on Sunday, September 22, 1935, Dusbabek detached from the real estate the following: The sliding doors from the garage, a kitchen sink and the faucets and traps thereon, (lie electric light fixtures from the living room, dining room, and front porch, a stove, lavatory, hot water heater and pipes attached from the bathroom, and a hot air furnace and control chains from the basement (which was attached to (he various rooms of the house by hot air vents) ; and moved these attachments to an adjoining county. The association learned of this, and on September 26, 1935, filed its verified application setting forth these facts and asking for injunctive relief. The court entered instanter a temporary injunction, mandatory in nature, and set the same for hearing at a later "date. When notice of this application and order had been served on Dusbabek, they moved to quash and when this was denied, they demurred, and when the demurrer was overruled, they responded to the application. At the hearing, Dusbabek admitted detaching these attachments .and taking them to another county, and said he did so on his own volition, but that his defense to the order of the court was oh advice of - counsel. The trial judge found that all of said attachments, except the stove taken from the bathroom, were permanent additions to the real estate and integral parts thereof, and further *593 found that they were yet in Dusbabek’s possession and could be restored to the premises ; and ordered Dusbabek to restore them at his own cost. The trial judge premised his action upon the facts developed at the hearing and in consideration (1) of Dusba-bek’s insolvency; and (2d) the lack of an adequate, plain, and speedy remedy at law for the association.

The Dusbabeks raised several contentions, but in our opinion they may be grouped and discussed in two groups.

The first group will cover the contentions relating to the power of the district court over the Dusbabeks in view of the fact that it is plain that the district court had exhausted the relief it was authorized to grant in the foreclosure action pending before it. The Dusbabeks say that this power was exhausted and they had taken up their residence in another county, and that they could only be brought to bar again by a new action in the county of their residence.

In the logical sequence of a foreclosure action the last thing to be done is to place the purchaser in the possession of the property. A general real estate mortgage covers the real estate described, which necessarily includes attachments of the character and status of those herein involved. The judgment establishing the lien and the sale thereunder likewise cover the same property, in the absence of adjirdieated exceptions. Therefore the purchaser at a judicial sale buys what the mortgage covered, no more or less, unless specified. Therefore, the association, as the purchaser, was entitled to be put in possession of the property which was sold and confirmed to it. This is done by a writ of assistance. For a discussion of this an-cien- writ, see 5 C. J. 1315, 42 C. J. 272, and 19 R. C. L. 637, see. 454. This court said in Richmond v. Robertson, 50 Okla. 635, 151 P. 203;

“This right has been exercised by courts of chancery in England since the reign of James I and followed in this country for so long a period that such practice has become the settled law of the land, and the doctrine is upheld upon the theory that the power to apply a remedy is coextensive with the jurisdiction of the subject-matter. It would be absurd to say that a court with equity powers, having exclusive authority to foreclose the equity of redemption of a mortgage, to call all the interested parties before it, and to decree ,a sale of the mortgaged property, does not have the power to put the purchaser in possession against one of the very parties to the suit.” '

As a necessary corollary, the district Courts of this state do not lose jurisdiction of the parties to a foreclosure action, nor of its power to enter binding orders and decrees on them relating to the relief involved in the action until it has i>laced the purchaser at the judicial sale in possession; and it necessarily follows that any party to the action may be brought before the court, upon written notice not rising to the dignity of a summons, irrespective of removal from the county of venue and irrespective of time, for a hearing relating to some step to be taken by the court necessary to the completion of the relief awarded. There is no merit in this group of contentions.

The second group of contentions deny the power of the court to grant the injunction, first, upon general principles, and, second, upon the ground that there existed a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. Our discussion of these contentions will cover both of these grounds at the same time.

It would serve no useful purpose to undertake an academic discussion of the injunc-tive power of courts of equity. It is generally recognized that an injunction may be either preventative (prohibitory), to restrain the commission or the continuance of an act; or mandatory, to require the doing or undoing of an act. See 14 R. C. L. 305, sec. 2. It is this last phase of injunctive relief with which we are to deal. Because of the drastic nature of the command, and largely out of consideration of" the vexation attendant upon the enforcement thereof, the courts are less likely to exercise their sound discretion in favor of granting mandatory injunctions than they are in relation to preventive injunctions. It is with these considerations in mind that we approach the determination of this matter. The modern rule is well stated in the case of Fredericks v. Huber, 180 Pa. 572, 37 Atl. 90; as follows;

“Equity regards the substance rather than the form of things, and will not allow itself to be baffled by a wrongful change while its aid is being invoked.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 769, 63 P.2d 756, 178 Okla. 592, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dusbabek-v-local-bldg-loan-assn-okla-1936.