Foster v. Wooley

1923 OK 938, 220 P. 938, 93 Okla. 53, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 17, 1923
Docket14121
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1923 OK 938 (Foster v. Wooley) 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
Foster v. Wooley, 1923 OK 938, 220 P. 938, 93 Okla. 53, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 317 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

This was an action instituted in the district court of Tulsa county by J. B. Foster, pa'ní-if. aun n t James Wooley, sheriff of Tulsa county, and London & Lancashire Indemnity Company of America, a corporation, as surety on the official bond of the defendant Wooley as sheriff.

The plaintiff in his petition sets forth the fact that James Wooley was the duly e'eot-ed, qualified, and acting sheriff of Tulsa county, and that the defendant London & Lancashire Indemnity Company of America was surety on the official bond of the said Wooley; that the plaintiff had recovered judgment against the Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company and filed his petition and affidavit for attachment anjdi executed ins bond in attachment in case No. 9726 of the docket of the said court, and .that the attachment was delivered and issued to the sheriff of Tulsa county, one of the defendants herein, and the said sheriff took into his possession said writ of attachment and took into his possession of the property of the defendant, the Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company, a certain electric automobile of the approximate value of $3,000; that the plaintiff recovered judgment against the Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company, foreclosing the plaintiff’s attachment lien upon the car, and that an order of sale was issued directing the sheriff to sell the said car in accordance with the order of sale and judgment of the court.

Plaintiff further alleges in his petition that the defendant James Wooley levied upon the property of the Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company and made his return showing that it was in his custody, and that *54 upon the order of sale of said property being issued by tbe court, tbe defendant Wooley made bis return that be was unable to sell tbe car for tbe reason that tbe car bad been stolen from tbe custodian, and further avers that through negligence and carelessness and through the want of faithfulness the said Wooley, as sheriff, wrongfully and unlawfully permitted said car to be taken out of his possession and custody without tbe consent of tbe plaintiff, and alleges damages in the sum of $3,000.

Plaintiff further avers that tbe defendant London & Lancashire Indemnity Company is surety upon the official bond of the defendant sheriff and sets forth in bis petition in this case bis petition, answer of tbe defendants, oath of office of tbe sheriff, copy of tbe indemnity bond, tbe judgment of tbe court in tbe case of Poster v. Baker R.. & L. Motor Car Company, tbe affidavit for attachment, tbe order of attachment, return of tbe sheriff showing that be bad levied upon tbe property of the defendants tbe Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company, and that tbe property was in bis, tbe sheriff’s, custody; also introduces order of sale of said property and return of tbe sheriff showing that no sale was had because of tbe theft from the sheriff, and further introduces tbe appraisement of the householders appointed by tbe sheriff reciting that tbe property was of the reasonable value of $3,000, to which petition tbe defendant Wooley filed his general demurrer, which was by the court overruled, and the defendant filed his answer, admitting that he was sheriff of Tulsa county at and during the time mentioned and set forth in the plaintiff’s petition, and filed a general denial, and the separate answer of the London & Lancashire Indemnity Company consists of a general denial.

Upon the cause being regularly called foi hearing, the defendants moved the court to dismiss the action, which motion was by the court overruled and the defendants excepted and, the jury being waived, this cause was tried to the court, and before the introduction of any evidence, the defendant Wooley moved the court to dismiss the cause, for that tlie plaintiff’s action is based upon a former judgment rendered by the court in case No. 9726, wherein J. B. Poster was plaintiff and the Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company was defendant, which said judgment was utterly void for the reason that the court acted wholly without jurisdiction, for that at the time of the rendition of the said decree, there were no issues joined and there had been no reply to defendant’s answer filed therein, which motion was by the court overruled and exceptions saved by the defendant. Thereupon the plaintiff introduced in evidence his petition in case No. 9726, the answer of the defendant therein, the judgment o,f the court, the affidavit o' attachment, return of the sheriff showing that the sheriff had levied upon the property of the judgment debtor and that the property was in the custody of the sheriff; the return of the sheriff showing that he had sworn two householders to appraise the property and that the householders had so appraised the property and found its value to be $3,000.

Plaintiff further introduced in evidence the order of the court ordering the sale of the property so seized, and the return of the sheriff showing “no sale, property having been stolen from custodian,” and further introduced the evidence of J. B. Poster, plaintiff herein, for the purpose of showing that said Poster did not consent or agree in any way to the disposition of the property levied upon by the sheriff in response to the order of the court, and the plaintiff rested, thereupon the defendants called W. P. Seaver as a witness, for the purpose of showing that said Seaver, being chief deputy in the court clerk’s office of Tulsa county, had examined case No. 9726 and found no record of a reply being filed in the last said case, and the witness, Seaver, testified that he did not find a reply but would not say that such a reply had not been filed, and that the witness Seaver was excused and the defendant rested and moved the court: to render judgment in favor of the defendants, Which motion was by the court overruled at that time and the hearing of the cause was continued to December 4, 1922, and upon December 20, 1922, the court rendered judgment for the defendants, wherein the court finds that “the motion of tbe defendant for judgment in .favor of the defendant as against the plaintiff should be sustained, and further finds that the evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff in support of the allegations of his petition failed to support the allegations of plaintiff’s petition,” whereupon the plaintiff filed motion for a new trial, which was by the court overruled, and for error of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial and the reasons therein stated, the plaintiff brings this cause to this court for review.

The plaintiff and defendants present the following questions to this court: First, Did the district court of Tulsa county have jurisdiction to render judgment in case No. 9726, entitled J. B. Poster v. Baker R. & L. *55 Motor Car Company? We think the court had jurisdiction to render the judgment it did render in such case. J. B. Foster had sued Baker R .& L. Motor Car Company for $5,000 damages for breach of contract, wherein it was alleged the defendant in that cause was to sell Foster’s Locomobile and to pay him, Foster, the proceeds after making certain deductions. The defendant, Baker R. & L. Motor Car Company, appeared and filed its answer admitting the sale of the car and alleging it had forwarded Foster the money by cashier’s check.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 938, 220 P. 938, 93 Okla. 53, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-wooley-okla-1923.