El Reno Foundry & MacHine Co. v. Western Ice Co.

1915 OK 1052, 153 P. 1107, 54 Okla. 116, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1280
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 14, 1915
Docket5567
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1052 (El Reno Foundry & MacHine Co. v. Western Ice 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
El Reno Foundry & MacHine Co. v. Western Ice Co., 1915 OK 1052, 153 P. 1107, 54 Okla. 116, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1280 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

- This ■ suit was filed in the county court of Canadian county by plaintiff in error, El Reno Foundry & Machine Company, a corporation, against Western Ice Company, a corporation, on an open account, for labor in repairing machines and machinery, and for furnishing supplies and material therefor, in the sum of $450. At the same time, a writ of garnishment was obtained against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, requiring it to answer, touching its indebtedness to the ice company. Thereafter judgment was rendered against the ice company for the amount claimed. The writ of garnishment was served upon the garnishee railway company on September 11, 1912, In response thereto, it filed its answer on October 17, 1912, in which it admitted it had received ice- from defendant company to the value of a large sum, against which it had an offset for freight charges, but alleged that it was not indebted to defendant company in any sium whatever, for the reason that on the 9th day of Septem *118 ber, 1912, it had been served with a copy of a written assignment of all the sums due to defendant for ice, and that same was executed by defendant to R. S. Trulock as trustee, and directed the garnishee to pay all sums in its hands to said trustee; and that inasmuch as said assignment was prior in point of time to the service of the writ of garnishment, it was not indebted in any sum to defendant; and that it ought to go hence with its costs. A copy of the assignment was attached to and made a part of the answer. Thereafter R. S. Trulock was permitted to intervene in the suit, and did so, claiming the fund that had been garnished. To this plea of intervention, plaintiff foundry company filed its answer and gave notice of issue raised on the answer of the garnishee. Thus it will be seen that the issue involved here arises out of the plea of intervention, the answer thereto, and intervener’s reply, and narrows down to a contest between these parties as to which of them has the superior right to the fund, which, in the meantime, had been paid into court. The written assignment set out by both the garnishee and intervener,- after reciting the fact that .the Western Ice Company had been furnishing ice to the garnishee at a stipulated price, and was under contract to continue to so furnish it, and that the garnishee was indebted to it therefor in the sum of $3,002.70, less certain freight charges, and that the said ice company was indebted to Trulock, as trustee under the terms of a certain deed of trust, and that $9,000 of such indebtedness had accrued and was unpaid, contains the following language:

«* * * ^nd that the said Western Ice Company does hereby assign to the said R. S. Trulock, as trustee aforesaid, all sums now due or to become due to it under and by yirtue of. said contract, from the said Chicago, *119 Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, for ice heretofore or hereafter furnished to said railway company, in performance of said contract, which sum or sums shall be applied to the amount thereof as paid, in payment of said defaulted interest and installments of principal now due and payable under the terms of said trust deed and the bonds hereinbefore mentioned, and which application the said R. S. Trulock, as such trustee, hereby agrees to; and the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company is hereby authorized and directed to make all payments of sums now due or to become due to the Western Ice Company, under the terms of said contract for supplying ice as aforesaid, to the said R. S. Trulock as trustee aforesaid, less the amount of freight charges now due from the said Western Ice Company to said Railway Company.”

At a hearing in the county court, judgment was rendered in favor of the intervener, holding that his right, under the assignment, to the fund in court was superior to the right of the plaintiff, under its writ of garnishment, and directing that the money be paid to the inter-vener. To reverse this order this appeal is prosecuted.

The record in this case is large, and excellent briefs have been presented on each side of the ease. The briefs of the parties, however, are built upon fundamentally different premises. This, upon a very careful examination of the record, in our judgment, grows out of the fact that the intervener, in the preparation of his intervention, overpleaded his case by setting up at least two separate and distinct reasons why he thought his right to the fund in court was superior to plaintiff’s. Therefore the main part of our work has been to ascertain from the record — and it. has taken a complete examination of it— just what claim intervener .set forth and relied upon in *120 the lower court as giving him a right to the fund. This is all-important; for, as we view the case, its determination practically decides it for the one or the other.

This condition arose out of the fact that intervener set up as his first claim to the fund the assignment of it to him by defendant ice company, dated September 4, 1912, a copy of which assignment was served on the railway company September 9, 1912, prior to service of the writ of garnishment. Had intervener stopped with this claim in his pleadings very little would have been. required of us, but he saw fit to go further, and in paragraphs 2 and 3 of his intervention (which he styled an answer) appears to make a claim to the money through the operation of a trust deed to secure a large bond issue, executed by the ice company to him as trustee, and under the terms of which after-acquired property and all rents, profits, and incomes of the ice company were embraced within the lien created by the trust instrument; and, as an aid to this claim," intervener further set up that in some- other suit pending in the federal court, involving an attempt to put the ice company into bankruptcy, the assignment involved here had been urged as a ground of bankruptcy, but that the federal court had held that it was not, for the reason that the sums due' for ice were going to the intervener under the income provision of the trust deed, and that the written assignment was a mere aid to the trustee in securing the funds due for ice, and which he was entitled to under the trust deed. Said two claims to the fund in court have provided widely different premises upon which to build the opposing arguments. The defendant in error, the intervener, therefore contends that he claims under the written assignment of the fund by the party to whom it was owing, *121 at a time and in a way that was lawful, and all of which was prior to the service of the writ of garnishment, and that therefore, these facts being admitted, or shown without any conflict in the evidenec, he prevailed rightly below, and is bound to prevail here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 1052, 153 P. 1107, 54 Okla. 116, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-reno-foundry-machine-co-v-western-ice-co-okla-1915.