Linson v. Barnes

1929 OK 190, 277 P. 233, 136 Okla. 237, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 30, 1929
Docket19047
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1929 OK 190 (Linson v. Barnes) 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
Linson v. Barnes, 1929 OK 190, 277 P. 233, 136 Okla. 237, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 176 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

REID, C.

The record in this case is meager, but it seems therefrom that the question presented by the appeal arose in this way: There was an action pending in the district court of Stephens county, styled Hanbury, Russell Supply Co. v. L. H. Harvey and Steve Linson, and this action was consolidated with the case of W. E. Farrell v. L. H. Harv'ey, in which cause several other parties were interpleaded. It may be fairly inferred that said proceedings were for the purposes of establishing and foreclosing ma-terialmens liens and laborers’ liens on n certain oil and' gas leasehold which was developed and operated by Harvey and Linson.

On; December 18, 1926, we find the following part of an order which appears to have be'en entered in the consolidated eases, to wit:

“Journal Entry.
“* * * And it appearing to the court further that. the application of the defendant. Steve Linson, for the appointment of a receiver should be sustained, and that Jessie F. Barnes, court clerk, should' be appointed a special receiver herein for tbe only and sole purpose of receiving and collecting the proceeds of the sale of gas runs from said premises herein involved during the pend-ency of this litigation,
“And further appearing to the court that th'e garnishment of Hanbury Russell Supply Company, plaintiff herein, should be in all thinss sustained, and that the same is superior and paramount to any and all claims of any of the other parties hereto; that tlm Lone Star Gas Company, garnishee, should pay th'e same to the court clerk as such clerk and as receiver, and when paid in che same to be paid to tbe said Hanbury Russell *239 Supply Company to apply on its judgment herein rendered. * * *
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the application for che ax>pointment of receiver be, and the same is hereby sustained, and Jessie IT. Barnes, court clerk, is hereby appointed special receiver to collect and receive the proceeds from gas runs and sale chereof from said premises that may have heretofore ac-cru'ed and that will hereafter accrue.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court t'hat the garnishment of the Hanbury Russell Supply Company be, and the same is hereby in all things, sustained, and that the said Lone Star Gas Company, garnishee, be, and it is hereby ordered and directed to pay to Jessie F. Barnes, receiver, and as court clerk, the sum of $2,046.32. Said court clerk upon receipt of the same is directed to pay said amount unto Hanbury Russell Supply Company, to be applied upon the. judgment rendered herein in favor of the said Hanbury Russell Supply Company and against L. H. Harvey and Steve Linson. * * *”

On the 26th day of May, 1927, Jessie F. Barnes, as receiver, filed h'er itemized report as receiver showing the total collection of $5,299.88, and the itemized disbursements of said sum. 'except a balance of $355.23; asked that said report be approved; that she be allowed a fee as receiver, and be discharged. On the 27th day of May, 1927, that court entered an order confirming the report, allowing her a fee of $250 for her services, and discharged hex’.

On the. same day said order was entered, th'e defendant, Steve Linson. filed an application to vacate the order approving the report and allowing the fee to the receiver on the ground that the matter had been heard without notice to him, and attacked the allowance of the receiver’s fee on the ground that th'e services performed by her were within her duty as court clerk, and that the funds received by her had been deposited with the county treasurer and disbursed -by regular warrants drawn against the court clerk’s account, for which reasons she was not entitled to any fee. for such service.

It is shown in th'e journal entry thereon that, when the hearing was had before the court on the motion to vacate the order approving the receiver’s report and allowing th'e fee. the court announced that p’aintiff in error had not been present upon the presentation of the receiver’s final account, and thereupon allowed th'e movant to introduce his evidence in opposition thereto. and at the conclusion of the hearing the court announced that its opinion was unchanged and that th'e motion should be overruled, and entered judgment in accordance with this conclusion.

There are, in substance, two assignments-of error presented by this appeal. The first one is that the court erred in allowing compensation to the defendant in error, as receiver, for the reason that all acts and things done and performed by her, for which she was allowed the fee, were within her duties as court el'erk, and the court had no power to allow her compensation for these services.

It seems that $2,000 of the funds which came into the hands of defendant in 'error, and included in her report as receiver, was paid to her by the sheriff from the sale of th'e oil and gas leasehold under an order pf sale issued to the sheriff on the judgment in this case; and that therefore this amount should be eliminated from consideration as a basis for compensation as receiver, for the reason that the law required her to receive and disburse this as clerk of the court.

It will be observed that, in th'e order of December 18, 1926, the garnishment proceedings by the plaintiff, Hanbury Russell Supply Company, against the defendant. Lone Star Gas Company, are sustained, and the garnishee is ordered to pay the amount of $2.046.32 so due to Jessie F. Barnes, as receiver and as court clerk, and said court clerk, upon the receipt of the samej is directed to pay said' amount unto Hanbury Russ'ell Supply Company, to be applied upon the judgment rendered herein in favor ef the said Hanbury Russell Supply and against L. H. Harvey and Steve Linson. This item is shown in the report of th'e receiver to have been collected by her as receiver, and as l-eceiver paid to Hanbury Russell Supply Company in accordance with the order of th'e court. This presented the question as to whether this money came to the clei’k and was disbursed by her in her official capacity as court clerk, or as receiver.

The applicable statutes of this state relating to duties of the court clerk aire así follows:

Section 878, C. O. S. 1921:
“The clerk of each of the courts shall ex-erc’se the powers and perform the duties conferred and imposed upon him by the statutes of this state and by the common law.’ In the performance, of his duties, he shall be under the direction of his court.”
*240 Section 870, C. O. S. 1921:
“Where there is no execution outstanding, the clerk of th’e court in which the judgment was rendered may receive the amount of the judgment and costs, and receipt ther'e-for, with the same effect as if the same had been paid to the sheriff on 'execution. * * *”

It appears from the order of December 18, 1926, that the plaintiff, Hanbury Russed Supply 'Company, had theretofore had judgment against Harvey and Linson, and that the garnishee, Lone Star Gas & Oil Company, had answered, showing an indebtedness by it to said parties in the sum of $2,046.82.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 190, 277 P. 233, 136 Okla. 237, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linson-v-barnes-okla-1929.