Jackson County Abstract Co. v. Great Plains Investments, Inc.

2007 OK CIV APP 113, 172 P.3d 237, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 24, 2007
DocketNo. 103,829
StatusPublished

This text of 2007 OK CIV APP 113 (Jackson County Abstract Co. v. Great Plains Investments, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson County Abstract Co. v. Great Plains Investments, Inc., 2007 OK CIV APP 113, 172 P.3d 237, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 87 (Okla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

CAROL M. HANSEN, Presiding Judge.

¶1 Appellant, Jackson County Abstract Company (hereafter JCAC), appeals from the trial court's Order denying JCAC's Petition for Review of Agency Action. The Petition for Review asked the trial court to vacate the order of Respondent, Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector (hereafter State Auditor), which approved the application of Respondent, Great Plains Investment (hereafter Great Plains), for a permit to build an abstract plant. We affirm the trial court's order.

T2 In December 2002, Great Plains applied to State Auditor for a permit to build an abstract plant in Jackson County, Oklahoma. State Auditor is the Oklahoma official charged with regulatory authority over the abstracting business in the state. Oklahoma Abstractor's Low (the Law), 74 0.8.2001 §§ 227.10 et seq. An "abstract plant" is defined in § 227.11 of the Law as consisting of "a set of records in which an entry has been made of all documents or matters which legally impart constructive notice of matters affecting title to real property, any interest therein or encumbrances thereon, which are filed or recorded in the offices of the county clerk and the court clerk in the county for which such abstract plant is maintained."

"T3 JCAC, which owns Jackson County's only abstracting business, filed a protest with State Auditor objecting to issuance of the permit to Great Plains. The protest was filed pursuant to Oklahoma Administrative Code (OAC) § 80:1-3-1, which is included in the rules authorized by statute and published by State Auditor "for the purpose of implementing [the Law]." See 74 O0.98.2001 § 227.18(1). A hearing examiner was appointed by State Auditor in accordance with OAC § 80:1-3-5 to hear JCAC's protest. Prior to the hearing, which was held April 17, 2004, JCAC served a subpoena duces tecum on the Jackson County Court Clerk and on the County Clerk, directing each of them to produce certain documents alleged to either be missing from their files or to have been destroyed.

T4 The list of the documents in dispute was compiled by JCAC, with the assistance of an expert who later testified at the hearing, from a "spot check" of the records in the Court Clerk's office and a review of JCAC's "track indexes", in which they "record court cases that relate to real property." In a search lasting "a couple of days", JCAC found 71 files "missing in the Court Clerk's office." Testimony from the Jackson County officials estimated there were more than 109,000 files in the Court Clerk's office and approximately 800,000 pages of records in the County Clerk's office. JCAC provided the list of 71 files to Court Clerk on April 12, 2004. By the time of the hearing on April 17th, the Court Clerk's office had been able to locate 51 of the files, leaving 20 unaccounted for at that time.

{5 When the hearing examiner stated he was going to continue the hearing to allow the Court Clerk more time to search for the [239]*23920 missing files, counsel for JCAC asked to be allowed to reopen the case if the files were found because JCAC believed further investigation would find additional files missing. In view of the large number of files involved, and the prospect of an indefinite series of finding missing files and then more files being deemed missing, JCAC and Great Plains agreed to a stipulation "that the 20 cases listed on Great Plains Exhibit A as missing, are missing and will never be found."

T6 In the "order" portion of the Hearing Examiner's Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order of Hearing Examiner, he opined, in relevant part:

... the records in the office of the District Court Clerk of Jackson County are not sufficiently complete to authorize the issuance of a permit to develop an abstract plant. However, upon the applicant's obtaining of those records otherwise unavailable from the offices of the District Court Clerk, it may request that the permit be issued. Once the applicant has satisfied the State Auditor and Inspector that all requirements for issuance of a permit have been met, including but limited to, provision of a current Abstractor's Bond and evidence the twenty specified missing records from the Jackson County Court Clerk have been obtained, the permit shall be issued.

T7 State Auditor issued his Order on May 10, 2005, essentially ratifying the Hearing Examiner's order. In his order, State Auditor directed "the permit shall be issued without further delay or further hearing" upon Great Plains satisfaction of the requirements set forth in the Hearing Examiner's order, but added, "[the Complainant (JCAC) shall have the opportunity to challenge any future filing by Applicant (Great Plains) of a Request for Renewal of the Permit as well as any Application for a Certificate of Authority to engage in the business of abstracting."

T8 JCAC requested a rehearing of State Auditor's May 10th order. State Auditor denied the application for rehearing and on July 13, 2005, JCAC filed this action in the Jackson County District Court in accordance with 75 § 318. Section 318, included in the Oklahoma Administrative Procedures Act (OAPA), 75 0.98.2001 §§ 250 et seq., allows judicial review for any party aggrieved by a final agency order in an individual proceeding.

19 JCAC asked the trial court to reverse State Auditor's order because the stipulated 20 missing files precluded issuance of a permit to build an abstract plant, citing OAC § 80:10-8-9, which provides, inter alia:

... if after an administrative hearing this office (State Auditor) determines that the records in those offices (Court and County Clerk) are incomplete; then the applicant shall obtain all those records otherwise unavailable from the offices of the District Court Clerk and County Clerk prior to the issuance of the permit.

Alternatively, if the trial court did not reverse State Auditor's order, JCAC asked the order be modified to allow it to locate additional missing files.

T 10 Great Plains and State Auditor separately responded to JCAC's Petition in the trial court. The essence of both responses, as succinctly stated in State Auditor's response, is that "the requirements to obtain a permit to develop an abstract plant are not contingent upon the completeness of anyone's records." State Auditor noted the six reasons for denying an application for such permit are statutorily set forth in § 227.22 of the Law, and that JCAC was attempting to add a seventh by asserting a showing of completeness of the Clerks' records is a mandatory prerequisite. State Auditor further noted completeness of records is one of the factors properly addressed if a permit holder seeks a "certificate of authority" to operate an abstract business.

11 The trial court, in an order filed September 19, 2006 without specific findings, denied JCAC's request that State Auditor's order be vacated. The trial court did not expressly address JCAC's alternative request that the matter be remanded for further hearing to allow it to find additional missing files. Of course, if, as argued by Great Plains and State Auditor, completeness of records is not a prerequisite at the permit [240]*240stage, then JCAC's finding additional missing files would be irrelevant at this point.

112 JCAC appeals from the trial court's order denying its Petition. State Auditor and Great Plains have again separately filed their responses. "The same standard of review applies to both the trial court and the appellate courts when making determinations on appeal from an administrative ageney ruling." (Citations omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
2007 OK CIV APP 113, 172 P.3d 237, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-county-abstract-co-v-great-plains-investments-inc-oklacivapp-2007.