Hughes v. Owl Oil Co.

1948 OK 160, 197 P.2d 292, 200 Okla. 493, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 29, 1948
DocketNos. 33139, 33140
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1948 OK 160 (Hughes v. Owl Oil Co.) 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
Hughes v. Owl Oil Co., 1948 OK 160, 197 P.2d 292, 200 Okla. 493, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 346 (Okla. 1948).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

On January 22, 1944, plaintiff, C. W. Hughes, commenced an action against the defendant, Owl Oil Company, in the district court of Tulsa county. In his petition he alleged that defendant was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Texas, with its principal office and place of business at Amarillo, Tex., and that it had transacted business in the State of Oklahoma without qualifying to transact such business, as required by the laws of this state. Summons issued directing the sheriff of Oklahoma county to notify Owl Oil Company of Amarillo, Tex., by serving the Secretary of State of the State of Oklahoma, that it had been sued by plaintiff, which summons was served on the Secretary of State. Thereafter, on November 26, 1945, plaintiff took a default judgment against defendant. On April 30, 1946, Otis L. Williams, M. R. Williams, and W. W. Woolsey, as trustees under the laws of the State of Texas for Owl Oil Company, filed a petition to vacate and set aside the judgment on the ground that the corporation had been dissolved on the 31st day of December, 1943; that petitioners were the trustees for said dissolved corporation under the laws of the State of Texas; that neither petitioners nor said corporation had any notice of the filing of this action, and that their failure to appear and defend the action was due to unavoidable casualty and misfortune. They further pleaded that plaintiff had filed a suit on the same cause of action against the corporation in the Federal court of Texas, in which action judgment had been rendered for defendant, and that same was a sufficient defense to the present action. Upon a hearing the trial court set aside and vacated the default judgment. Plaintiff appeals separately from the denial of his motion for con[494]*494tinuance and from the order vacating the judgment.

Plaintiff’s first contention is that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for continuance and to strike the cause from the trial assignment. This motion was filed in the case on December 2, 1946, the day on which the petition to vacate the judgment was set for trial, and the grounds of said motion were that the cause was not included in the trial docket made up by the court clerk at least twelve days before the July, 1946, term of court, and that the trial court had not made a specific order which appeared on the journal or docket of the court setting the cause for trial on December 2, 1946, or that if such an order was made it was entered without notice and without opportunity for plaintiff to be heard with respect to the setting.

Plaintiff urges that such order is required by the provisions of 12 O.S. 1941 §§663 and 666, and that in construing these sections this court has always required that a case be set by order of the court. In support of this assertion plaintiff cites Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Vandivere, 42 Okla. 427, 141 P. 799; Cherry v. Milam, 66 Okla. 162, 168 P. 241; Eagle Loan & Investment Co. v. Turner, 113 Okla. 251, 241 P. 138, and Colley v. Sapp. 90 Okla. 139, 216 P. 454. Examination of these cases discloses that while in the Vandivere case the opinion shows that the trial court on its own motion set the case for trial, and that in Eagle Loan & Investment Co. v. Turner an entry was made upon the appearance docket assigning the cause to be tried, there is nothing in the cited cases to indicate that this court has construed those statutes as imposing upon the trial court a mandatory duty to make a specific order setting each case upon the docket for trial. The statutes themselves, in our opinion, are not susceptible of such construction, but place upon the court clerk the duty of setting cases for trial subject, of course, to the right of the trial court to change the order in which they may be tried or the time of trial of any of them, either upon his own motion or upon a specific showing that such change is necessary or desirable.

In the instant case it is conceded that the attorney for petitioners, after the issues had been made up for more than the statutory length of time, filed with the court clerk a request that the matter be set for trial on the non jury docket; that prior to the making of such request he talked to one of the attorneys for plaintiff and had what amounted to an agreement that the matter might be set about that time; that he thereafter notified the said attorney by letter that the case had been set on the specific date, and that no objection to that setting was made. This letter was dated November 6, 1946. Also it was stipulated by plaintiff’s attorney that notice of the setting was published in the Tulsa Daily Legal News, the paper in which dockets set were customarily published, beginning with the issue of November 7, 1946, and continuing in each issue until November 30, 1946. The motion filed by plaintiff did not allege or set forth any prejudice of any kind to plaintiff by reason of the setting, or that plaintiff for any reason could not properly prepare his case for trial on that date. Nor was it shown at the trial that any prejudice resulted to plaintiff from such setting.

In Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Vandivere, supra, we held that a judgment would not be reversed merely upon the contention that the trial docket was not made out as required by law, when it did not appear from the record that such contention was true, or that the complaining party was substantially prejudiced thereby if the contention were true.

In Gill v. Meis, 158 Okla. 154, 12 P. 2d 692, we held that if the statutes above mentioned had not been complied with in the setting of cases the judgment could be set aside “unless such aggrieved person had actual notice of [495]*495the trial in time to appear and defend or prosecute his case”, citing Nation v. Savely, 127 Okla. 117, 260 P. 32, and McKinney v. Swift, 135 Okla. 164, 274 P. 659.

Examination of the record in this case discloses that plaintiff failed to establish that the setting of the case for trial was not made in compliance with the statutory provisions above referred to, and wholly failed to establish that any prejudice resulted to him from the setting. It also affirmatively appears that his attorneys had actual notice of the setting of the case in ample time to enable them to prepare for trial. It follows that this contention of plaintiff may not be sustained.

Plaintiff also asserts that the matter was a jury case and that he did not waive a jury. In this respect the record discloses that in the written notice of the setting of the case for trial given to plaintiff’s attorney by the attorneys for petitioners, attention was called to the fact that the case was placed on the nonjury docket, and that if plaintiffs attorney was not in agreement that the case should be set on the nonjury docket, the attorneys for petitioners would like to talk the matter over with him; that plaintiff’s attorney made no objection to the setting on the nonjury docket, and that in a statement to the court during the trial of the case plaintiffs attorney made the following statement:

“I think that this court is now sitting in what we would think of as an equity court, and any matters that are addressed in the way of setting aside this judgment would be addressed to the discretion of the court sitting as an equitable court, . . .”

It therefore appears that plaintiff, by appearing without objection and participating in the hearing as an equitable proceeding, may not now contend that he was entitled to a jury trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1948 OK 160, 197 P.2d 292, 200 Okla. 493, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-owl-oil-co-okla-1948.