Gayer v. Roddie

1932 OK 75, 7 P.2d 847, 155 Okla. 27, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 2, 1932
Docket22136
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1932 OK 75 (Gayer v. Roddie) 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
Gayer v. Roddie, 1932 OK 75, 7 P.2d 847, 155 Okla. 27, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 67 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

SWINDAUL, J.

.This is an appeal from an order of temporary injunction issued by the district court of Oklahoma county, enjoining the appellant from further proceeding in the district court of Creak county with reference to certain funds which came into the hands of the appellee, a receiver appointed by the district court of Oklahoma county, the funds being production payments from oil and gas property which were in the possession of the receiver until a mortgage on the property was foreclosed in an action instituted in the district court of Creek county under an order of the district court of Oklahoma county permitting the receiver to be made a party to- the foreclosure action but ordering him to retain all income from the property in his hands and to pay it out only upon the order of the Oklahoma county district court.

.The application for leave to make the receiver a party to the foreclosure action had alleged that the mortgage covered the income and that the applicant believed the security was being- impaired, and asked the district court of Oklahoma county to make an order impounding any and all moneys coming into the hands of the receiver pending the litigation with reference to the foreclosure of the petitioner’s mortgages, suits to be filed immediately in Oreek and Pawnee counties, respectively, the venue of the actions being in said counties. Upon the application the Oklahoma county district court-made an order permitting the receiver to be made a party to the foreclosure actions and further ordered the receiver “to hold and retain in his possession, as receiver of the Riverside Oil & Refining Company, all moneys received by him as such receiver from any of said above-described property covered by the petitioner’s mortgages, and not to pay same out except upon orders of this court and pursuant to notice served upon the petitioner herein, a reasonable length of time before such application to disburse said funds shall be heard.”

Subsequent to the foreclosure of the mortgages the plaintiff in the actions was proceeding in the district court of Oreek county to obtain an order that the Empire Natural Gas Company pay to the plaintiff $428.32 which was due but had not been paid to the receiver, and that the receiver pay to the plaintiff $8,914.29, which was all the income that had accrued during the life of the mortgages, said sums to be credited upon a deficiency that remained after the foreclosure sale, which appears to have been in excess of both sums.

The Oiklahoma county district court granted a temporary injunction forbidding further proceeding against the receiver, but did not enjoin proceeding to obtain the funds due from the Empire Natural Gas Company.

.The appellant .filed an amended response to the application for the injunction, setting up the application for leave to make the receiver a party to the foreclosure actions, the order made upon the application, alleging that the mortgages covered the income from the properties, quoting the text of the mortgages upon that point, and alleging the execution of transfer orders as required by the terms of the mortgages; and he further alleged that the foreclosure action in Oreek county went to trial and judgment February 17, 1928, and that on that day he filed an amendment and supplement to the foreclosure petition setting up the amounts accrued under the transfer orders and asking that the amounts be impressed with the mortgage lien and be ordered paid to him to apply on the mortgage debt; that the court permitted the filing of the amendment and supplement, against the objection of the receiver, and gave the receiver time to plead to it, but continued the issues under the amendment and supplement and rendered judgment that day on the petition as it then stood; that judgment was rendered for the foreclosure of the mortgage, from whi-ch the receiver appealed, and that the appeal was dismissed by the Supreme Court; that *29 after the foreclosure sale there remained a deficiency of about $16,000 and interest; that he filed a further amendment and supplement setting up the entire income from the properties, up to the time of divesting of title by the foreclosure sale, and that he prayed that the sums respectively in the hands of the Empire Natural Gas Company and in the hands of the receiver be ordered paid to him to be credited upon the indebtedness ; that issues were made upon the amendment and supplement and the case was set for trial when the receiver applied for the injunction; that the original indebtedness of $50,000 had not been disputed, but on the contrary had been allowed in full by the Oklahoma county district court in the receivership proceedings, including interest and attorney’s fees.

In the amended response the appellant denied that he was seeking to interfere with the receiver, but was merely proceeding as by law and the former order of the receivership court he had been authorized to do, to have his lien and the amount thereof judicially decreed and determined, and that as to the money in the hands of the Empire Natural Gas Company, that it should pay same to the appellant, and as to that in the hands of the receiver, upon obtaining the decree as to the sum or amount thereof subject to the lien, the appellant intended to present the same to the receivership court with an application for an order directing the “time and manner of payment of same” by the receiver, and that such purpose had been repeatedly asserted in both courts; that the prior order authorizing him to make the receiver a party to the action . permitted such procedure, and that the same was in accordance with the well-established rules of equity procedure and practice; that the action was set for trial in the Creek county district court.

Since perfecting the appeal the appellant has applied for a writ of mandamus to> require the district court of Oklahoma county to vacate the order of temporary injunction, and for a writ of prohibition against its further proceeding- in the injunction matter. If the temporary injunction was properly granted, it would follow that the order should be affirmed, and that the extraordinary writs should be denied.

It may be unnecessary to consider the power and authority of a court to revoke an order permitting its receiver to be sued in another court, for a proper interpretation of the order permitting the suit may be found to require the lien creditor to apply to the receivership court to determine what part of the income which came into the hands of the receiver is applicable in reduction of the deficiency remaining after application of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, and if that is a proper interpretation of the order and it is further concluded that such an order was properly so limited by the receivership court, then it follows that the temporary injunction was properly granted, and the order should be affirmed and the application for the extraordinary writs would consequently be denied.

The appellant expressly admits that the court appointing a receiver has the jurisdiction to administer the assets, both the general assets and the assets subject to liens. In fact, that elementary rule cannot be denied.

It is elementary that ‘No court can properly interfere with the custody of property held by another court through a receiver.’ Dillingham v. Russell, 73 Tex. 47, 11 S. W. Rep. 139, 3 L. R. A. 634, 15 Am. St. Rep. 753.”

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Related

Schofield v. Melton
1933 OK 447 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)
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1932 OK 309 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 75, 7 P.2d 847, 155 Okla. 27, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gayer-v-roddie-okla-1932.