Lively v. Evans-Howard Fire Brick Co.

1925 OK 894, 242 P. 773, 115 Okla. 259, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 3, 1925
Docket15935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1925 OK 894 (Lively v. Evans-Howard Fire Brick Co.) 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
Lively v. Evans-Howard Fire Brick Co., 1925 OK 894, 242 P. 773, 115 Okla. 259, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 325 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

This action is a consolidation of two original actions instituted for the purpose of declaring on mechanics’ liens of equal priority against the Victory Metal Company’s zinc smelter property located at Henryetta, Okla. The two causes wetre filed on the, same day, April 4, 1921. The items of account claimed by Evans-Howard Brick Company were 8 carloads of brickbats valued at $2,320.06, delivered f. o. b. cars at St. Louis between J une} and November, 1920, and to be used by the metal company in making retorts for its furnaces and fire brick for repairs. The items of the account claimed by the Volz Fire Clay Company we,re 17 carloads of fire clay valued at $1,117.70, delivered f. o. b. cars St. Louis,' between March 10 and October 14, 1920,, and to be used by the metal company in making retorts and repairs in its furnaces. At the time the suits were filed, an action *261 was pending against the Victory Metal Company in the district court of Ottawa county to foreclose a mortgage or trust deed dated July 15, 1920, and filed August 5, 1920, in the hands of the trustee, W. H. Loigan, for the sum of $150,000, covering -all the smeltey property of the Victory Metal Company in Okmulgee county. In this action W. H. Logan and Geo. W. Moore were appointed receivers to take charge of the smelter property and hold the same subject to the orders of the court. The Evans-Howard Brick Company and Volz Eire Clay Company, plaintiffs in the action in the district court of Okmulgee county, were not made parties to the foreclosure action in Ottawa county. Before bringing the suits in Okmulgee county, t!he plaintiffs, by special application, obtained leave of the district court of Ottawa county on March 7, 1921, to make said receivers parties defendant to their proposed action against the Victory Metal Company. The said receivers were accordingly made parties and answered in both eases. Thereafter, judgment was had in the district court of Ottawa county in favor of the trustee to foreclose the trust deed, and the receivers were ordered to sell the property, which they did at a public sale on February 16, 1922, and before the actions to foreclose the mechanics’ liens were tried in Okmulgee county. The two causes we are considering were consolidated by agreement on May 7, 1921. After the receivers’ sale under the order and approval of the district court of Ottawa county, and after the receivers were discharged and the cases closed, plaintiffs in the mechanics’ liens eases, by leave of court, filed a supplemental petition June 14, 1923, and made M. R. Lively, the purchaser of the property at the receivers’ sale, and J. F. Wingfield, trustee, to whom said Lively made a deed of trust on slaid property for the purchase price in the sum of $35,000. and all the parties appeared and answered, and the issues were tried to the court and judgment rendered on May 23, 1924, in favor of plaintiffs, and defendants appeal, contending that the judgment is erroneous and the cause should be reversed.

1. The first question presented is one of jurisdiction. Defendants say the district court of Ottawa county, having acquired jurisdiction to foreclose tlhe mortgage or trust deed lien and having placed the property in the hands of receivers before plaintiffs brought their action in the district court of Okmulgee county, that said couyt had jurisdiction for «11 purposes in determining the claims and liens against the property in question, and the Okmulgee district court was without jurisdiction to pass on any of these matters.

Defendants say that when plaintiffs made application to the district court of Ottawa county for permission to make the receivers parties to the mechanic’s lien action they proposed to bring in the district court of Okmulgee county, that they, in effect, entered their appearance for all purposes and became parties in the receivership easle and subject to the jurisdiction of the receiver-ship court. They cite as authorities: 34 Cyc. page 419; N. Y. Security & Trust Co. v. Illinois Transfer Co., 104 Fed. 710, 44 C. C. A. 161; Investment Registry v. C. & M. E. R. Co., 251 Fed. 513; Foster v. Field, 13 Okla. 230, 74 Pac. 190; Holmes & Hibbard Mortgage Co. v. Ardmore National Bank, 48 Okla. 319, 150 Pac. 105; Commercial National Bank v. Burch, 141 Ill. 519, 33 Am. St. Rep. 331. These cases do not support the proposition that the application to bring suit against the receivers binds the appellant to the jurisdiction of the receivership court for all purposes, but on the contrary, they support the proposition that the said couyt may authorize the bringing of the suit against the receivers in another court for purpose of determining certain rights. The authority involved judicial discretion and the refusal to make the order in a proper ease would be ground for mandamus. Petaluma Savings Bank v. Superior Court (Cal.) 44 Pac. 177.

It is not necessary to discuss what the status of plaintiff would have been, and what the results would have been, had the receivership court refused the application to bring suit against the receivers in the district court of Okmulgee county, and it is not necessary to pass on the question as to whether or not their claim could have been allowed and adjudicated by the receivership court, although- the statute, section 7478, Comp. St. 1921, provides that a mechanics’ lien, such ¿s plaintiffs’ claim, should be brought in the court where the-property is situated, for the reason the receivership court had the power and au- ’ thority to grant the application to bring the. action in another court, which grant was given, not revoked, and it must be held by the great weight of authority that the district court of Okmulgee county had jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter of. the action:

2. Defendants further contend that if the district court of Okmulgee county had' jurisdiction to determine the amount of plaintiffs’ claims, and the fact of the liens *262 and the amount of property involved, it had no jurisdiction to determine the priority of the liens, as this authority was vested in the receivership court. They cite Premier Steel Co. v. McElwaineRichards Co. (Ind.) 43 N. E. 876; Baldwin v. Spear Bros. (Vt.) 64 Atl. 235; 34 Cyc. 447; Harding v. Nettleton, 84 Mo. 658. The rule laid down in these cases presupposes that the property subject to the lien is in the hands of the receivers at the time the lienholder asserts his right to enforce the lien by a sale of the property, but it can have no application to a lien not involved in the issues before the receivership court' (34 Cyc. page 320), and which is asserted by permission of said court in another court, of which all parties in the receivership court have knowledge, and where the amount of the claim and the extent of the lien were not determined until the receivers were discharged from the receivership. The appointment of the receiver in a mortgage foreclosure action, and his possession of the property, do not diminish other outstanding liens against it. The receiver takes the property subject to the liens, priorities and equities existing at the time of his appointment. 23 R. C. L. page 56. These liens, priorities, and equities may all be adjudicated in the same court, but such adjudication cannot affect the liens of creditors, and claims otherwise not before the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 894, 242 P. 773, 115 Okla. 259, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lively-v-evans-howard-fire-brick-co-okla-1925.