Frost v. Blockwood

408 P.2d 300
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 7, 1965
Docket40641
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 408 P.2d 300 (Frost v. Blockwood) 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
Frost v. Blockwood, 408 P.2d 300 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

IRWIN, Justice.

Pauline Harris, Orville Stearman, individually and as the administrator of the Estate of Melvina Stearman, deceased, commenced proceedings against Ida M. Block-wood, et al., to determine the death and heirship of certain named parties, their respective interests in a tract of land, quiet title, and to partition the tract, (less and except the oil, gas and other mineral rights) according to their respective interests. Service of summons was made by publication and personal service.

On January 29, 1963, all defendants were declared to be in default and judgment was rendered as prayed for and the trial, court ordered partition and appointed Commissioners. The Commissioners took and subscribed their oath and filed their report, dated February 9, 1963. The Commissioners found the tract could not be partitioned in kind and appraised the tract (less and except the oil, gas and other minerals rights) at $9,000.00.

Pauline Harris filed a motion for revivor on April 10, 1963, suggesting that her co-plaintiff, Orville Stearman, had died on February 4, 1963; that she had been substituted in his place as special adminis-tratrix of the estate of Melvina Stearman, deceased; and moved for an order of re-vivor. The trial court entered its order on April 10, 1963, reviving the action in the name of Pauline Harris as special ad-ministratrix of the estate of Melvina Stear-man, deceased, and in the name of the heirs and personal representatives of Orville Stearman, deceased.

On April 16, 1963, Glenn Frost filed a motion alleging that Ida Dryden, a defendant in the action, had transferred and conveyed her interest in the tract to the mov-ant by quit claim deed, dated April 16, 1963, and prayed that he be substituted as a party defendant. The record reflects that Ida Dryden had been personally served with summons on August 1, 1959, and having failed to plead or answer in the case, she was adjudged to be in default. The trial court had determined that she owned an undivided one-fifteenth (¾5⅛) interest in the tract of land in controversy by the Journal Entry of Judgment on January 29, 1963. The trial court entered an order on April 16, 1963, substituting Glenn Frost as a party defendant in the place of Ida Dryden.

Thereafter, Glenn Frost filed a motion to vacate and set aside the judgment rendered on January 29, 1963, and the- revivor thereof. One of the alleged grounds for vacation was that a number of the defendants were shown to be minors, improper service was had, and no guardian ad litem was appointed.

The trial court heard oral arguments on the motion to vacate and took the matter under advisement. Thereafter, it denied Glenn Frost’s motion to vacate and he perfected the instant appeal. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court or by name.

*303 Plaintiffs first contend that the “Journal Entry of Judgment”, which determined the death and heirship of named decedents, the interests of all parties to the action and ordered partition and appointment oí commissioners, was no more than an interlocutory decree or order, and therefore not ap-pealable; and that the order overruling Glenn Frost’s motion to vacate that interlocutory decree or order was likewise not appealable,- and the present appeal should be dismissed. This question must necessarily have our first consideration.

The order forming the basis of this appeal was entered on June 26, 1963, and neither party suggests that a motion for a new trial was necessary. In this connection, see Title 12 O.S.1961, § 651, as amended in 1963.

Plaintiffs’ answer brief cites Richardson v. Thompson et al., 40 Okl. 348, 138 P. 177; Foreman v. Riley, 88 Okl. 75, 211 P. 495; and Wrightsman et al. v. Southwestern Natural Gas Co., 173 Okl. 75, 46 P.2d 925, as authority for the contention. None of the cited cases deal with the question of interlocutory decrees or orders in partition suits and are therefore not in point.

In Clement v. Ferguson, Okl., 287 P.2d 207, we held:

“An order for partition entered as prescribed by Tit. 12 O.S.1951 § 1505, making no change in nor final determination of a substantial right of any of the parties to the proceedings is not a final order or judgment within the meaning of our appellate jurisdiction stahites, Tit. 12 O.S.1951 §§ 952, 953, or judgment vacation statutes, and can be modified, vacated or set aside previous to the trial court’s consideration of the commissioners’ report and its final judgment, even after the term of court during which it was entered.” (Emphasis added).

It is to be noted the above holding relates to an order “making no change in nor final determination of a substantial right of any of the parties * * * ”, and is in harmony with the language in the body of the opinion where we said:

“ * * * However, as said in Camp Phosphate Co. v. Anderson, supra (48 Fla. 226, 37 So. [722] 725): ‘We do not commit ourselves to all that is said in the opinions just cited, nor are we prepared to adopt or approve all of their reasoning.’ We say this because we do not wish, by this decision, to be interpreted as holding that an order for partition, or denying partition, may never, in any case, be regarded as a final or appealable order * * *.
In this connection, see Bates v. Hanks, 262 Ky. 556, 90 S.W.2d 743; Brown v. Crossmann, 204 N.Y. 238, 97 N.E. 526; Jackson v. Myers, 120 Ind. 504, 22 N.E. 90, 23 N.E. 86, and 12 O.S. 1951 § 953, with reference to ‘an order affecting a substantial right * * * (which) * * * ’. But the order here in controversy was not such an order.
It affirmatively exercised the court’s power to order partition invoked by plaintiff’s petition; but it affected no substantial right of any of the parties to the action. Though, in a purely formal way, it did purport to quiet their title and 'declare their interests among themselves, it purported to make no change in said interests as they existed before the action, and about which there was no issue in the proceedings.” (Emphasis added).

It is to be noted here that substantial rights of the parties are involved as plaintiffs not only sought partition under Title 12 O.S.1961, § 1501 et seq., but also sought the determination of. the death and heirship of named decedents under Title 84 O.S. 1961, § 257 et seq. The “Journal Entry of Judgment”, dated January 29, 1963, granted plaintiffs all the relief sought in their petition, including relief under Title 84 O.S. 1961, § 257 et seq. In the second paragraph of the syllabus in Wells v. Shriver, 81 Okl. 108, 197 p. 460, we said:

“A ‘judgment’ is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an *304 action. To constitute a judgment under the Code, it must judicially determine all of the issues raised by the pleadings except such as are waived or abandoned on the trial of the case.”
Title 84 O.S.1961, § 259, provides:

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408 P.2d 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-blockwood-okla-1965.