Harris v. Spurrier Lbr. Co.

1928 OK 192, 265 P. 637, 130 Okla. 99, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 20, 1928
Docket17171
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1928 OK 192 (Harris v. Spurrier Lbr. Co.) 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. Spurrier Lbr. Co., 1928 OK 192, 265 P. 637, 130 Okla. 99, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 462 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

An appeal from the district court of Creek county from an order of the court overruling- motion to vacate a judgment in favor of Spurrier Lumber Company against P. 0. Harris and Zoe Harris. The latter parties will be herein designated as plaintiffs and the lumber company as defendant. The appeal is in form by case-made, but in effect by transcript, as no evidence or proceedings are included in the record. The only error claimed is the refusal of the court to vacate a judgment which plaintiffs say was void upon the face of the judgment ioll.

The original judgment was taken in a case pending in district court of Creek county in July, 1924, wherein the lumber company was plaintiff and P. O. and Zoe Harris, the Georgia State Savings & Loan Association, J. L. Miller, C. A. Ruggles, C. E. Dickinson, and B. D. Vice, were defendants. The action by the lumber company was to foreclose a materialman’s lien against the real property of P. O. Harris and Zoe Harris. The individual defendants were alleged to be contractors who had some part in the erection of the building against which the lien was sought, and the loan association was alleged to have some interest in the premises, junior, however, to the claims of plaintiffs.

Upon filing the petition in the cause last named, the plaintiff caused summons to be issued against P. O. and Zoe Harris, J. L. Miller, O. A. Ruggles, C. E. Dickinson, and B. D. Vice, and also separate summons *100 against, the loan association, but the appellants herein claim (and the record sustains them) that the summons directed against J. L. Miller, O. A. Ruggles, O. E. Dickinson, and B. D. Vice, does not appear among the papers of the judgment roll. The other defendants are shown by the record to have been served.

E. 0. Harris and Zoe Harris filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, but it was not passed upon, and later filed a motion to require plaintiff to furnish defendants a statement of account, and asked for additional time to answer. Within the time allowed they .filed an answer containing a general denial, but admit that they were the owners of the lots in controversy, and later still filed an amendment to their answer setting out “that the account sued upon in this action has been paid in full by the defendants herein and that they are not now indebted to plaintiffs in any sum whatsoever.”

On June 22, 1925, said cause was tried; plaintiff appearing by its attorneys, defendants E. O. and Zoe Harris appearing in person, and by their attorneys, and the Georgia State Savings & Loan Association appearing Dy its attorneys. A jury was waived and all parties announced ready for trial. After the case was closed the same was continued to a later date for argument, when a judgment was entered in which it was found that E. O. and Zoe Harris entered into a contract with J. L. Miller, by which the latter was to furnish labor and materials for the erection of a house on lot 2, block 97, original town of Bristow, and that thereafter said Miller contracted with Ruggles, Dickinson, and Vice to furnish material which went into the structure, and it is decreed that there is due from Miller, Dickinson, Ruggles and Vice to the lumber company $517.10 for material, and a lien therefor is declared against the real estate, and the same is ordered foreclosed subject only to a prior lien given the loan association, and the cause was continued as to defendants Miller, Ruggles, Dickinson and Vice, as shown by the judgment.

No motion for new trial was filed, and after the expiration of the term of court, and on the 8th of June, 1925, F. O. and Zoe Harris filed their motion to vacate the judgment aforesaid upon the following grounds:

“ (a) That * * * no service, or pretended service of summons, was had upon the said defendants (J. L. Miller, G. E. Dickinson, 0. A. Ruggles and B. D. Vice), * * * and that said defendants did not appear at said trial either in person or by attorney, and that the said judgment shows upon its face that said cause was continued as to said defendants, * * *
“(b) That said judgment and pretended judgment is wholly void upon its face, for the reason that said judgment shows upon its face that the said court had no jurisdiction of the person of the said defendants J. L. Miller, G. D. Dickinson, G. A. Ruggles, and B. D. Vice, or either of them, and that the said judgment in the said sum of $517.10 is therefore wholly void and of no effect, and there is nothing on which to base a lien against and upon the premises of these defendants. * * *
“Second. * * * That the said defendants J. L. Miller, O. E. Dickinson, O. A. Ruggles, and B. D. Vice, were, according to the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, contractors, and that these moving defendants were the owners of the lands hereinbefore described, and that the cause of action as set forth in plaintiff’s petition is for material above furnished for the erection of a building on the above described premises to said contractors, and that said contractors were, therefore, indispensable parties to said cause, and said cause could not proceed to trial without said contractors having been duly summoned to appear in this court to answer to saia cause of action, and that, as more fu'ly appears from the face of the plaintiff's petition, the said plaintiff has no cause of action whatever against these defendants independent of the cause of action alleged and proved against the said defendants J. L. Miller, O. E. Dickinson, G. A. Ruggles and B. D. Vice; 4 * * and that the pretended Judgment * * * is wholly void.”

A motion to vacate a judgment is in all respects to be treated as a petition, and if it fails to set up any proper ground for relief to the movant, as a matter of course it should be denied. A careful reading of the grounds of iiris motion will disclose that it is based upon, first, an allegation that no service of summons was had upon J. L. Miller, C. E. Dickinson, G. A. Ruggles, and B. D. Vice. Vas it absolutely necessary that summons should be served upon these parties defendant?

Section 7179, C. O. S. 1921, provides, among other things:

“In such actions all persons whose liens are filed * * shall be made parties, * * * Where such action is brought by a subcontractor, * * * such original contractor shall be made a party defendant, and shall at his own expense defend against the claim of every subcontractor, or other person claiming a lien under this chapter, and if he fails to make such defense, the owner may make the same at the expense of such contractor; * * * provided, that if the sheriff of the county in which such action is pending shall make return that he is unable to find original *101 contractor, the court may proceed to adjudicate the liens upon the land and render judgment to enforce the same with costs.”

It is entirely clear that a service of summons on these defendants was not indispensable. The full requirement of the statute was met when the summons was issued, and the same was either served on the defendants or by a return by the sheriff that he was unable to find the original contractors, in which latter event the court could proceed to judgment as effectively as to the fixing and foreclosing of the lien as if personal service had been had, or a personal appearance had been made by such defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 192, 265 P. 637, 130 Okla. 99, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-spurrier-lbr-co-okla-1928.