George v. Kinard

1921 OK 425, 202 P. 503, 84 Okla. 95, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 6, 1921
Docket10361
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1921 OK 425 (George v. Kinard) 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
George v. Kinard, 1921 OK 425, 202 P. 503, 84 Okla. 95, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 399 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

NICHOLSON, J.

This is a partition suit brought in the district court of the territory of Oklahoma, within and for Pottawatomie county, on September 11, 1905, by Clara E. Rose and others, as plaintiffs, against John P. Kin-ard, as defendant. The petition alleged that the plaintiffs and defendant were the children and sole heirs of Armétta J. ICinard, deceased, who died seised of the land in the petition described, and prayed for a partition of said land, and that in case partition could not be had in kind, that the same be sold and the proceeds of the sale be divided between the plaintiffs and said defendant.

Summons was duly issued on September 11, 1905. returnable on September 21, 1905, and the sheriff’s return shows that said summons was served on the 14th day of September, 1905, by leaving a true copy thereof with all indorsements thereon at the usual place of residence of the defendant. The defendant was required to answer on or before the 12th day of October, 1906; on October 13, 1905, the defendant having failed to answer, judgment was rendered against him by default. The journal entry recites that John P. ICinard had been personally served with summons in said cause for more than 20 days prior to that date, but had failed to plead said cause. Partition was decreed and appraisers appointed. The appraisers filed their report, showing that the land could not be partitioned without loss and detriment, and fixed the value of said land at $1,500. The court by decree confirmed the report of said appraisers, and ordered the land sold by the sheriff of said county as upon execution. The sale was duly advertised, and at said sale Edward George, plaintiff In error, became' the purchaser of said land for the sum of $1,525, which sale was by the court confirmed on the 16th day of March. 1906, and sheriff’s deed duly executed to said purchaser. On June 5, 1916. the defendant, filed in said cause his special appearance and motion to vacate and set aside said judgment. Two amendments to this motion were filed, ihe last -on July 17, 1918. The gist of this motion was that service of summons was not had upon him, and he was not a resident of Pottawatomie county at the time of the proposed service of summons upon him. On Eebruary 6, 1918, the plaintiff in error filed his petition in intervention, pleading the judgment and sale thereunder, and also that Hie plaintiffs and defendant had received the purchase price paid by him for said land; that no part of said purchase price had been paid or tendered to him and that they and each of them 'were es-topped from claiming any right, title, or interest in or to said lajids, and praying that said John P. Kin-ard be denied any relief, and that tbe title to said land be quieted in said intervener. Tbe court made findings of fact and conclusions of law as follows:

“Upon request of counsel for the inter-vener, George, the court makes this finding of fact:
“That at the time of the service of. the summons in question the defendant, John P. Kinard, was an unmarried man over the age of 21 years. That during the greater part of the year 1904 he had not actually maintained the place at which summons was left as a place where lie ate and slept and usually resorted to when not engaged in labor or business elsewhere, -but that during the greater part of the year 1904, he was employed by a neighbor, one Parker, as a farm hand and slept and ate at the residence of said Parker. That during about two months of that year he was sick and during the period of his sickness stayed at the resilience of one Stell in the city of Shawnee; that at times during that year and after his recovery from his sickness he spent some of his time at a place leased by him in the northern part of Pottawatomie county, not the place at which service was made; that during the year 1904, this place was leased and rented out to said Parker.
“That during the spring and early summer months of 1905, the defendant put out and cultivated a crop on the premises on which the service or purported service was made, but that after about the month of July of said year he did not actually stay on said premises or any part thereof, but that during all times after some time in the month of July, he stayed elsewhere, took his meals- elsewhere and slept elsewhere; that he left his bed and bedding at the bouse on tbe premises on which the purported service was made, but at no time after some time in the month of July did he occupy it as a place of abode.
*97 ‘■T}ie court further finds as a matter of fact that after the said time in the month of July when he abandoned the place as a place of actual abode, he did retain said premises as his legal residence to which he would probably have resorted had he not been engaged elsewhere; that he was engaged elsewhere and actually abiding elsewhere at the time of the purported service of summons in this case.
"The court further finds that there were no, members of his family abiding at the place with whom the summons could have been left. The court finds that the summons in this ease was delivered to the sheriff of Pottawatomie county and was by the sheriff placed in the hands of one C. E. Francis for service; that the said C. E. Francis went to the premises in question and attempted to serve the same by leaving it with some person unknown to the court on said premises, but the court finds that said person was not a member of defendant’s family, and the court further finds that service was not actually made by leaving a copy of the summons personally with the defendant John P. Kinard.
"The court finds that the defendant, John P. Kinard, did not at the time have any personal knowledge of the fact of the pendency of the suit, nor of the fact that attempted service was made on the premises, but finds that at the time of the service and at the time of the rendition of the judgment complained of rbe defendant was a resident citizen of Pottawatomie county, and was personally abiding in Pottawatomie county at some place other than the place at which service was attempted to be made, and that the place at which service was attempted to be made was at the time of the service the legal residence of the" defendant. John P. Kinard, or the place to which he would have resorted had he not been engaged in employment or business elsewhere.
“The court fiuds from the evidence in the ease, that the deputy sheriff who attempted to make sendee of summons indorsed thereon the following:
' “ T received this summons on the lltli day of Sep. 1906 at -o’clock — M., and executed the same in my county toy leaving a true copy of the within summons with all the indorsements thereon at tbe usual place of residence of John P. Kinard on the 14 day of Sep., 1905.
“ ‘By IV. A. Grace, Sheriff.
‘Tty G. E. Francis, Deputy.’
“And the court further finds that such attempt to make the service as the deputy did make was made on the 14th day of September. 1905, and before the return day of the summons.
“The court finds from these facts, as a conclusion of law, that the attempted service was not a legal service of the summons and the judgment of the court, by reason of the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, is that the judgment, as against John P.

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 425, 202 P. 503, 84 Okla. 95, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-kinard-okla-1921.