Harris v. Smiley

1912 OK 725, 128 P. 276, 36 Okla. 89, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 815
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1912
Docket1350
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1912 OK 725 (Harris v. Smiley) 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
Harris v. Smiley, 1912 OK 725, 128 P. 276, 36 Okla. 89, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 815 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

*90 Opinion bjr

ROBERTSON, C.

This was an action by J. Smiley, defendant in error,1 plaintiff below, against R. Harris, J. W. Lokey, and C. S. Beard, plaintiffs in error, defendants below, for an injunction and for damages. It appears from the íecord that one Isabel Anderson, a nonresident, was indebted to R. Harris, a merchant at Byars, and that J. Smiley was indebted to said Anderson on a promissory note, not yet due. Harris instituted a suit against Anderson, before Lokey, a justice of the peace at Byars, and procured a garnishment process to be served on Smiley. Smiley answered that he was indebted to Anderson in the sum of $100, due on November 1, 1908. Judgment was rendered against Anderson in favor of Harris, and Smiley was ordered by the justice of the peace to pay Harris the $100 which he admitted he owed Anderson. Judgment was entered on March 28, 1908, and in January, 1909, Smiley not having obeyed the order of the justice of the peace, Harris procured an execution against Smiley on the order made by the justice, and the same was placed in the hands of C. S. Beard, a deputy sheriff of McClain county, for service. I-Ie executed the same by levying upon and taking into his possession two horsés belonging to Smiley and advertising them for sale, the sale to occur on February 4, 1909. Smiley brought suit in the district court of McClain county to restrain the deput)r sheriff from selling his horses. Harris, the judgment creditor, and Loke}r, the justice of the peace, were also joined in said suit as defendants. ■ A temporary injunction was issued and served. The defendants appeared and demurred to the petition, which demurrer was sustained by the court. Smiley thereupon obtained leave of court to amend his petition, which was done; whereupon the second demurrer was interposed by the defendants, and was overruled by the court. Defendants elected to stand on their demurrer, and refused to plead further; whereupon judgment was entered against them and the temporary injunction made permanent, and damages were awarded to Smiley in the sum of $75, to all of which the defendants excepted and'bring this appeal to reverse said judgment.

The only questipn presented by the appeal in this case is the sufficiency of the petition as challenged by the demurrer of *91 the defendants. Counsel for defendant in error seemingly rely upon the fact that the judgment of the justice of the peace, in so far as it affects Smiley, is absolutely void, and of no effect, and that an injunction 'is the proper remedy to prevent the sale of his client’s property under the execution issued thereon. He cites the case of Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Reid et al., 34 Kan. 410, 8 Pac. 846, and the cases therein referred to, as a case on “all fours” with and decisive of the case at bar.

If the question in this case was limited, as was the question in that case, to whether or not injunction is an available remedy to prevent service of execution in case of a void judgment, we might be persuaded to agree with counsel for defendant in error ; for, without doubt, a court of equity, in certain cases, has power to prevent, by injunction, the service of an execution issued on a void judgment. This, however, on the assumption that the petition of plaintiff, who seeks the injunction, shows that he is entitled to such relief, and that he has no legal remedy, or that the same is inadequate to give him a plain and speedy relief, or to prevent a continuing nuisance or a multiplicity of suits. But, before a court of equity will grant an injunction in such a case, it must affirmatively appear that the party seeking such relief is entitled to such remedy. It is a fundamental rule, so well established that citation of authority is unnecessary, that, to enable one to secure in junctional relief, he must show affirmatively in his petition that he has exhausted his legal remedies, or that they are inadequate to give him plain and speedy relief, and that, unless such relief is granted by injunction, he will suffer great and irreparable damage. If it appears from the pleadings that he has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, equity will not grant him relief by injunction. Therefore the question arises: Did Smiley have a plain, adequate, and speedy remedy at law in this case, and, if not, was he, by reason of such lack of legal remedy, entitled to the equitable relief prayed for in his petition ?

We are of opinion that the judgment of the justice of the peace as pleaded by defendant in error in the court below, is void, although we do not specifically pass upon that question at this *92 time; the case not calling for an expression from us on that point. But,- conceding it to be void, the petition does not show that defendant in- error has pursued, much less exhausted, any of the legal remedies provided for him by statute for his relief. Without doubt, a motion filed in the original case in the justice court would be sufficient authority for the justice to recall the execution.

No opportunity had been given the justice of the peace; leastwise nothing in the record shows that the attention of the justice had'ever been called to the alleged error which resulted in the rendition of the judgment complained of. No question had been raised concerning the jurisdiction of the justice court over the persons of the parties or the subject-matter of the controversy, and we are unwilling to believe that any court, even one of such inferior jurisdiction as justice of the peace, would willfully refuse to correct an error of judgment, either of procedure or on the merits, after the same has been pointed out, in any case pending before it. In this case it clearly appears that no effort was made to obtain from the justice the relief sought in the district court. The law requires, and common courtesy demands, that the lower court be given an opportunity to correct, especially while the matter is pending before it, any error into which it may, by erroneous view of law or mistake of fact, have fallen; and a litigant, failing to pursue the remdey given him by law, will not be allowed to seek in a court of equity that relief which is afforded, and whidh has not been denied him in a court of law. Equity relieves only in case of failure of the law to grant adequate relief. No hard and fast rules governing all cases can be formulated. . Each case must be decided upon its own peculiar circumstances. In our opinion, in the case at bar, as shown by the petition, no good reason exists for the interposition of the powers of a court of equity.

Further, if the contention of defendant in error is correct, and the judgment void, no title to the property sold would pass to the purchaser, and replevin would lie, and would, in this case, be an adequate remedy at law to one whose property had thus been wrongfully taken from him by a trespasser. So, too, might *93 he pursue his remedy in conversion; perhaps also by an action against the officer on his official bond. It may also be that defendant, after exhausting his remedy in the justice court, would yet have an adequate remedy by way of appeal. We cannot assume, however,' that the justice court would commit error by refusing to correct former errors when regularly pointed out in good faith by the aggrieved party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 725, 128 P. 276, 36 Okla. 89, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-smiley-okla-1912.