Jones v. Balsley & Rogers

1909 OK 319, 106 P. 830, 25 Okla. 344, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 14, 1909
Docket509
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1909 OK 319 (Jones v. Balsley & Rogers) 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
Jones v. Balsley & Rogers, 1909 OK 319, 106 P. 830, 25 Okla. 344, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 182 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

*347 Williams, J.

(after stating the facts as above). The defendants in error, Muldrow, Bledsoe & Colbert, moved to dismiss this appeal on the following grounds: (1) The ease-made was never served upon Balsley & Rogers; (2) the said Balsley & Rogers are necessary parties to the proceeding in error; (3) same was never legally served upon the defendants in error, Muldow, Bledsoe & Colbert; (4) no proper notice of the time and place of settlement of the case-made was served.

(1) If Balsley & Rogers were not necessary parties to the proceeding in error, it was not essential that the casemiade be served upon them or that they have notice of the time.and place of the presentation of the settlement of the same. In the case of Atlantic Trust Co. et al. v. Prescott et al., 5 Kan. App. 172, 48 Pac. 926, the court said:

“Oh June 24, 1892, C. J. Prescott and Arthur Allen, partners as Prescott & Allen, filed their petition in the circuit court of Shawnee county against Hattie I'. Dennis, J”. H. Dennis, the Atlantic Trust Company, W. E. Swentzel, B. L. Vineyard, and C. T. Harvin to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on property (described) in the city of Topeka, and to correct the statement filed for said lien on said property. To this petition the Atlantic Trust Company filed its answer, denying the validity of plaintiffs’ lien, and setting up a mortgage in its favor on said property given by the Dennises, defendants, April 6, 1889, for $27,000, and asking that it be declared paramount and superior to plaintiffs’ claim. To this answer the plaintiffs filed a general denial. The defendant W. E. Swentzel filed his answer to plaintiffs’ petition, denying the validity of plaintiffs’ lien, and setting up a first lien in his favor on said property for $7,699.73 by virtue of a judgment of the circuit court of the United States for the district of Kansas. To which plaintiffs filed a general denial. The cause came on for hearing February 1, 1893, the plaintiffs and the defendants, W. E. Swentzel and the Atlantic Trust Company appearing. The defendants Hattie I. Dennis, J. H. Dennis, B. L. Vineyard, and C. T. Harvin made default, although all were personally served. A jury was waived, and the cause tried by the court, the issues found for the plaintiffs, and the judgment rendered for said plaintiffs and against said Dennises, defendants, for $141.50, and interest at 6 per cent, from date, and costs. The property was ordered sold, if judgment be not paid within *348 30 days, and proceeds applied — first, to the payment of the costs; second, to the payment of plaintiffs’ judgment and interest, and to the defendant W. E. Swentzel $7,699.73 and interest, with equal priorities; third, to the defendant the Atlantic Trust Company, $27,000, with interest; fourth, that the balance be brought into court to abide its further order. To the rendition of which judgment and decree in favor of said plaintiffs’ defendants Swent-zel and the Atlantic Trust Company excepted. Motion for a new trial was duly made and overruled, and the case brought here, on a petition in error attached to a case-made, for review. The first question for our decision is the motion of the defendants m error to dismiss the petition in error for the reason that the defendants in the court below, Hattie I. Dennis, James H. Dennis, B. L. Vineyard, and C. T. Harvin, have not been brought into this court. This is not merely a question of the marshaling of liens. The issue raised is, have the defendants in error any lien upon the property in question? If they have a lien for the amount claimed, it is undoubtedly superior to the lien of the plaintiffs in error. In Paper Co. v. Hentig, 31 Kan. 322, 1 Pac. 533, the court says: ‘In no case should a judgment be interfered with by the Suprenie Court where one of the parties to the judgment is not a party in the Supreme Court.’ ' In Central Kansas Loan & Inv. Co. v. Chicago Lumber Co., 53 Kan. 677, 37 Pac. 132, it was held that, where ‘it appears that a modification or reversal will affect a defendant, who has not been made a party, the proceedings in error will be dismissed.’ In that case the plaintiff in error claimed that not only was its lien prior to the lien .of the defendant in error, but that the amount allowed the defendant in error against the owner of the land, who was not brought into the reviewing court, was too large, and the ease was dismissed for defect of parties. That case is very much like the case at bar, the main difference being that in that case the omitted defendant contested in the court below, which was not done by the Dennises. But we do not think this is material. The motion to dismiss the petition in error for defect of parties is sustained.”

In the case of Hallwood Cash Register Co. v. Dailey, 70 Kan. 620, 79 Pac. 158, the court said:

“Counsel for defendant in error ask for a dismissal of the petition in error because Schroeder was not made a party nor was the case-made served on him.. He ‘did not appear at the trial and take part in the proceedings,’ for which reason, under *349 section 5020, General Statutes of 1901, be was not a necessary party. Haas v. Tough, 67 Kan. 253, 255, 72 Pac. 856.”

In the Haas Case in 67 Kan. and 72 Pac., the court likewise predicates its ruling on section 5020, Gen.. St. 1901. By reference to said section (Gen. St. Kan. 1901, § 5020, p. 1029), we find that on the 22d day of March, 1901, the Legislature of that state provided:

“It .shall not be necessary for the party desiring to have any judgment or order of the district court, or other court of record, other than the probate court, to serve the case-made for such court, on any party to the action who did not appear at the trial and "take part in the proceedings from which the appeal is taken, or who shall have filed a disclaimer in the district court, nor shall it be necessary to make any such person a party to the petition in error: Provided, that any person so omitted from the proceedings in error, who was a party to the action iin the district court, may be made a party plaintiff or defendant in the'action in the Supreme Court upon such terms as the court may direct upon its appearing that he might be affected by the reversal of the judgment or order from which the appeal was taken, with the right to be heard therein the same as other parties.”

The case of Atlantic Trust Co. et al. v. Prescott et al, supra, was decided by the Kansas Court of Appeals on April 30, 3897. It is reasonable to presume that the act of March 22, 1901, was passed in view of that decision.

In the case of Gillette & Libby et al. v. Murphy, Carroll & Brough et al., 7 Okla. 91, 99, 54 Pac. 413, 415, on reading paragraph 1 of the syllabus, on first impression it may seem that the Supreme Court of the Territorjr of Oklahoma, expressly decided that where a party permitted judgment to go against him by default, that on that ground he was not a necessary party on appeal in the Supreme Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1909 OK 319, 106 P. 830, 25 Okla. 344, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-balsley-rogers-okla-1909.