Kuykendall v. Lambert

1918 OK 276, 173 P. 657, 173 P. 607, 68 Okla. 258, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1918
Docket8105
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1918 OK 276 (Kuykendall v. Lambert) 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
Kuykendall v. Lambert, 1918 OK 276, 173 P. 657, 173 P. 607, 68 Okla. 258, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 365 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

BRETT, J.

In this case, the Lamberts, defendants in error, sued Kuykendall, plaintiff in error, for $1.000, the alleged purchase price of a certain jack. The gist of the defense of Kuykendall, defendant below, was that one of the plaintiffs below, Sam C. Lambert, sold the jack in question to on© Vennum, and that subsequently he (Kuyken-dall) purchased the jack from Vennum, and paid him the purchase price in full, and therefore was not indebted to Lambert in any sum for the jack. He pleaded and attached to his answer a receipt from Lambert to Vennum, acknowledging that Ven-num had paid Lambert in full for tlie jack. Lambert replied, denying all the allegations of Kuykendall’s answer, but also alleged that, if lie executed the receipt pleaded in said answer-, it was obtained by fraud, setting out the conditions' under which the alleged fraud was perpetrated. Upon the issues thus framed the cause went to trial to the court and a jury. During the progress of the trial Lambert asked and obtained leave, over the objection of the defendant. Kuykendall, to verify his reply. The trial resulted in a vprdict and judgment for the plaintiffs, and defendant, Kuyken-dall, appeals to this court.

There are 15 assignments of error, but it will not be necessary to notice all of them specifically.

1. The first assignment complains because the court refused to quash the service of summons.

. The motion to. quash was based on the fact that the summons commanded the sheriff to notify the defendant, 'Ora L. Kuyken-dall, that he had been sued by Sam C. Lambert et ah, omitting to set out the name of the other plaintiff to the action, Lena Lambert. And it is gravely contended that the fact that the summons omitted the name of Lena Lambert, and only notified the defendant that he had been sued by Sam O. Lambert et al., rendered the summons fatally defective and ’ the service thereof void. We know of no precedent or reason which supports this position. Counsel cite Lyman v. Milton, 44 Cal. 632, but this case does not support their contention, but holds that as to a summons, in which one defendant < nly is named, when in fact there are several defendants to the action, service of such summons is void as to the defendants whose names do not appear in the summons. But that is very different from the state of facts existing in the case at bar, and is based upon reason. For how would a defendant know be bad been sued, unless bis name appeared in the summons? But in the case at bar the defendant knew from the summons that he had been sued. H© also knew that Sam C. Lambert and some one else had sued him. It is perhaps the better practice to set out the names of all the plaintiffs, as well as all the defendants, in the summons; but under the facts in the case at bar we are unable to se© how the defendant was prejudiced or misled to his injury by the omission in the summons of the name of Lena Lambert, one of the parties plaintiff.

2. It is next claimed that it was error for the court to permit the plaintiffs to amend their reply by verifying the same during the progress of tire trial; the contention being that the unverified reply did not operate to deny the execution of the receipt pleaded by the defendant in Ms answer, but, when verified, it did have that effect. There might be some merit in the contention of defendant if the execution of *260 this instrument had really been made an issue in the case. But the reply admits the execution of the instrument, but seeks to avoid its effect on the ground that it was obtained by fraud, and sets out the conditions under which it was executed and delivered. And the plaintiff, Sam 0. Lambert, las stated) by thje defendant in his brief, as a witness in his own behalf, also admitted the execution of the instrument. Hence the plaintiff in fact derived no advantage from, nor was the defendant prejudiced by, the verification of the reply.

3. Again the defendant complains because the court permitted the witness, McKee, to testify, to statements made to him by one Blackburn, the ground of the objection being that the statements of Blackburn were not made in the presence ■ of the defendant, and therefore did not bind him. But the record shows that the plaintiff, on rebuttal, offered McKee to show that Blackburn, who 'was a witness for the defendant, had made statements out of court, contrary to what he had testified at the trial. And since a proper predicate had been laid in the cross-examination of Blackburn, by asking him if at a certain time and place he had not made these contradictory statements to McKee, which he denied, the testimony of McKee was properly admitted for the purpose of impeachment. Greenleaf on Evidence (14th Ed.) vol. 1, p. 561; Smith v. State, 3 Okla. Cr. 629, 108 Pac. 418.

4. Defendant next complains because the court, over the objection of the defendant, permitted the plaintiff to testify to the circumstances under which Yennum procured the receipt pleaded by defendant; the basis of this complaint being that none of the things testified to transpired in the presence of the defendant, Kuykendall. While it is true, there was no merit in this specific objection, for Kuykendall was not alleged' to be a party to the fraud, and the fraud pleaded and proved was in no way dependent upon the presence of Kuykendall, and while the law is that a receipt is only prima facie evidence of the declarations and admissions it contains, and is open to explanation and contradiction, and the party giving it may show that it was obtained by fraud, or is in fact untrue (St. Louis, Ft. Scott & Wichita R. R. Co. v. Davis, 35 Kan. 464, 11 Pac. 421, and eases there cited; Toby v. Barber, 5 Johns. [N. Y.] 68, 4 Am. Dec. 326; Lacrabere v. Wise [Cal.] 71 Pac. 175; Joslin v. Giese, 59 N. J. Law, 130, 36 Atl. 680; Milos v. Covacevich, 40 Cr. 239, 66 Pac. 914; Comptoir D’Escompfe de Paris v. Dresbach, 78 Cal. 15, 20 Pac. 28; Stewart v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 9 Lea [77 Tenn. 1] 104), and while it is true that a receipt is not an instrument that the law requires for the protection of, or as a notice to, third parties, but is only prima facie evidence of the payment of an obligation due from one party to another, and in such transaction the general public, or third parties, are usually supposed to have no interest, yet the facts in this case are peculiar. Lambert and Vennum had jointly left this jack with Kuy-kendall for the purpose of making the season. They each represented that they owned the jack jointly, and at the time the receipt in question was executed were each trying to make a deal with Kuykendall to sell him the jack. Then under these conditions, when Yennum appeared with a receipt which Lambert admitted he signed, showing Yennum had paid him in full for his interest in the jack, regardless of the fact that the instrument was not one that the law requires for the benefit of third parties, did not Kuykendall have a right to rely upon that instrument when exhibited ■ to him, and act upon the indicia of ownership with which Lambert, through this receipt, had clothed Vennum? We think so. Noe v. Smith et al., 67 Okla. —, 169 Pac. 1108. In the syllabus of the case above cited, we said:

:‘When an instrument which clothes another with the indicia of title to property is used by him, the equities of innocent purchasers are protected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 276, 173 P. 657, 173 P. 607, 68 Okla. 258, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuykendall-v-lambert-okla-1918.