Harrison v. Reed

1921 OK 67, 197 P. 159, 81 Okla. 149, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1921
Docket11395
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1921 OK 67 (Harrison v. Reed) 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
Harrison v. Reed, 1921 OK 67, 197 P. 159, 81 Okla. 149, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 112 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This cause is presented on the motion of deienuant in error Frank H. Reed to dismiss this appeal for failure to mane and serve case-maue within the s.attt-tory period of time, or within any extension of uiue allowed uy tiie court.

On the 4th day of November, 1919, judgment was rendered in favor of defendant in error Frank H. Reed, and against plaintiff, Willie Harrison, who is plaintiff in error in this court. For convenience we will refer to Willie Harrison as plaintiff, the same as he appeared in the court below, and our reference to defendant will mean Frank H. Reed, who was one of the defendants in the court below, and the only one against whom this appeal is prosecuted.

Judgment was rendered and motion for new trial overruled on November 4, 1919, and 3u days given in whicn to make and serve case-made and file supersedeas bond.

On the 8th day of November, 1919, the court made a further order:

“That the plaintiff have and he is hereby given thirty days from and after the time allowed by law to prepare and serve case-made in said cause. * * *”

On November 28, 1919, the plaintiff made the following application for extension of time to make and serve case-made and to file supersedeas bond:

“Comes now the plaintiff in the above entitled cause and makes this, his application for an extension of time to make and serve case-made and. also extension to file supersedeas bond, and for grounds of said application states: .
“That the stenographer has informed him that he will be unable to prepare case-made in said cause within the time heretofore al *150 lowed;, by the court,: or the time allowed by; law.
.“And’that he has not had sufficient time to file, supersedeas bond in said cause.
. “Wherefore he asks that- he be granted an, extension of ninety days to make, pre-. pare and serve case-made in said cause, from and after the time heretofore allowed, and asks an- extension of ten days from this date to file supersedeas bond.' »
“Dated this the 28th day of November, A. D. 1919.”

On the same day, November 28, 1919, pursuant to said application, the judge made the following orde r:

“Now on this the 28th day of November, 1919. came on to be heard before me, in chambers at Ada, Oklahoma, the application of the plaintiff for an extension- of time to make and serve case-made and an extension to file supersedeas bond, and the court being fully advised in the premises is of the opinion that said application should be granted.
“It is..therefore considered, ordered and adjudged, that the plaintiff have and he is hereby given ninety days from and after this dáte to prepare and s'-rve case-made in said cause, and the defendant is given ten days after the service of the case-made upon him to suggest amendments, and the case to be settled upon five days’ notice by either party.
“It is further ordered that the plaintiff is given ten days from this date in which to file ' supersedeas bond.”

(This order appears on page 208 of case-made.)

The record shows that the case-made was served on Wilmott & Roberts, attorneys for defendant, Frank H. Reed, on the 28th day of February, 1920.

Plain tiff contends that the motion to dis-mss depends upon the construction of the words “tlis date” as used in the order of November 28, 19Í9.

If the words “this d^te” refer to the 28th day of November, 1919. the case-made not having been served until the 28th day -of February, 1920. it is manifest the ease-made was not served in time and this court did not acquire jurisdiction of this action and the appeal should be dismissed. Cook v. Cook, 79 Okla. 222, 192 Pac. 215; Greco v. Kool Kola Co.. 79 Okla. 120, 191 Pac. 1036; Durant v. Stanfield, 77 Okla. 112, 186 Pac. 939; Cripple Creek Oil Co. v. King, 76 Okla. 316, 185 Pac. 439; King v. Pool, 49 Okla. 537, 153 Pac. 860: Samuel Dodsworth v. Fulcher, 80 Okla. 96; Folsome v. Billy, 78 Okla. 146, 189 Pac. 188; Parker v. Wadleigh, 43 Okla. 180, 141 Pac. 781.

Plaintiff’s contentions are best set forth by quoting from his brief. He sets out a copy of the order made on November 28, 1919, and then states as follows:

“This order finds that ‘said application should be granted’ and then grants the same in the language set forth in the second paragraph of the order just quoted. If the court, granted the application, as he finds should' be done, the order extended the time to make and serve case-made ‘ninety days from and after the time heretofore allowed,’ as that is the language of the application. We here quote the language of the application, to wit:
“ Wherefore he asks that he be granted an extension of ninety days to make, prepare and serve case-made in said cause, from and after the time heretofore allowed.’ Case-made, page 206.
“The time heretofore allowed expired on December 4, 1919,-and the ninety days' extension carried the time for serving the case-made several days beyond the 28th day of February, 1920, the day on which the same was served. In order to set this out more plainly we will copy the first paragraph of the court’s order and insert in parenthesis the reasonable construction of this order:
“ ‘Now on this the 28th day of November, 1919. came on to be heard before me, in chambers at Ada, Oklahoma, the application of the plaintiff for an extension of time to make and serve case-made and an extension to file supersedeas bond, and the court being • fully advised in the 'premises is of the opinion that said application (asking tint he be granted an extension of ninety days to make, prepare and serve case-made in said cause; from and after the time heretofore allowed — December 4, 1919 * * *) should be granted.’
“The court’s intention and finding was to grant the application in its entirety, if not, the court would not have said, ‘is of the 'opinion that said application should be (granted,’ and would then have fixed the time as ‘ninety days from the date of, this ’order,’ or such other time as the court thought proper.
“The defendant in error seeks to construe the words ‘this date’ as meaning and referring to the date of the order extending the time, and render a nullity of that part of the order which says, ‘and the court being fully advised in the premises is of. the opinion that said application should be granted.’ which can have no other meaning or construction whatsoever except that the plaintiff in error, /be granted an extension of ninety days to make, prepare and serve case-made in said cause, from and after, the time heretofore allowed,’ i. e., from and after December 4, 1919. The last date referred to in the order preceding the words ‘this date’ is the finding that the request for the 'ninety days’ extension from December 4, 1919, should be granted. With these facts before us it is simply a matter of law whether the words, in the order ‘this date’ *151

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 67, 197 P. 159, 81 Okla. 149, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-reed-okla-1921.