Hoskins v. Peak

1924 OK 654, 228 P. 478, 100 Okla. 124, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 939
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 1, 1924
Docket13495
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1924 OK 654 (Hoskins v. Peak) 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
Hoskins v. Peak, 1924 OK 654, 228 P. 478, 100 Okla. 124, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 939 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

This is an appeal- by Nora G. Hoskins, plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, from a judgment in the district court of Oklahoma county, in favor of Dan Morrissey, one of the defendants in error and one of the defendants below, and the parties will be referred to as they appeared in. the trial court.

The action was brought February 28, Í921, and was for the purpose of quieting title in certain real estate in Oklahoma county.

The facts involved are substantially as follows:

In 1935, the defendant Dan Morrissey brought suit against D. A. Shriver and his wife to foreclose a real estate mortgage on the land involved in this action, and various c-ther piersons were made parties to close out any equities they might have, one of said parties being J. O. Severns of Oklahoma City; said suit being numbered in the district court as 15995, and on February 3, 1915, judgment was rendered in said court against Dias A. Shriver, for $2,333, with interest and attorneys fees, and foreclosing the mortgage lien> against all the parties defendant.

On August 7, 1915, an execution against Dias A. Shriver and the property described in the mortgage was issued, and after due notice the property was sold under the execution, and on September 13, 1915, a motion was filed to approve the sheriff’s sale, and September 17, 1915, the purchaser, C. W. Fla-herty, filed objections to confirmation of sale an the grounds that there were other liens that might constitute priority; other parties whose claims were denied filed objections and one J. B. Sparrow filed objections on the ground that he was the owner and holder of certain sewer warrants against said property and claiming that his lien was prior to the mortgage lien foreclosed under the judgment of February 3. 1915.

The said J. B. Sparrow was not a party to the foreclosure judgment. On April 16. 1918, an order was made overruling the motion to confirm the foreclosure sale and sustaining the motion of Sparrow to vacate the *125 judgment in so far as it affected his interest and sustaining the objections of said Sparrow to the confirmation of the. sale. On May 24, 1918, plaintiff filed his motion to vacate' the judgment as to said defendants, not including Dias Ai Shriver and his wife, which motion was on same date sustained and permission granted to file a supplemental petition against such defendants and against the defendant J. B. Sparrow. The issues were joined >on the priority of the mortgage lien and the sewer warrants lien. The case was tried on February 28, 1918, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff on his note and mortgage, but decreeing that J. B. Sparrow had á first lien on the property for the payment of the sewer tax warrants. The plaintiff in that suit, Dan Morrissey, appealed from that judgment to this court and the cause was decided against him and affirming the judgment of the lower court on February 27, 1923.

It appears from the record that the plaintiff, Nora A. Hoskins, in this case claims title to the property in controversy by a quit claim deed from Dias A. Shriver, dated December 11, 1920, and she brings this action to quiet her title on the theory that the judgment obtained in the above entitled cause •by Dan Morrissey against Dias A. Shriver and his wife was dormant.

She alleges that the said Shriver at the time the quit claim deed was executed to her was a single man, and in the quiet possession of the premises, and that she was given possession and full control of all the rights that go with and are incident to the ownership of real estate; that said D. A. Shriver derived the title from one Anna B. Shriver on October 24, 1917, by a quit claim deed and that he had been in the quiet and peaceable possession of said premises up to the time that he conveyed it by deed to the plaintiff, December 11, 1929, Elizabeth Peak, was made a party defendant because she had a quit claim deed to said four acres of real estate dated December 2, 1920, and which was executed by Annabelle Ivy, and sh« asks that his deed be canceled as a cloud upon her title. Dam Morrissey, Merchants & Planters Insurance Company, and Security Trust Company were made parties defendants, and it is alleged that they procured a judgment against Dias A. Shriver and Annabelle Shriver (Annabelle Shriver being Annabelle Ivy) on February 3, 1915, for the foreclosure of a mortgage against this land, and there has been no execution issued or revival of this judgment as to the said Dias A. Shriver for more than five years since the first execution issued, and said judgment is absolutely barred now as to the said Dias A. Shriver, and she asks that the judgment be canceled as a cloud on her title. It appears further from the record that at the time plaintiff commenced her suit that one of the defendants was in possession, and she asks for possession against him. The Security National Bank answered by general denial, and by pleading that the original judgment was unsatisfied, and denies especially that the plaintiff has any interest in and to the property and the premises, and denies that D. A. Shriver ever acquired any1 title to said prop-ety by deed from Annabelle Shriver. Elizabeth Peak answered by general and special denial that the plaintiff has any title or that D. A. Shriver had any title to said property, and she states that since December 2, 1920, she has been the owner and in possession of four acres of 'the said described premises, and that she obtained her title by a quit claim deed from Annabelle Ivy, nee Shriver, dated December 2, 1920, and made of record in the county clerk’s office, and she states that the deed claimed by the plaintiff is a cloud on her title to the four acres, and she asks that it be canceled. Dan Morrissey filed an answer consisting of a general denial.

The plaintiff contends that more than five years had elapsed from the time of issuing the last execution under the judgment recovered by said Morrissey on February 3, 1915, to the time of her purchase December 11, 1920, and that said judgment had become dormant and the lien of Morrissey thereon had been lost. The action was one of equitable recognizance, and upon hearing the issues the trial court refused to quiet title in plaintiff, and the plaintiff has brought the cause here by petition in error and case-made.

The assignments of error are as follows:

“1. The verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, or is contrary to law.
“2. Error of law, which occurred at the trial, and was excepted to by the plaintiff.
“3. The court erred in its failure to hold that the statute of limitations had run •against- the defendant, Dan Morrissey, on the judgment rendered on February 3, 1915.
“4. The court erred in holding that the said judgment was not dormant and of no effect and in overruling motion of plaintiff for a new trial.”

In passing on the assignments above presented it is only necessary for us to consider whether or not the statute of limitation had run against the judgment rendered by the district court of Oklahoma county, February 3, 1915, in favor of Dan Morrissey and against Dias A. Shriver and wife, being *126 numbered 15996. Plaintiff claims that there was but one execution issued on this judgment and the same was issued August 7, 1915.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 654, 228 P. 478, 100 Okla. 124, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskins-v-peak-okla-1924.