Harding v. Gillett

1909 OK 274, 107 P. 665, 25 Okla. 199, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 1909
Docket560
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 1909 OK 274 (Harding v. Gillett) 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
Harding v. Gillett, 1909 OK 274, 107 P. 665, 25 Okla. 199, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 164 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

(after stating the facts as above). Sixty assignments of error have been urged by counsel for plaintiff . in error in their brief, but it will be unnecessary to consider all of these assignments separately or in the order in which counsel have presented them. In several instances the same proposition of law is presented by several different assignments, and many of the assignments are directed to questions that have been settled upon the different appeals heretofore made upon the different branches of this ease. It is therefore necessary to a decision of the question presented by this appeal to review at a length, otherwise unpardonable, the questions decided on the previous appeals had in this case, for such questions as were decided on the former appeals have become the law of the case and are not now open for reconsideration by .this court. Oklahoma City Electric, Gas & Power Co. et al. v. Baumhoff, 21 Okla. 503, 96 Pac. 758; U. S. v. New York Indians, 173 U. S. 464, 19 Sup. Ct. 464, 43 L. Ed. 769; United States v. Camou, 184 U. S. 572, 22 Sup. Ct. 515, 46 L. Ed. 694; People v. Ill. Cen. Ry. Co., 184 U. S. 77, 22 Sup. Ct. 300, 46 L. Ed. 440.

The judgment of foreclosure rendered on December 18, 1896, was not rendered after personal service upon defendants, but was rendered after an attempted service by publication notice. The motion filed by Myrtle Gillett to vacate and set. aside the decree of foreclosure and the sale had thereon was based solely upon the ground that the judgment was void because the court had no jurisdiction of the defendant Myrtle Gillett, for the reason that she was, at the time of the beginning of the action and at the time of the rendering of the decree of foreclosure, a resident of the ter-ritor]', residing within 20 miles of the real estate involved in the decree, and had been so residing for a period of about 7 years, and *207 that she had not at any time concealed herself so that process could not be served upon her, and had at no time departed from the territory or from the county .of her residence with intent to delay or defraud her creditors or to avoid the service of a summons, and for the further reason that the affidavit filed in the cause for the purpose of obtaining service by publication was not such as the law requires. The affidavit for publication filed by plaintiff, Romig, stated that, “upon information and belief,” the defendants Don A. Gillett and Myrtle Gillett were nonresidents of th,e. territory of Oklahoma and that service could not be had upon them in said territory. The.Supreme Court of the territory affirmed the judgment of the trial court setting aside the decree of foreclosure and sale thereunder upon the ground that an affidavit made on information and belief, merely stating that the service could not be had upon them therein, was insufficient to authorize summons by publication, and that the publication made upon such affidavit and every subsequent proceeding in the ease based thereon was void. Romig et al. v. Gillett, 10 Okla. 186, 62 Pac. 805. The affidavit for publication also contained the averment that “the plaintiff is unable, by using due diligence, to obtain service of summons on said defendants within the territory of Oklahoma.” .On appeal to the Supreme Court of the United Stales from the judgment of the Supreme Court of the territory, Romig and Harding urged upon that court that, if the affidavit as to Che nonresidence of the defendants was defective because made on information and belief, it was yet saved by the averment above quoted. .The Supreme Court of the United States makes no comment upon the holding of the Supreme Court of the territory that the affidavit is void because made upon information and belief, but addressed itself to the contention made by Romig and Harding that the judgment is saved by the averment in the affidavit of failure to obtain service after due diligence, and used the following language:

“On the other hand, it is contended by the appellants that a separate ground for service by publication is ‘where the plaintiff, with due diligence, is unable to make service pf summons * * * within the territory'"; that the affidavit for publication stated posi *208 tively such inability; that,'therefore, it was strictly within the statute and authorized the publication of notice; that the publication was duly made, the defendants were thereby brought into court, and the judgment and all subsequent proceedings were regular and valid. It ma}'" well be doubted whether this contention of appellants can be sustained, at least in cases like this of direct, and not collateral, attack, even if the inability to obtain personal service by the-exercise of due diligence is a distinctive ground for service by publication. It would seem that the facts tending to show such diligence should be disclosed, and that an affidavit merely alleging" inability was one of a conclusion of law, and not of facts. McDonald v. Cooper [C. C.] 32 Fed. 745. Carleton v. Carleton, 85 N. Y. 313; McCracken v. Flanagan, 127 N. Y. 493 [28 N. E. 385, 24 Am, St. Rep. 481] ; Ricketson v. Richardson, 26 Cal. 149; Braly v. Seaman, 30 Cal. 610; Kahn v. Matthai, 115 Cal. 689 [47 Pac. 698]; Little v. Chambers, 27 Iowa, 522; Thompson v. Shiawassee County Circuit Judge, 54 Mich. 236 [19 N. W. 967] ; Alderson v. Marshall, 7 Mont. 288 [16 Pac. 576].” (Romig et al. v. Gillett, 187 U. S. 112, 23 Sup. Ct. 41, 47 L. Ed. 97.)

This language of the Supreme Court as to whether the averment of the affidavit alleging due diligence was sufficient to support a judgment upon service by publication is not entirely explicit or free from ambiguity, but when we consider this language of the court in connection with the grounds of Myrtle Gillett’s motion to vacate the judgment and the subsequent language of the court in its opinion and the decree rendered, we take it that that court held that the judgment of foreclosure was not based upon sufficient service and was void. " It must- be borne in mind that Myrtle Gillett’s motion to vacate was not made under section 4281, Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St., which provides that a party against whom a judgment has beep rendered without other service than by publication in a newspaper may, at any time within three years, have the same opened and may defend, and which further provides that no property the subject of the judgment or order sought to be opened shall be in consequence of it affected by the proceeding under said section if said property has passed to a purchaser in good faith. That section of the statutes offers to a defendant against whom a valid ¡judgment has been rendered on service by publication an opportunity to appear and defend within three years if, in his applica *209 tion, he can show to the court that he has a valid defense and that he did not have actual notice. That section offers a remedy when the service by publication is valid.

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Bluebook (online)
1909 OK 274, 107 P. 665, 25 Okla. 199, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-gillett-okla-1909.