Kinney v. Vernor

1929 OK 142, 276 P. 750, 136 Okla. 166, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 26, 1929
Docket20170
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1929 OK 142 (Kinney v. Vernor) 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
Kinney v. Vernor, 1929 OK 142, 276 P. 750, 136 Okla. 166, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 161 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

This is an original action commenced in this court by Thomas Kinney, plaintiff and petitioner, against Hon. Enloe Y. Vernor, judge of the district court in and for Muskogee county, Okla., wherein the petitioner on February 25, 1929, presented to this court his petition praying for a writ of prohibition against the respondent faking further action in case No. 19597, in the district court of Muskogee, county, wherein W. O. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill are plaintiffs, and Thomas Kinney is defendant.

The record in this court shows that on February 23, 1928, W. O. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill commenced an action in the district court of Muskogee county against the petitioner, Thomas Kinney, as defendant, and upon the issues joined, a jury was waived and said icause tried before Hon. W. J. Crump, on June 16, 1928, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs-. Motion for new trial was duly filed, presented, and overruled, and no appeal taken from said judgment. The controversy in that case grew out of an exchange of r’e-al estate, wherein Thomas Kinney, the i>etitioni&r in this case, and the plaintiffs in that action entered into a written contract whereby the petitioner agreed to exchange a 40 acre tract of land owned by him to the said plaintiff, W. C. Farrill, free, clear, and discharged from all debts, mortgages, taxes, and in-cumbrances of whatsoever nature, and the said plaintiff, W. O. Farrill, in consideration thereof, agreed to convey to the petitioner, Thomas Kinney, 130 acres of land, free, clear, and discharged of all debts and incumbrances. It was further agreed that each party was to furnish the other with an abstract showing the lands to be free and clear of all debts and incumbrances, and that the deeds were to be deposited in the First National Bank of Muskogee, Okla., and to be delivered toy the said bank to the respective parties as soon as the abstracts were procured, examined, and approved. The record further shows that the. agent of petitioner 'went with W. O. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill to- the First National Bank of Muskogee, Okla., arriving after the bank was closed, and then induced the Farrills to permit him to retain possession of' the abstract and deed until the day following, at which time he promised them he would deposit the deeds and abstracts in the bank, subject to the terms of said agreement, but, on the contrary, he delivered the deed to the Farrill property to Thomas Kinney and Kinney proceeded to have the same, recorded, in the office of the eountv clerk of Muskogee county, and executed a -mortgage on the same, securing the payment of a note of $1,000 and a commission note of $140. A short time after this mortgage was placed of record, W. O. Farrill advised the. petitioner, Thomas Kinney, that there was a mortgage on the land which Kinney had agreed to exchange to the Farrills for their land, of $1,000, and that Kinney had also placed a $1,000 mortgage upon the land which the Farrills had agreed to convey to him and had placed the deed to said property of record. Kinn'ey stated that he had placed the deed from W. O. Farrill and wife to him of record in order that he might secure a loan of $1,000 to pay off the mortgage on the propertv that he had conveyed to the Far-rills, and which h’e had agreed was to be free and clear of incumbrances, and that he was *168 going to use the proceeds of the mortgage for the purpose of paying off the mortgage on the land he had traded the Farrills. Instead of doing so, he retained the proce'eds from the mortgage on the property and never satisfied the mortgage on the property which he had traded to- the Farrills, according to his agreement which fraud and deceit on his part resulted in the institution of the -suit in Muskogee county by W. C1. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill, as plaintiffs, against Thomas Kinney, as defendant, and which resulted in a judgment in favor of the Farrills.

After this judgment was entered, the petitioner, Thomas Kinney, filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, and was duly adjudged a bankrupt, and on February 11, 19219, was discharged from all debts and claims which are made provable by the bankrupt acts of the United States.

On February 13, 1929, -in the case in Muskogee county, the petitioner filed a pleading styled, “Petition for Perpetual Stay of Execution,” and on the same date the plaintiffs filed a pleading styled their “Replication to said Petition,” which is in the nature of an answer thereto. Then petitioner cam'e to this court praying for a writ of prohibition against Hon. Enloe V. Yernor, judg'e of the district court in and for Muskogee county, further proceeding in said case, upon the grounds that the district court was without jurisdiction to further proceed to hear evidence after final judgment had been entered and the term of court at which judgment was entered had expired, and that the judgment was barfed by the discharge in bankruptcy. An alternative writ was issued fixing the hearing thereon for ten o’clock a. m. on March 11, 1929. The respondent has filed and presented his response, and from the record before us, it appears that the proceedings in the district court in the case of W. O. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill. Plaintiffs, v. Thomas Kinney, which the petitioner seeks to prohibit was set in motion by the petitioner filing his petition for perpetual stay of execution, to which said petition th'e plaintiffs have filed their replication, which is in the nature of an answer to said petition, and it is upon these ancillary proe'edings that the district court of Muskogee county is attempting to proceed.

“Prohibition is an 'extraordinary writ and cannot be resorted to when the ordinary and usual remedies provided by law are available. It will only issue where an inferior tribunal does not have jurisdiction or assumes to exercise judicial power not granted by law or is attempting to make an unauthorized application of judicial foroei” Jeter v. District Court of Tulsa County, 87 Okla. 3, 206 Pac. 831.

From the record of the proceedings in the case in the district court of Muskogee county, wb are of the opinion that the evidence was sufficient to justify the trial court in finding and holding that the sum of $1,000 was obtained by the petitioner in this cause from W. O. Farrill and Mary E. Farrill by fraud and deceit, and the trial court in entering judgment in that case on June 16, 1928, sets forth sufficient facts to warrant us in arriving at that conclusion. And th'e court further recites in the journal entry of judgment:

“That the pleadings! are hereby amended to the real issues in the cas'e and the facts in the case in the event the pleadings do not now conform to the real issues.”

The real issue in th'e ease was whether or not the petitioner in this case was guilty of fraud and deceit when he represented to the plaintiffs in that case that he would deposit their deed and abstract in the bank the next day after the contract was made and thereby induced them to deliver the deed and abstract to him or to his agent, and instead of depositing t'h'e deed and abstract in the -bank, he proceeded to place the deed on record, and execute, a mortgage upon Farrill’s property and secure a loan of $1,000,- and when th'e Farrills inquired of him about this. transaction, he stated that he did so to raise sufficient funds to liquidate the mortgage that was on the property which he had agreed to exchange to the Farrills for their property, and which he represented was free and clear* of in-cumbrance.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 142, 276 P. 750, 136 Okla. 166, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-vernor-okla-1929.