Hendrickson v. Brown

1901 OK 33, 65 P. 935, 11 Okla. 41, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1901 OK 33 (Hendrickson v. Brown) 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
Hendrickson v. Brown, 1901 OK 33, 65 P. 935, 11 Okla. 41, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 5 (Okla. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion of tbe conrt by

Burford, C. J.:

On April 24, 1899, the plaintiff in-error, T. J. Hendrickson, filed his petition in the district, court of Oklahoma county, against the defendant in error, Warren H. Brown, in which he alleged that on the 18th day of November, 1897, he purchased from the defendant. Brown, certain real estate situated in Oklahoma county, in the Territory of Oklahoma, and on the same day Brown executed and delivered to him a warranty deed conveying said real estate to plaintiff. That as consideration for said real estate he paid said Brown the sum of twelve hundred ($1,200) dollars cash, and endorsed and delivered to Brown two promissory notes executed by one Samuel 0. May, for *42 the sum of $150 each, due one and two years after date, respectively. That in order to induce plaintiff to purchase said land, the defendant knowingly made certain false and fraudulent representations as to the location and boundaries of said land, and as to certain improvements thereon, which, if true, rendered such land much more valuable than it in fact was; that he relied upon said representations and believed them to be true, until some time after such purchase was made, when he discovered that said representations were false. That as soon as he made such discovery, he executed a good and sufficient warranty deed reconveying said real estate to.the defendant, and tendered the same to him, and •at the same timé demanded the return of the purchase money •and notes, or, if said notes could not be returned, the cash in lieu thereof; he also tendered the rental value of the land during the time he held possession of the same. The defendant refused to accept the deed or return any part of the consideration, and the plaintiff prays for a rescission of the contract, and for a judgment for the $1,200 cash paid, •and a return of said notes, or if said notes have been paid or transferred, that he recover the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.

At the same time the plaintiff filed the necessary affidavits and procured an attachment to issue against the property of the defendant. The defendant moved to discharge the attachment, upon the ground that said action is not one for the recovery of money, but is one for the rescission of a contract, and one in which plaintiff is not entitled to an attachment. The court sustained this motion, and ordered the attachment discharged. From this order the plaintiff appeals.

*43 The record presents but the single question: Does our statute authorize an attachment in the case presented by the plaintiff in his petition?

Section 190, Civil Code, Stat. 1893, p. 791, provides:

“The plaintiff in a civil action .for the recovery of money may at or after the commencement thereof, have an attachment against the property of the defendant, and upon the grounds herein stated.”

Then follows the several grounds for which an attachment may issue. There is no limitation in the statute as to the character of civil actions for the recovery of money necessary to entitle the plaintiff to the remedy of attachment. .All that is required is that it must be a civil action, and must be for the recovery of money. It need not be an action for the recovery of “money only,” nor for the recovery of '“money alone,” as is the case in a great many other statutes.

Section 10, Civil Code, abolishes all distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and the forms of all such actions and suits, and substitutes therefor one form of action, called a civil action. The term “civil action” embraces every form and character of action at law, or suit in equity, rthat was known to legal jurisprudence prior to the enactment •of the civil code. It embraces actions ex contractu, ex .delictu, suits in equity, mixed actions, and all their various modifications. In every civil action for the recovery of money the plaintiff may have an attachment. It is immaterial whether it be an action on contract, an action to recover ■damages for a tort or an action for equitable relief. If the •facts stated will entitle the plaintiff to a personal money judgment, then he comes within the statutory provisions entitling *44 him to the remedy by attachment. The legislature has not seen fit to place any limitation upon the character of action or the relief or remedy sought, except that it must be an action for the “recovery of money,” and the courts have no-power to further limit or nullify the plain and unambiguous, provisions of the statute.

It is conceded that, as a general rule, attachment will! not be permitted in actions of equitable cognizance, but attachment is not a common law remedy or right; it is of statutory origin, and is regulated by statute. Each state has-its own peculiar provisions on the subject, and the decisions-deal with these various statutes. All have some provisions in, common, but there is enough variance in the statutes of the several states to render the adjudications of little value as-precedents.

Our own statute was adopted from Kansas, which state-still has the same statute. The Ohio statute is almost identical. The Indiana statute is similar, and the New York statute, prior to its amendment in 1866, was practically the-same as Indiana. Nebraska also has a similar statute, but. by reason of some legislative changes, it has been generally given a different construction from that of other states.

While the adjudicated cases are not always clear and decisive of the point under consideration, they furnish valuable-information, and materially aid in determining the proper-interpretation of our own statute.

In the case of Ward & Co., v. Howard et al. 12 Ohio St. 158, it was said by the. supreme court of Ohio:

“An attachment is allowed to the plaintiff in a civil ac *45 ~tion fox tbe recovery of money. Sec. 191. The different .grounds for an attachment are stated in the subdivisions of that section, and among them is. ‘that the defendant, or one •of several defendants is a foreign corporation or non-resident of this state/ But it is provided that no attachment shall be granted on that ground, ‘for any claim other than debt or demand arising upon contract, judgment or decree/ The ■conclusion follows, that if the action be for the recovery of money, though not for a debt or demand arising upon contract, judgment or decree, an attachment may be obtained. 'This conclusion is strengthened by the consideration that the next section of the statute provides that the affidavit for an attachment among other things must show the nature of the plaintiff’s claim, that it is just, and ‘the amount which the affiant believes the plaintiff ought to recover/
“It is obvious that an intention is manifested to extend '■the remedy by attachment, and that in no stinted measure. ' * * * * An obligation to deliver propeny gives to the party entitled to receive it, a claim, the nature and ¿amount of which may be stated, and if the obligation be not ■complied with, an action for money to the extent of the value ■of the property may be sustained.”

The case of Goble v. Howard et al. 12 Ohio St.

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Bluebook (online)
1901 OK 33, 65 P. 935, 11 Okla. 41, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrickson-v-brown-okla-1901.