Elliott v. Orton

1918 OK 176, 171 P. 1110, 69 Okla. 233, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 2, 1918
Docket8542
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1918 OK 176 (Elliott v. Orton) 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
Elliott v. Orton, 1918 OK 176, 171 P. 1110, 69 Okla. 233, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 681 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

WEST, O.

This suit was in-situted in the district court of Pawnee county, Okla., on the 21st day of April, 1915, by defendants in error, plaintiffs below, against plaintiffs in error, defendants below, to im-l)ress and enforce an attorney’s lien on certain lots situated in the town of Ralston in said county and state. Parties will be referred to hereinafter, as they appeared in the court below.

It appears that: Some time in 1911 Mary Elliott and J. W. Elliott were sued by one Stroud to dispossess and quiet title to the lots in controversy, and that plaintiffs were employed to defend said suit. That, at the time of the institution of this suit and before the employment of plaintiffs, Elliotts had executed a mortgage to John A. Stuart on said property for the sum' of $150. During the progress of the suit, plaintiffs indorsed, “Attorney’s lien claimed,” upon the answer filed to the Stroud suit. That in 1914 the Elliotts executed a mortgage to the First National Bank of Ralston for $325. This included the Stuart mortgage for $150 which had been assigned by Stuart to the *234 Bank of Ralston, which was súcceéded by the First National Bank, and some,other sums which were due by Elliotts, to the bank* After the disposition of the Stroud .spit, which was decided in. favor ,óf the El-.liojfcts, plaintiffs undertook to impress.an attorney's lien upon the lots by .this suit, claiming that they had a statutory lien, and in addition that the Elliotts had promised to -execute them a mortgage upon the lots to secure their attorney’s fee. ' Elliotts filed ánswer to the suit setting up the fact that the lots were a homestead, that the lots sought to be impressed were not the lots in controversy in the Stroud suit, and that they had executed a mortgage upon said lots to the First National Bank which was a superior and prior lien to any” lien which the plaintiffs might have, and further that under the attorney’s lien law the plaintiffs could not maintain their suit for the reason that the statutory lien sought to be enforced could only attach to the cause of action and not to the subject-matter of the action. The First National Bank filed a separate answer which was practically the same as the answer filed by the Elliotts; cause was tried to the court on the 5th day of January, 1916; and a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs, giving them the lien upon the property sought to be impressed therewith, subject to the $150 represented by the Stuart mortgage. From this action of the court defendants perfected their appeal, and plaintiffs below, defendants in error, have filed motion to dismiss said appeal for the reason that said cause has become a moot question on account of the acts and conduct of the defendants since their appeal herein.

The ground of said motion is in effect that, after the appeal was taken, no super-sedeas bond having been filed, plaintiffs had order of sale issued and property sold to satify the judgment, and that the same was bought in.by John A. Stuart, the president of the First National Bank, for the sum of $190, subject to the $150 which was represented by the original mortgage given him and included in the $325 mortgage claimed by the bank; and that, after the satisfaction of the judgment of plaintiffs, there remained something over $52 which the Elliotts accepted, thereby ratifying said judgment and sale. We are of the opinion that said motion is well taken.

In the second paragraph of the syllabus in the case of Barnes et al. v. Lynch et al., 9 Okla. 11, 59 Pac. 995, the following rule is announced:

“A party who voluntarily acquiesces in or ratifies, either partially or in toto, a -judgment against him, cannot appeal - from it. Where plaintiffs brought action, claiming to be the owners of Céftain lands praying a 'decree for absolute titíe,” and for the quieting of the samé, and the decree was for the •defendant, decreeing that the defendant was the owner ef ;the lands,- from which decree plaintiffs appealed,-and, pending appeal; on -supplemental petition in . the trial. . court plaintiffs claim to • have expended- • individual moneys in the purchase of the lanan under circumstances that .would entitle them to an equitable lien for the amount expended, and had a referee appointed to make ¿n accounting of the moneys so expended, and asking that the amount so found should be decreed an equitable lien upon the land, held, that such subsequent proceeding, being inconsistent with the assertion of absolute ownership and title, was an acquiesc-i ence in and the ratification of the judgment, and that their appeal should be dismissed.”

In the body of the opinion , the court announced and adopted the following rule:

“No rule is better settled than that the right to appeal may be waived by the acts of the party which are inconsistent with the assertion of that right. A party who voluntarily acquiesces in or ratifies, either partially or in toto, a judgment against him, cannot appeal from it.”

In case of City of Lawton v. Ayers, 40 Okla. 524, 139 Pac. 963, first paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

“Any act on the part of a defendant by which he impliedly recognizes the validity of judgment against him operates as a waiver to appeal therefrom or to bring error to reverse it.”

In the body of the opinion the court uses the following language:

“A preliminary question decisive of the cause is presented by counsel for defendant in error by a motion to dismiss the appeal. It seems that, subsequent to the rendition of’ the judgment against it, the city of Lawton commenced a proceeding for the purpose of funding its warrant and judgment indebtedness, wherein it included the judgment herein as one of the items of valid indebtedness against it; that said funding proceeding culminated in a bond issue which was approved by the Attorney General, as required by law, in which said judgment was included as one of the items funded. The contention of the movant is that this proceeding constitutes a recognition on the part of the city of the validity of the judgment rendered against- it, and a waiver of its right to appeal therefrom or to bring error to reverse it. We think this position is well taken. The rule is ‘that any act on the part of the defendant by which he impliedly recognizes the validity of a judgment against him operates as a waiver to appeal *235 therefrom, or to bring error to reverse it.’ 2 Cyc. 656.”

Applying the rule announced in the foregoing cases, it is apparent that, when the Elliotts by their attorney accepted the $52, the excess that the property brought after satisfying the judgment of plaintiff, they thereby acquiesced in said judgment and ratified the same in part and in effect ratified the judgment entered by the district court in foreclosing the lions of plaintiff. We are therefore' of the opinion that the Elliotts became estopped to deny the validity of said judgment and are bound thereby, and that their appeal should be dismissed, and it is so ordered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 176, 171 P. 1110, 69 Okla. 233, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-orton-okla-1918.