Maharry and Ray v. Maharry

1897 OK 27, 47 P. 1051, 5 Okla. 371, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1897 OK 27 (Maharry and Ray v. Maharry) 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
Maharry and Ray v. Maharry, 1897 OK 27, 47 P. 1051, 5 Okla. 371, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 75 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bieeee, J.:

At the time the plaintiff commenced her action for divorce and alimony against the defendant, William J. Maharry, she procured a restraining order enjoining the defendant from the disposition of his property; and also an order for $50 attorneys fees, and for suit money in the sum of $50, and for $20 a month for her support. The order for temporary alimony was subsequently modified, so as to require the payment of $25 attorneys fees, and $25 alimony pending the litigation.

The defendant presented a motion to dissolve the restraining order, and also to set aside the order for temporary alimony. At the time this motion was presented he made an application for change of venue on account of the bias and prejudice of the judge. The defendant, without complying with the order for the payment of temporary alimony, excepting the payment of $25- attorneys fees, filed his answer and cross-petition, which the plantiff moved to have stricken from the files for the reason that the defendant had failed to comply with the order for temporary alimony. On the presentation of this motion the defendant, Maharry, asked the court to pass upon his motion for change of venue, which the court refused to consider until after the defendant should *373 have complied with the order of the court by paying into court the plaintiff’s suit money. This action of the court is assigned as error.

We think this conclusion of the court was erroneous. The statute gives a party the right to a change of venue in all cases when it shall be made to appear that the judge of the court is interested or has been of counsel in the case, “or is otherwise disqualified to sit,” and we have held that the words “otherwise disqualified to sit,” mean that the party is entitled to a change of venue when the judge is biased or prejudiced against him. (In re. Brown, 2 Okla. 590).

Our statute imposes upon a party no conditions whatever as to his right to ask for a change of venue. He may do it at any time up to the time of the trial, whether the issues are made up or not. He has a right to demand a change of venue for the purpose of making up the issues, in order that a trial may be had. (Sumner County v. Wellington Tp., [Kansas], 17 Pac. Rep. 787).

The fact that the party may have been in contempt of court could not deprive him of the right to a change of venue, if his showing entitled him to it. The fact of his contempt, if it existed as a fact, would have to be made to appear to the court by some proper proceeding, and he would have as much right to a change of trial judge upon the determination of this question as upon any other question in the case. Whether he was in contempt of court or not might, and usually would, depend upon the facts of the case as they existed. His being in contempt of court for failure to pay alimony in a divorce suit would depend upon his ability to pay, his means of procuring the money wherewith to comply with the order of the court, and this issue of fact he would have a right *374 to have determined by an impartial judge, So, too, likewise when the charge of contempt was before the court on the application to strike his pleading from the files because of his failure to comply with the order of the court, he would have a right on that hearing to have the issue determined by a court presided over by the same impartial and unprejudiced judge. So we would hold that the conclusion of the court in refusing to consider the defendant’s application for a change of venue was erroneous. We do not hold, however, in this case, that the error was reversible, for we do not consider that the application for change of venue was such as entitled the plaintiff to the relief asked for. The only affidavit made in support thereof was the following:

“Territory of Oklahoma, Logan County,
“William J. Maharry, being duly sworn according to law, says: That he has reason to believe and does believe that he cannot have a fair and impartial trial before Frank Dale, judge of the district court of Logan county, Oklahoma Territory, and therefore asks that a change be granted to some other judge, for the purpose of trying all questions that may arise in said cause, and for the purposes of trying the motion to dissolve the injunction and set aside the order already made in said cause.
“Affiant says that he had a personal altercation .difficulty with said judge, and that on account of said difficulty he believes that said judge has an unkindly feeling toward him, and that by reason thereof is prejudiced against him, and that said prejudice would affect the judgment of said court, and by reason thereof he cannot have a fair and impartial trial.
(Signed) Williah J. Maharry.
“Sworn to before the undersigned, this 3d day of July, 1894:
(Signed) L. J. Pitts, Dep. Clerk.”

*375 This affidavit contained no statement of facts which made it “appear to the court that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had,” and this situation must, under the statute, exist before the supreme court can say that the district court committed reversible error by its failure to sustain the application. The alleged bias and prejudice of the trial judge, as will be seen by the affidavit, is shown only by the belief of the applicant, which may have existed in this case much more in desire than from any fact stated. The only fact stated is that the applicant “ had a personal altercation difficulty with said judge.” What was the altercation? What was the difficulty? What did it amount to? And what evidence had the judge exhibited as to whether or not this slight or trivial, serious or otherwise, difficulty, had biased or prejudiced the judge against the defendant? There is nothing whatever appearing in the affidavit from which a conclusion can be reached that the judge was in fact biased or prejudiced against the applicant. And if the bias or prejudice did not exist then it did not appear to the court that the judge was disqualified to try the case. In DeWalt v. Hartzell, [Colorado,] 4 Pac. Rep. 1201, it is said of an application for a change of venue:

“We think the petition fails to set forth facts sufficiently, either in respect to the alleged prejudice of the judge or of the inhabitants of the county, to warrant us in interfering with the ruling of the court, under the discretion vested therein by the statute touching applications of this character. Beyond the bare allegation of prejudice, sufficient facts should be set out by the petitioner from which the court may be able to judge of the probable truth or falsity of the averments; otherwise a change of the place of trial, with its involved expense and delay, might go as a matter of course, upon the mere petition therefor, supported by an indefinite affidavit, as in this case.”

*376

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1897 OK 27, 47 P. 1051, 5 Okla. 371, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maharry-and-ray-v-maharry-okla-1897.