Gardner v. Rumsey

1921 OK 95, 196 P. 941, 81 Okla. 20, 25 A.L.R. 1411, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
Docket9932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1921 OK 95 (Gardner v. Rumsey) 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
Gardner v. Rumsey, 1921 OK 95, 196 P. 941, 81 Okla. 20, 25 A.L.R. 1411, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 82 (Okla. 1921).

Opinions

PITOHFORD, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Oklahoma county, sustaining a demurrer by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ petition. The causes of action set forth in the petition are based upon the statute of the state of Arkansas creating a- liability in favor of creditors against officers Of an Arkansas corporation who make a false certificate.

By virtue of .the statute, the organizers of a corporation, ..in Arkansas, are required to state, under oathi the amount of capital stock actually paid' in. The' directors and organizers are' required to make affidavit to the truthfulness of the certificate and report, and if any officer of the corporation makes, a false affidavit as to the amount paid in, said person making the false affidavit is liable to any creditor of the corporation for the amount of the debt against said corporation.

It was alleged in the petition that W. C. Hathaway, Joseph F. Rumsey, and T. P. Edwards associated themselves together as a body politic and corporate and to be known as the Mansfield Cotton Oil Company. That the amount of capital stock was to be $30,000. That defendant, Rumsey, subscribed for 360 shares of the capital stock, same amounting to $9,000. That Edwards and Hathaway subscribed for the balance. That each of the subscribers signed an affidavit showing that the full amount of the capital stock had actually been paid in, but said sums were not paid and never had been paid, and the affidavit and oath of the said Rumsey, in the organization of the 'corporation, were untrue and false.

The plaintiffs, A. L. Gardner, J. M. Marshall, and Proctor & Gamble Company, joined in an action against the defendant; the plaintiff Gardner claiming that the Mansfield Cotton Oil Company became indebted to him in the sum of $5,437.50; the plaintiff Marshall claiming an indebtedness against the corporation for $6,000, and Proctor & Gamble Company claiming that the corporation was indebted to it $980. These debts were created after the organization of the corporation. The plaintiffs contend that, by reason of the untrue and false affidavit of the defendant, he became indebted to each of them for the amounts set forth above.

To the petition of the plaintiffs, the defendant demurred upon the following grounds: That several causes of action were improperly joined, and that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court below sustained the demurrer upon both grounds. Plaintiffs refused' to plead further and elected to stand upon their petition. The prayer of the petition was that plaintiffs have judgment against the defendant individually and separately and personally for. the sums of money above set forth, together with interest thereon from the date that each became due.

We are here confronted with this proposition : Can three separate and distinct plaintiffs join in one petition, and in one action three separate and distinct claims, one in behalf of each plaintiff, against, the same defendant? • ■ ■■

Under "paragraph 5, section 4740, Rev. Laws 1910, the defendant may demur to the petition when it "appears on its face: “That *22 several causes of action are improperly joined.”

It is the contentipp of the plaintiffs that the liability of the defendant arises out of the alleged false affidavit, that the claims arose out of the same transaction, arid that if they did arise out of the same transaction, a liability was created in favor of each of the' plaintiffs, and that under the law the different causes of action may he included in the same petition, and that the remedy of the defendant was not to demur, but was a motion to strike out the names of at least two of the plaintiffs if he desired to raise the question of misjoinder of parties, and that if this motion had been made, then the plaintiffs had their remedy under section 4743, Rev. Laws 1910.

The above section .provides as follows:

“When a demurrer is sustained, on the ground of misjoinder of several causes of action, the court, on motion of the plaintiff, shall allow him, with or 'without costs, in its discretion, to file several petitions, each including such of said causes of action as might have been joined; and an action shall be docketed for each of said petitions, and the same shall be proceeded in without further service.”

Here we have three lawsuits in one, maintained by three plaintiffs without unity of interest stated in the petition, requiring the proof and defense of three causes of action, upon three different debts created at three different times, upon three different transactions in favor of three different plaintiffs, and which would require three verdicts and •three separate judgments. While this section gives the plaintiffs the right to have the causes of action separated, this they did not seek to do, no doubt realizing that this course would have been futile. For when the demurrer was also sustained on the ground that no cause of action was" stated, they could have accomplished nothing by having the causes separately stated, as they were, at that time, informed by the court ••they had no cause of action. What the statutes authorize is the joinder of several causes of action in the same petition in behalf of the same plaintiff, or the same joint plaintiffs having unity of interest where they, arise out of the same transaction.

Under section 4738, supra, the causes of action so united must all belong to one of these classes, and must affect all the parties to the action, except in actions to enforce mortgages or other. liens.

Gardner’s cause of action is wholly personal to himself, and in.no wise affects Marshall or Proctor & Gamble Company. The cause of action of Proctor & Gamble Company in no manner affects either of the other plaintiffs, and the same is true of Marshall’s cause of action. Therefore, since the several causes of action do not affect all the parties, but affect each' plaintiff separately and distinctly, although the several causes of action might have arisen out of the same transaction, the claims constituted different transactions and were improperly joined.

In Jeffers v. Forbes, 28 Kan. 122, Mr. Justice Brewer, after considering the statutes of that state, and quoting from Tate v. Railroad Co., 10 Ind. 174, said:

“Two or more persons, having separate causes of action against the same defendant, though arising out of the same transaction, cannot unite; nor can several plaintiffs in one complaint demand several distinct matters of relief; nor can they enforce joint and separate demands against the same defendants.”

In Swenson v. Moline Plow Co., 14 Kan. 297, the syllabus is as follows:

“Where S. executed to A. two promissory notes, and a mortgage on real estate to secure the payment of the notes, and A. after-wards assigned one of the notes to M., held, that A. and M. cannot sue jointly as plaintiffs on the notes and mortgage, but each has his separate action.”

In St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. Dickerson et al., 29 Okla. 386, 118 Pac. 140, this court said in the third paragraph of the syllabus:

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 95, 196 P. 941, 81 Okla. 20, 25 A.L.R. 1411, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-rumsey-okla-1921.