LVO Federal Credit Union v. Wolfe

1977 OK 236, 574 P.2d 293, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 808
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 29, 1977
Docket49140
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1977 OK 236 (LVO Federal Credit Union v. Wolfe) 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
LVO Federal Credit Union v. Wolfe, 1977 OK 236, 574 P.2d 293, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 808 (Okla. 1977).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice:

This case involves an appeal perfected by the Tulsa Abstract and Title Company, from a judgment against it in favor of the Oklahoma Morris Plan Company, for damages suffered by the Morris Plan Company because of its loss of interest in property on which it accepted a mortgage, the loss being caused by negligence on the part of the Abstract company.

In June, 1974, the defendant Abstract company issued and delivered to Oklahoma Morris Plan Company an abstract certificate covering specific property in Tulsa County on which the Morris Plan was about to take a mortgage to secure the payment of a note executed by Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, and Richard A. Wolfe. In preparing the abstract certificate, the Abstract company did not include the pleadings in Case No. C-71-1695, filed in the District Court of Tulsa County. That case was styled LVO Federal Credit Union, a corporation, Plaintiff v. Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, and O. G. Bellows, Defendants. The action was founded upon two promissory notes. In the petition filed in that case, the plaintiff alleged, among other things:

3. “Plaintiff further alleges and states that the defendant, Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, has left the State of Oklahoma, with the intention of defrauding her creditors and to avoid the service of summons and is about to remove her property, or part thereof, out of the jurisdiction of the Court with the intent to defraud her creditors. Further, that the defendant, Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, has real property located within Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma, but she is about to convert this property into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of her creditors.
4. Plaintiff further alleges and states that a writ of attachment should issue against the property of the defendant, Torchy Jane Wolfe, upon the grounds stated herein." [Emphasis added]

Paragraph three of the petition was later amended to read:

3. “Plaintiff further alleges and states that the defendant, Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, has assigned, removed and disposed of, and is about to *295 dispose of additional property, or a part thereof, with the intent to hinder and delay her creditors. Further that said defendant has property within Tulsa County, Oklahoma.”

The Tulsa County file also contained an Attachment Affidavit, an Order of Attachment served upon Torchy Jane Wolfe, formerly Bellows, and an Attachment Bond.

At the time the abstract was prepared, the Order of Attachment, served upon Ms. Wolfe, had been in the court file for almost three years. Additionally, judgment had been entered against Ms. Wolfe and co-defendant Bellows, more than a year prior to the preparation of the abstract. Although at the time of the making of the abstract, no journal entry had been filed, the judgment was memorialized in the court’s minutes. A Journal Entry of Judgment was eventually filed.

Neither Ms. Wolfe nor Mr. Bellows appealed from the judgment in the trial court, nor from the issuance of the Order of Attachment.

After judgment in its favor, LVO Federal Credit Union proceeded with preparations to sell the real property in Tulsa County which had been attached. After the judgment, and prior to the day of the sale, the Oklahoma Morris Plan Company, relying upon the abstract prepared by the Tulsa Abstract and Title Company, accepted a mortgage on the same real property, not being aware of the attachment on the land.

On the day of the sale, LVO Credit Union’s attorney canceled the sale, then brought a declaratory judgment action in the District Court of Tulsa County, asking the court to determine whether LVO Federal Credit Union’s attachment or Morris Plan’s mortgage had priority. Shortly thereafter, Morris Plan joined the Abstract company as a third party defendant. In the declaratory judgment action, the trial court ruled that the Credit Union’s attachment took priority over the mortgage, entitling the Credit Union to its rights under the attachment and judgment, and found that the Oklahoma Morris Plan Company had suffered damage because of the loss of its interest in the mortgaged property — the damage being the amount of the balance due on the note, $6,959.43 together with interest at the rate of 10%, a reasonable attorney’s fee of $1,250.00, and costs of the action. The trial court additionally held that the Abstract company’s failure to include the pleadings of the prior case in the abstract caused Morris Plan’s loss. Accordingly, the court found the Abstract company liable for the damage caused by their negligence. It is from that judgment that the Abstract company appeals.

On appeal, the Abstract company attacks LVO Federal Credit Union’s attachment, arguing that it is void and of no effect. In raising this issue, the Abstract company asserts that the Affidavit of Attachment and other instruments were fatally defective, as was service. Assuming ar-guendo that there were defects in the instruments of attachment, we hold such defects were waived when neither Ms. Wolfe nor Mr. Bellows appealed from the issuance of the Order of Attachment or from the judgment issued against them. Similarly, any defects in service were also waived. The defendants filed a Motion to Quash, which was overruled. After the Motion to Quash was overruled, they proceeded to answer and defend, but sought no affirmative relief. By proceeding in this fashion, the defendants saved their objection to jurisdiction and could have raised it on appeal. However, no appeal was taken. Accordingly, we hold that any defects in service, if any existed, were waived. Appellant Abstract company, through a collateral attack on the attachment, now seeks to relitigate the question of service, and the validity of the attachment.

With respect to the alleged defect of the personal service, upon which the trial court ruled when it overruled the debtors’ Motion to Quash, we note that an adjudication of jurisdictional facts is not properly raised in a collateral proceeding. In Fitzsimmons v. City of Oklahoma City, 192 Okl. 248, 135 P.2d 340 (1943), we stated:

*296 “An adjudication of the jurisdictional facts in a domestic judgment by a court having jurisdiction of the general subject matter is conclusive in a collateral proceeding attacking such judgment by attempting to again put such facts in issue (Gregg v. Seawell, 85 Okl. 88, 204 P. 908; Fooshee v. Craig, 110 Okl. 189, 237 P. 78), ** *"

Also see Continental Gin Co. v. De Bord, 34 Okl. 66, 123 P. 159 (1912), in which we held that when in a judicial proceeding the court expressly finds that the. defendant is present, such finding is not subject to attack in a collateral proceeding.

As to any defects that may have existed in the acquiring of the attachment, the defects, if any existed, were not jurisdictional, and therefore may not be attacked in a collateral proceeding. E. g., Fitzsimmons v. City of Oklahoma City, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
1977 OK 236, 574 P.2d 293, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lvo-federal-credit-union-v-wolfe-okla-1977.