First National Bank of Hennessey v. Hesser

1904 OK 27, 77 P. 36, 14 Okla. 115, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 4, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1904 OK 27 (First National Bank of Hennessey v. Hesser) 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
First National Bank of Hennessey v. Hesser, 1904 OK 27, 77 P. 36, 14 Okla. 115, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 62 (Okla. 1904).

Opinion

*119 Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

No question is raised in the record touching the validity of plaintiff’s mortgage or of plaintiff’s right of possession thereunder, of the property sought to be taken in replevin, so far as the owner and mortgagor, G. W. Baker, is concerned.

This action was replevin, brought by the plaintiffs to recover from the defendant the property mortgaged by Baker to plaintiff.

The case presents a question of right of possession as between plaintiff and defendant Hesser, who was at the time sheriff of Payne county, and claimed the right of possession by force of two orders of attachment against the property of Baker, issued out of the probate court of said county.

The cause was tried in the district court of Payne county in December, 1902, resulting in a judgment for the defendant Hesser, requiring the plaintiff to return to defendant all the property of G. W. Baker taken under the two attachments in default of payment to him of $140.00, the amount found by the probate court to be due in the two actions against him in that court.

If the defendant at the time of bringing this action, May 13, 1901, was legally holding the property covered by plaintiff’s mortgage, under valid process issued by the probate court, he was entitled to continue the possession until the lien acquired thereby was lost, or the property was disposed of by force of it, or the. lien secured thereby was satisfied, for the reason that plaintiff’s mortgage was executed in Kingfisher county, where the mortgagor, Bakerj then, resided, upon property then located in Payne county, and *120 which said mortgage had not, at the time the property was taken on attachment, been filed for record in Payne county. Such mortgage for want of record in Payne county was, at the time, void as to creditors and innocent purchasers. (Greenville National Bank v. Evans Co., 9 Okla. 353.)

The correctness of the determination of the district court is challenged first upon the ground that no valid process is, by the record, shown to have been in the sheriff’s hands, at the time the plaintiff demanded the property under, and by virtue of its mortgage. Such process was issued by the probate judge of Payne county in two cases: viz,: Dix v. G. W. Baker and Pink Taylor, and second: Millikan v. G-. W. Baker, each of which was brought to recover a sum less than $100.00 and in each of which cases an attachment was issued against the property of defendant therein, G. W. Baker, under and by force of which the defendant herein ITesser, sheriff, claimed the right of possession.

In such cases the probate judge acts with the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace and is governed by the procedure applicable to such jurisdiction. See Sec. 2, Art. 15, Chap. 18, Statutes of 1893.

The actions in the- probate court against Baker at the time they were brought were actions in personam, and in the Dix ease being rightfully brought against G-. W. Baker and Pink Taylor, Taylor being a resident of Payne county, service first had upon him in that county, authorized service against Baker in Kingfisher county.

The action in this case was therefore rightfully brought in Payne county, and the probate judge had jurisdiction to issue the order of attachment in that case upon the filing of the necessary affidavit and proper bond. •

*121 It is contended by tbe plaintiff that the transcript from .the probate court offered in evidence in this, the Dix case, does not show such compliance with the law governing justice of the peace procedure as to give the act' of the probate judge issuing the process relied upon in this (Dix) .case, any validity whatever. It is true that sec. 4835, Statutes of 1893, requires a justice of the peace to keep a docket in which he must enter at the time of its occurrence, the title of the case, the date of the writ, the time of the return, and if an attachment issued that fact should be stated, together with the affidavit rxpon which such order was made, etc., all of which requirements were by the probate court ■disregarded and not complied with.

It is unquestionably true that cases may arise, wherein the existence of such record becomes necessary to be shown; but is this that kind of a case?

The issue here is the question of the lien of the attachment and the date such lien went into effect as against the property in question. It was therefore only necessary to show a valid lien, that the attachment was issued from a court having jurisdiction and that the same when issued was based upon sufficient authority tiled with the court in compliance with the law in such cases to justify its issuance, and if so issued the person securing it and a levy thereunder, would not lose the lien secured thereby upon the property attached, because of the fact that the justice ■of the peace or the probate judge failed to make satisfactory docket entries of the proceedings before him. In this case it is shown that Mr. Dix, on the morning of April 16, 1901, ■procured from the probate court of Payne county an order *122 of attachment against the property of G-. W. Baker, and secured the same by filing in said court the affidavit and bond required by the law, and such attachment was immediately levied upon a portion of the property involved herein.

Afterwards, on the same day, the plaintiff herein demanded possession from the sheriff of all’ of Baker’s property, including the portion so levied upon, the sheriff having the key to the room in which all of the property was-situated.

The plaintiff, the Hennessey Bank, had a right to such-possession at the time of this demand as against the mortgagor Baker, but not as- against the defendant Hesser, to-the extent of the property so attached by him.

We cannot agree with the contention of counsel for plaintiff that the lien so acquared was lost by a failure on the part' of the probate judge to make the necessary docket entries of this transaction. Enough is shown to satisfactorily establish the fact that the plaintiff in that case, Dix, had at that time secured a legally authorized attachment to issue, which in- the hands of the sheriff, Hesser, had ripened into a-valid subsisting lien as against the right of the plaintiff' bank, under its unrecorded .mortgage.

In the Dix case only a small portion of. the property covered by plaintiff’s mortgage was levied upon by the sheriff, some 27 volumes of books and a desk and three chairs, leaving a large number of law books in the office at the time the sheriff riiade the Dik levy, not covered thereby,, and these the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of, by virtue of its mortgage thereon.

There are other questions presented 'by the brief of *123 plaintiff which seem to have had some consideration in the trial of.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Seminole v. Henshaw
1934 OK 410 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Rice v. Ed Hockaday & Co.
1924 OK 154 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)
Friedman v. First Nat. Bank of Cleveland
1913 OK 586 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
1904 OK 27, 77 P. 36, 14 Okla. 115, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-hennessey-v-hesser-okla-1904.