Hyre v. Pratt

1963 OK 91, 382 P.2d 18, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 16, 1963
Docket39903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1963 OK 91 (Hyre v. Pratt) 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
Hyre v. Pratt, 1963 OK 91, 382 P.2d 18, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 387 (Okla. 1963).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Garvin County granting a peremptory writ of mandamus ordering Clarence Hyre, City Treasurer (defendant below) to pay a judgment in favor of Robert O. Pratt et al. (plaintiffs below) from the sinking fund of the City of Pauls Valley.

Plaintiffs had filed a prior replevin action in said court against the City of Pauls Valley wherein they claimed ownership of the lines, pipes and material constituting a water distribution system and that the city wrongfully retained possession of the same, and plaintiffs asked for a judgment for possession or in lieu thereof the value of the water system. A trial was held in this replevin action and resulted in a judgment on July 29, 1960, finding plaintiffs were the owners and entitled to possession of enumerated lines, pipes and material, which were in the possession of the city, and also the value thereof, and a judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs for possession or in lieu thereof the value, after allowance for all credits,, in the sum of $9462.48 with interest at 6% from October 6, 1958. The city did not appeal and the judgment became final.

Thereafter and on April 28, 1961, the plaintiffs filed the instant mandamus action *21 against the defendant City Treasurer, alleging and attaching as an exhibit the judgment in the replevin action; that execution in replevin had been issued and returned uns'atisfied; that the city had a surplus in its sinking fund sufficient to pay the judgment; and praying that defendant be required to pay such judgment. The defendant’s “response” to the alternative writ of mandamus took issue with the statement of surplus in the sinking fund and further alleged that the liability of the city under the replevin judgment was a “contingent liability only;” that the city was without funds to effect delivery, but had offered the use of its equipment to plaintiffs to remove the pipes, etc. from their buried location; and further:

“Defendant further alleges that the liability of the City in connection with said judgment is at this time contingent only for the further and additional reason that due to the large number of inhabitants residing in the area where the water line is located that said water line should not be removed without making other provisions for the distribution of water for the people residing in said area; and the defendant City of Pauls Valley, Oklahoma, has had no funds from which it could pay such expenses.”

Trial was had upon the issues made by the pleadings and from our examination of the record we conclude that the trial court allowed the parties great latitude in the introduction of testimony and evidence. In the final judgment on June 29, 1961, the trial court found the judgment in the prior replevin action was a valid and final judgment and that the property involved could not be restored to plaintiffs in its former condition, “and was not restored to the plaintiffs;” that the sinking fund had sufficient cash on hand to pay the judgment after all other obligations for bonds and interest coupons or any other obligations have been paid; and by mandamus directed the defendant City Treasurer to pay plaintiffs’ judgment from said sinking fund.

The defendant did not file motion for a new trial and then appeal from the order overruling the same but appealed direct from the judgment by case made. In this connection the attorney for defendant stated several times in the record that the appeal was not on any controverted questions of fact and that the appeal was entirely on legal questions.

In Staten v. McMahan, Okl., 337 P.2d 440, we stated:

“Errors occurring during the trial of a case cannot be considered in this court unless a motion for a new trial founded upon and including such errors has been made by the party complaining and presented to the trial court and by it denied.”

In Kellogg v. School District No. 10, 13 Okl. 285, 74 P. 110, we held:

“Where error is apparent upon the face of the judgment roll or record proper, no motion for a new trial is necessary in order to have the judgment reviewed.”

See also Oxford v. State, 80 Okl. 103, 194 P. 101, and Deering v. Meyers, 29 Okl. 232, 116 P. 793.

The evidence at the trial did present controverted questions of fact as hereinafter set forth and the trial court based his conclusions upon said evidence.

Under these authorities this court will not go into the sufficiency of the evidence, but will limit its inquiry to errors of law, if any, appearing on the face of the record.

It is obvious and in fact it is admitted that the circumstances that caused the plaintiffs to commence the replevin suit were similar to those facing the parties in Selected Investments Corp. v. City of Lawton, Okl., 304 P.2d 967, with the difference that in the present situation it was admitted that plaintiffs were the owners of the water system. Plaintiffs relied upon the cited decision in prosecuting their replevin action and it was not denied that the judgment in the replevin action was founded upon the legal conclusions contained in that decision.

*22 For the purpose of brevity we will treat a number of defendant’s assignments of error as one proposition. Defendant contends that the City has done all that it is legally required to do and that only that portion of the replevin judgment awarding possession of the material to plaintiffs is valid and binding on the city.

The replevin judgment found and adjudged that the city had possession of the property and that plaintiffs have the immediate possession or in lieu thereof its value, after allowing all credits, of $9462.48. That judgment became final. The mandamus judgment in the instant appeal found the property could not he restored to plaintiffs in its former condition, and was not restored to plaintiffs. These adjudications were based on evidence and cannot now he inquired into because of finality of the first judgment and because in the present appeal no motion for new trial was filed.

In Wortham v. Mathews, 207 Okl. 466, 250 P.2d 428, this court stated:

“In a replevin action, where an alternative judgment has been rendered against a party,, for the return of the property taken or its value, it is the duty of such unsuccessful litigant to promptly, and in good faith, tender the property in substantially the same condition and of substantially the same value as when the property was obtained by him, and upon his failure to make such delivery he becomes liable for the full adjudicated value.”

We also held in the cited case that the value of the property as fixed by the replevin judgment was final and conclusive where no appeal was taken.

Our statute, 12 O.S.1961 § 1580, provides in part that in an action for possession of personal property, judgment for the plaintiff may be for the possession, or for the recovery of possession, or the value thereof in case a delivery cannot be had.

In Morley v. Bowline, 172 Okl.

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1963 OK 91, 382 P.2d 18, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyre-v-pratt-okla-1963.