Harden v. District Court of Tulsa County

1935 OK 1184, 53 P.2d 247, 175 Okla. 417, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 909
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 10, 1935
DocketNos. 26333, 26334.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1184 (Harden v. District Court of Tulsa County) 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
Harden v. District Court of Tulsa County, 1935 OK 1184, 53 P.2d 247, 175 Okla. 417, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 909 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an action by Andrew J. Harden (o prohibit the district court of Tulsa county from proceeding further in a certain cause wherein Elizabeth Harden is plaintiff, and Andrew J. Harden is defendant, and by consolidation, an action also by Elizabeth Harden to prohibit the district court of Pontotoc county from proceeding further in cause No. 13224, wherein E'iza-beth Harden is plaintiff, and Andrew J. Harden is defendant.

For convenience we will refer to Elizabeth Harden as plaintiff, and Andrew J. Harden as defendant, as they appeared in the various proceedings in the trial courts.

P'aintiff and defendant were married in 1880. They then, and continuously thereafter, resided in what is now Pontotoc county, Okla. In 1914 they separated. There is some controversy as to whether they divided or arranged their property interests at that time, but, at any rate, they did then separate. In 1932 plaintiff sued defendant in the district court of Pontotoc county for maintenance or division of property or both. Final judgment was rendered in that action awarding plaintiff certain substantial parts and portions of defendant’s property, and enjoining plaintiff from thereafter claiming any other rights, interest, or portions of defendant’s property.

Thereafter, in 1935, plaintiff filed in the district court of Pontotoc county her action No. 13224, for divorce and alimony, seeking temporary alimony, suit money, and attorney’s fees, and seeking also the appointment of a receiver for defendant’s property, or to enjoin the defendant from disposing of it.

Upon that petition the court in Pontotoc county ordered certain payments of alimony pendente lite, and those payments, or at least two of them at $250 each, were made by the defendant. The plaintiff’s application for appointment of receiver came on for hearing in that action on April 26, 1935. The court had issued an order citing plaintiff and her attorney for contempt, and that citation also came on for hearing on April 26th.

On that, date, the parties appearing, the district court heard the evidence and declined to appoint a receiver, but in lieu thereof impounded certain receipts of oil money belonging to defendant, and took under advisement for further consideration and future determination, plaintiff’s request for $1,000 attorney’s fee, and the question of the contempt matter. The plaintiff then filed an amended petition. Up to that time plaintiff and defendant for more than 60 years had ■continuously resided in what is now Pon-totoc county, Okla.

On May 1, 1935’, plaintiff appeared in Tulsa county and filed her suit No. D13759, naming her husband, Andrew J. Harden, as defendant, and there also seeking a divorce and a'imony, and obtained a temporary order restraining disposition of property and for alimony, suit money and attorney’s fee. Also on the same day she filed in the district court of Pontotoc county in her action there, a signed document purporting to be a dismissal of that cause.

On the following day the district court of Pontotoc county entered its order striking from the files the purported dismissal, and on that day the defendant filed his answer to the amended petition which plaintiff had filed on April 26th.

So that we have the two district courts at the same time undertaking to exercise jurisdiction of an action by the same plaintiff against the same defendant for the same relief.

The plaintiff claims that she had the right at will to terminate her Pontotoc county action, and that the filing of her so-called dismissal fully, finally, and irrevocably terminated the entire matter in Pontotoc county. But it must be noted that in her Pontotoc county action she had obtained temporary relief in both money payments and the impounding of defendant’s property, she had not only filed her action in Pontotoc county, but had obtained substantial partial relief and had presented other substantial matters to the court which the court had under advisement, and that court also had under advisement the application of the defendant to, modify certain of the temporary orders in the case. With the cause in that situation, the arbitrary right of plaintiff to terminate the action and withdraw her cause_and the submitted matters from the court and keep and retain the substantial temporary advances, is open to serious doubt. For that matter, it appears that the plaintiff was actuated, not by a desire to terminate her action-against the defendant, but merely to try a new venue.

Thus in truth and in fact the plaintiff attempted to change the venue of her cause t n Tulsa county, without consulting the court then actually engaged in the consideration of her rights, and then actually applying its equitable powers in her behalf. This, too, without attention to the legal formalities *419 which at least in some cases justify and make provision for a change of venue in an orderly manner. We are not justified in ascribing to plaintiff’s action any actually improper or evil motive, but, since no reasonable or justifiable motive for it appears, we should doubtless attribute it to her whim or caprice. It evidently being plaintiff’s though! that her new action in Tulsa county could be sufficiently reinforced or fortified, and the venue firmly fixed in Tulsa county by at the same time filing with the court clerk of Pon-totoc county her documentary dismissal of the cause pending there.

It is not necessary that we fully pass upon the plaintiff’s right to file the dismissal on May 1st, as that dismissal was stricken from the files and its effect as a dismissal was vacated by order of the court on the following day, during the same term.

Even if the court itself had ordered a dismissal on plaintiff’s motion on May 1st, the court would not have been precluded from vacating that order by the subsequent order. In Todd v. Orr, 44 Okla. 459, 145 P. 393, it was said in the body of the opinion:

“The power of a court of record, during the term at which rendered, to control its orders, judgments, and decrees, made during the term, is of farreaehing importance. That such authority should be possessed by trial courts of general jurisdiction must be conceded. Any other view would so fetter and paralyze the power of the courts that they must frequently do wrong from mere inability to do right. * * *”

And it was held in paragraph 3 of the syllabus :

“The power to correct errors in their own. proceedings is inherent in all courts of general jurisdiction, and in the exercise of that discretion they are governed, not alone by their solicitude for the rights of litigants, but also by the consideration of justice to themselves as instruments provided for the impartial administration of the law.”

There is no question as to the general power of the district court to control the filing of documents and pleadings, to permit or refuse their filing in many instances, and in proper cases to strike from the files such pleadings and documents as ought to be stricken. The district court of Pontotoc county made various and numerous orders in the case prior to the order of May 2nd, striking the purported dismissal. As to all those orders, they import verity and validity, and we will assume them to be valid until the contrary is shown by proper procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1184, 53 P.2d 247, 175 Okla. 417, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harden-v-district-court-of-tulsa-county-okla-1935.