Fooshee v. Craig

1924 OK 1008, 237 P. 78, 110 Okla. 189, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 787
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1924
Docket12335
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1008 (Fooshee v. Craig) 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
Fooshee v. Craig, 1924 OK 1008, 237 P. 78, 110 Okla. 189, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 787 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment, of the district court of 'McCurtain county, Okla., rendered in favor of J. M. Craig, plaintiff below, and the Choctaw Lumber Company, interpleader, defendants in error, against D. K. Foo-shee, A. J. Waldock et al., agents and employes of the Home Builders’ Lumber Company, defendants below, plaintiffs in error, granting a permanent, and perpetual injunction against tbe plaintiffs in error and each of them and all parties acting by, through, or under them, enjoining them from cutting or removing timber from the lands mentioned in the petition or exercising ownership or control ’ over the property or interfering with the ownership or control of the plaintiffs over timber standing, lying, or being on the lands described in the petition of defendants in error.

The parties will he referred to hereafter as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the lower court.

Plaintiff’s petition, which was adopted by the interpleader, the Choctaw Lumber Company, alleges that plaintiff was the owner of the standing timber, growing and situated on certain lands in McCurtain county, Okla.; that the defendants were unlawfully and wrongfully cutting and removing the timber, growing upon the said lands, and manufacturing tbe same into lumber and transporting the same out of this state outside of the jurisdiction of this court; that they were operating a sawmill, with a cutting capacity of 20,000 or 25,000 feet per day, continuously, and had already cut and removed over 100,000 feet of said timber; that defendants were insolvent; that unless they were granted injunctive relief they would be compelled to bring a multiplicity of suits based upon each trespass, and had no adequate remedy at law, and prayed for a temporary injunction, and that on final hearing the temporary injunction be made perpetual.

A temporary injunction was issued by the county judge on account of the absence of the district judge from the county.

The defendants answered by way of general denial, and further answered, denying that the plaintiff, J. M. C'raig, had any right, title, or interest to the timber growing upon the land described or that he was the owner thereof; that the defendants went on the premises or trespassed upon the premises wrongfully, but alleged that they acted with lawful authority. All of the defendants, except D. K. Fooshee and A. J. Wal-dock, entered a. disclaimer. The interpleader, the. Choctaw Lumber Company claimed the timber by purchase from J. M. Craig after this action was commenced.

Upon these issues the cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and at the close of all the testimony in the case the plaintiffs filed a motion to strike and exclude all the testimony introduced on behalf of the defendants that sought to attack the judgment -of the court in the case of Leon A. White, Treasurer, v. Home Builders’ Lumber Company, and the proceedings and sales had thereunder, and as to the value of the property sold and evidence ot like import for the reasons: First, that the testimony was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and did not tend to sustain any issue in the case; second, that the attack on the judgment in said case was a collateral attack; third, that the certified copies of the court records, introduced in the above styled case, showed that all matters and pleadings were submitted by pleadings, mo *191 tions, and motion to vacate, duly filed in said cause of Leon A. White, Treasurer, v. Home Builders’ Lumber Company, were acted upon and overruled by the district court, and to the rendition of said judgment on said motions to set aside the same an appeal was perfected to the Supreme Court of this state, and said appeal was dismissed and said judgment became final. Said opinion, dismissing the appeal, is found in the case of Home Builders’ Lumber Co. v. White, 75 Okla. 294, 183 Pac. 725. On the amotions to vacate and set aside the sales filed by the Home Builders’ Lumber Company, itself, the same were acted upon and overruled by the district court in said cause. An appeal from said judgment was pending in the Supreme Court of this state at the time of the trial in the present case, involving the same questions urged here. The said motion to strike the testimony, referred to in said motion, was sustained, the court finding that after the judgment had been rendered in the original action and while the ease was on appeal to the Supreme Court, the parties agreed by stipulation to pay the judgment or an agreed part thereof and the Home Builders’ Lumber Company obligated itself to pay the judgment, which agreement or stipulation was filed in the cause then pending in this court, and this court approved said stipulation and in accordance therewith dismissed the action and issued its mandate, which was duly filed in the trial court, and held that all matters in connection with said original action became res judicata. The Home Builders’ Lumber Company, after paying a portion of said judgment in accordance with .the stipulation, made default as to the payment of the balance, and in accordance with said stipulation the plaintiff in that action caused three separate executions to be issued by the clerk of the court, which executions were levied upon the growing timber and the lumber at the mills, and said property levied upon was sold and, while said executions were being levied, the county, through its commissioners, sold the judgment to J. M. Craig. Thereupon motion to set aside said sale was filed by the Home Builders’ Lumber Company, again raising the question of the jurisdiction of the court, the illegality of the sales, and every question that is urged here'; that the judgments and executions were void, and that the property .sold was real estate and was not sold in conformity with the statute in regard to the sale of real estate under execution, and also raised the question of the validity of the assignment of the original judgment to J. M. Craig, plaintiff herein, and challenged his right to invoke the process of the court in this cause. The trial court determined all these questions adverse-, ly to the claims of the defendant, the Home Builders’ Lumber Company, and an appeal was taken to this court, which appeal was pending at the time the present action was tried, but since the trial of the present action, this court dismissed the appeal, which action of this court is found in the case of the Home Builders’ Lumber Company v. West, 95 Okla. 144, 218 Pac. 512, F. B. West having succeeded Leon A. White as county treasurer of McCurtain county, Okla.

Prom the judgment of the trial court the defendants appeal to this court for review.

The attorneys for defendants set up nine assignments of error, but content themselves by arguing the saimc under five separate heads, which, in substance, are as follows:

First, the contention of the defendants is that the tax judgment in the district court of McCurtain county, Okla., in the case of Leon A. White, Plaintiff, v. Home Builders’ Lumber Company, Defendant, is void; second, that the court had no jurisdiction to render same and no rights could flow from it and no rights can be obtained under it; third, that the attempted sales made “under general executions issued before an order of sale was issued as directed by the judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1008, 237 P. 78, 110 Okla. 189, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fooshee-v-craig-okla-1924.