Heiny v. Sommers

1928 OK 421, 268 P. 287, 131 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 19, 1928
Docket18313
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1928 OK 421 (Heiny v. Sommers) 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
Heiny v. Sommers, 1928 OK 421, 268 P. 287, 131 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 628 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

W. N. Sommers brought suit in district court of Oklahoma county against T. H. Heiny, Walter Benson, justice of the peace for Oklahoma City district, and others, to vacate a judgment rendered in said justice of peace court on November 30, 1923, in an action wherein Heiny was plaintiff and W. N. Sommers was defendant. The parties will be referred to in the order in which they appeared in trial court.

The petition, omitting formal parts, set out in substance: That plaintiff was an actual bona fide resident of Ponca City, Kay county. Okla., and that defendant Walter Benson, since January 23, 1927, has been a justice of the peace in Oklahoma City justice district, and that during the year 1923, and up to the 3rd of January, 1927, one A. T. Early was justice of the peace in said justice district, county and state aforesaid, with an office in Oklahoma City; that upon the election of Walter Benson as justice, the records, dockets and files of said Early, justice, passed into and have remained in the hands of said Benson.

There appeared on said records under cause No. 5981, entitled T. H. Heiny v. L. A. Sommers and W. N. Sommers, a purported judgment rendered against W. N.' Sommers in favor of plaintiff therein under date of November 30, 1923; that said judgment appeared to have been rendered upon default in appearance, and the records recited that summons was served on plaintiff herein as defendant therein by delivering a copy thereof to said L. A. Sommers, wife of this plaintiff, in Oklahoma county, Okla., on November 12, 1923; that said judgment is void for that said court acquired no jurisdiction over defendant therein; that plaintiff, *215 W. N. Sommers, wás at all times during the year 1923, prior and subsequent thereto, a resident of Ponca Qity, Kay county, Okla., where he maintained his permanent residence; that during all said period L. A. Sommers was plaintiff’s wife, but under an agreement they lived separate and apart from each other, the said L. A. Sommers residing in Oklahoma City, and that said parties maintained separate places of residence; that the said judgment was based upon a claim that defendant therein was in debt to plaintiff for certain moneys loaned, whereas plaintiff herein alleges that he did not know Tom Heiny or Walter Benson, and that he has a good defense to said claim, to wit, that no transaction was ever had by this plaintiff or his agent with said Heiny, and that nothing of value ever passed or was to pass between plaintiff and said Heiny, who knew that said plaintiff herein did not reside in Oklahoma City, and that said summons as to plaintiff herein was a nullity and was a fraud upon the court, and this plaintiff, who was not present at trial in person or by attorney and did not know of the purported judgment until the time of filing of this cause; that said Heiny and Walter Benson, justice, are now seeking to enforce the purported judgment by garnishments against tenants of plaintiff, and unless restrained will collect said unlawful judgment, and that plaintiff will suffer irreparable loss. Wherefore, plaintiff prays that defendants be restrained, etc. The petition is verified. Defendant demurred on February 7, 1927, upon various grounds, among others, that the action was barred by statute of limitations. On February 10, 1927, by leave, plaintiff amended his petition, and on February 12th defendants filed their answer consisting of, first, a general denial; second, an admission that judgment against plaintiff herein was taken which is alleged to be valid; third, that the judgment was not a default judgment, but that plaintiff was represented at trial by counsel, and that service of summons was regular, and finally that plaintiff had knowledge of the existence of said judgment, for more than -three years subsequent to the date thereof, and that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by laches.

The evidence, both on the part of plaintiff and on the part of defendant, in so far as the same affects the crucial issues in this law suit, may be summarized as follows: That W. N. Sommers and L. A. Sommers were husband and wife and lived together until 1916 in Oklahoma City; they had a married daughter, Maud. The husband and wife mutually agreed in 1916 to live separate and apart, and from that time until June, 1924, when they resumed their marital relations, neither ever occupied the home of the other. The husband was a traveling salesman and lived about over his territory. His last residence before the resumption of relations with his wife was at Ponca City, Okla., to which place he went early in 1923, at which place he had his room, received his mail, and made his business headquarters. He came occasionally to Oklahoma City, four or five times a year, principally to see his employer, Miller-Jackson Company, and upon such visits went to see his married daughter occasionally at her home at 608 East Eighth street, in Oklahoma City, and a part of which time his wife resided with the daughter.

The husband, so far as the proof goes, never spent a night or took a meal with his wife during the time of the separation. The wife was engaged in her own separate occupation during the separation period, and lived at various places within the state of Oklahoma — Duncan, McAlester, Lawton, Muskogee, and Oklahoma City. The proof is that it was a matter of common knowledge that they were separated and had been for years. .This was testified to by those living in the same house with the daughter and with the wife and her near neighbors When the husband came to Oklahoma City, he stopped at one of the hotels. The testimony of plaintiff is further to the effect that he never borrowed any money from Tom Heiny, had never had any transactions with him, had never seen him but once, and did not know Justice Walter Benson; that he did not know that he had been sued in Justice Early’s court, or that judgment had been taken against him there until January, 1927, immediately before the filing of this suit; that he knew nothing of any litigation betwen his wife and Tom Heiny. The substance of this testimony was given also by Charles B. Selby, attorney for plaintiff herein, who represented Mrs. L. A. Sommers in a suit in justice court filed by Tom Heiny, wherein, a judgment was taken against Mrs. Sommers and not as to her herein sought to be vacated; that the cause proceeded to trial and judgment without any mention of the name or liability of W. N. Sommers, and that he learned of the judgment in January, 1927, and immediately brought this suit.

The constable who made the service of process in the suit of Heiny v. Sommers in Early’s court has no independent recollection of the same, but he delivered the summons addressed to W. N. Sommers to Mrs. *216 Sommers at 608 East Eighth street, Oklahoma City; secured the location from the telephone directory.

It is shown also that this was the only service or attempted service had on W. N. Sommers. At the conclusion of the evidence the court made certain findings of fact set out in the journal entry to the effect that W. N. Sommers and wife had been separated for years; that the summons was not delivered to his wife at the usual residence of the plaintiff herein; that he had no knowledge of the judgment, and that said Sommers had not been served with process; had not appeared in court; that the judgment should be vacated and that Tom Heiny and Walter Benson should be enjoined from colleoting or attempting to enforce the judgment rendered in Early’s court..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 421, 268 P. 287, 131 Okla. 214, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heiny-v-sommers-okla-1928.