Hinds v. Atlas Acceptance Corporation

1936 OK 723, 63 P.2d 29, 178 Okla. 474, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1936
DocketNo. 26803.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1936 OK 723 (Hinds v. Atlas Acceptance Corporation) 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
Hinds v. Atlas Acceptance Corporation, 1936 OK 723, 63 P.2d 29, 178 Okla. 474, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 865 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

This case is presented to this court on appeal from a judgment of the court of common pleas of Oklahoma conniy. If was instituted in the lower court on the 8th day of February, 1935, by J. C. Hinds, as plaintiff, against A. W. Wilson, as defendant. Plaintiff’s action was based upon alleged fraud and deceit asserted to have been practiced upon him by the defendant, a nonresident of the state of Oklahoma. At the commencement of the action an automobile was attached under process of the trial court. On March 8, 1935, the cause was tried to a jury in the trial court and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $261.30. In the meantime F. M. Taber filed another suit in the trial court against A. W. Wilson and also against W. Elmer Jones and Russell Shepherd.

The same automobi’e was seized under another attachment issued at the commencement of that action. It is not clear from the record before us whether a final judgment was ever obtained in the suit commenced by Taber.

After the judgment had been obtained in the case commenced by J. 0. Hinds, the Atlas Acceptance Corporation, a Utah corporation, filed its interplea in the action asserting its right to possession and special ownership of the automobile by virtue of a conditional sales contract executed by itself, as seller, and A. W. Wilson, as purchaser. This conditional sales agreement was alleged to have been executed on August 21, 1934, at Salt Lake City, Utah. A similar interplea was filed in the action commenced by F. M. Taber. By order of the trial court the two actions were consolidated for the purpose of trial to determine the rights of the in-terpleader

On June 3, 1935, the cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. At the close of the evidence offered by the Atlas Acceptance Corporation, J. C. Hinds and F. M. Taber demurred thereto. The demurrer was overruled. The challenging parties elected to stand upon their demurrer, whereupon judgment was entered in favor of the interpleader.

In the petition in error the names of J. C. Hinds and F. M. Taber are both inserted as plaintiffs in error. In its brief the Atlas Acceptance Corporation points out, however, that J. C. Hinds alone and acting individually procured extensions of time in which to prepare and serve case-made and that such essential extensions of time were not procured for or on behalf of F. M. Taber. These complaints are in the nature, though not in the form, of a motion to dismiss the *475 appeal as to E. M. Taber. The motion, being well taken, is sustained.

Our consideration of the merits of this case is thus limited to the controversy be-1ween J. O. Hinds and the Atlas Acceptance Corporation. In presenting the appeal to this court Mr. Hinds contends, in substance, first, that it was improper to permit the At las Acceptance Corporation to interpl-'fid in the action commenced by him after he had obtained a judgment; second, that the trial court committed error in consolidating tin two actions for the purpose of trial upon the interplea; third,'that the trial court erroneously permitted the interpleader to prove the law of Utah with reference to the recording of conditional sales contracts on automobiles in the absence of a pleading setting forth such law, and that the only proof offered upon the subject was that of a lay witness who was incompetent to testify to th© same.

In response to these respective contentions, the defendant in error, Atlas Acceptance Corporation, submits the cause and briefs the case upon the following three counterpropositions:

“(a) The Atlas Acceptance Corporation properly interpleaded.
“(b) There was no error in consolidating the causes.
“(c) The Utah law governs and is controlling and conclusive in favor of the in-terpleader.”

W© shall pass for the present the first two contentions on th© part of Mr. Hinds and the corresponding eounterprópositions on the part of the Atlas Acceptance Corporation.

It will be seen that under eounterproposition (c) we are asked to affirm the judgment and decision of the trial court solely upon consideration of the law of the state of Utah. It is asserted that under that law it was unnecessary for the interpleader to file its conditional -sales contract in the office of the county clerk in order to render it valid as against innocent purchasers or creditors of the vendee, as it is required under the laws of this state under section 11906, O. S. 1931. It is contended that the only filing permitted or required in the state of Utah of such instruments is the production and exhibition thereof to the State Tax Commission of that state.

In the trial of this case it was established by the evidence that the instrument in ques-rion was not otherwise filed. It was stipulated between the parties that the automobile herein involved was first brought into this state on January 22, 1935, less than 30 days prior to the time it was subjected to attachment. It is contended, and as we understand the briefs conceded, that it was unnecessary by reason of the short time which elapsed subsequent to the arrival of the automobile in this state that the contract should have been refiled in this state in order to protect the seller, provided the contract had been properly filed in the state of Utah. This by virtue of section 11279, O. S. 1931, considered in conjunction with section 11906, O. S. 1931. See Arnold et al. v. Wittie et al., 99 Okla. 236, 227 P. 132.

J. C. Hinds, the plaintiff in error, asserts that if th© laws of the state of Oklahoma were applied to this transaction, his rights in the automobile as an attaching creditor would be superior to those of the seller under the conditional sales contract. This assertion is not disputed in the brief of the Atlas Acceptance Corporation. We therefore treat this contention as conceded and refrain from a discussion thereof.

This brings us to a consideration of the question: Are the laws of Utah properly before us for consideration in support of the judgment of the trial court?

The question: What is the law of a sister state? is a question of fact as distinguished from a question of law, and the statutes of another state must be pleaded in order to be proved. Dunham et al. v. Holloway, 3 Okla. 244, 41 P. 140; Mansur-Tebbetts Imp. Co. v. Willet, 10 Okla. 383, 61 P. 1066; Betz v. Wilson, 17 Okla. 383, 87 P. 844. See, also, Arnold et al. v. Wittie, supra.

In the absence of such pleading and proof the laws of sister states, including its general statutes, are presumed to be the same as the laws of this state. 22 C. J. 151, et seq. This presumption was applied by this court to usury statutes in the case of Betz v. Wilson, supra, and to statutes requiring the filing of conditional sales contracts in the ease of Arnold v. Wittie, supra. It is applicable to this cáse unless the statutes of Utah are proporly before us for consideration. If applicable, it determines the appeal by reason of interpleader’s failure to dispute that upon application of the law of this state, Hinds should prevail.

An examination of the pleadings of the Atlas Acceptance Corporation discloses that, while it is therein asserted that the contract was executed in Utah, there is no allusion to the law of Utah as established by legis- *476

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 723, 63 P.2d 29, 178 Okla. 474, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinds-v-atlas-acceptance-corporation-okla-1936.