McBride v. Cowan

1923 OK 291, 216 P. 104, 90 Okla. 130, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1131
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 22, 1923
Docket12906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1923 OK 291 (McBride v. Cowan) 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
McBride v. Cowan, 1923 OK 291, 216 P. 104, 90 Okla. 130, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1131 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. The suit was brought by.plaintiff in error, McBride, to set aside a default judgment for $3,000, which in a previous suit, defendant in error, Bert Cowan, had obtained against plaintiff in error, McBride, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by Cowan, while in the employ of McBride, as a well driller, and to have been caused by McBride’s negligence.

A review of the proceedings in the damage suit of Cowan against McBride is nec-essaiT' to a determination of the issues presented in this suit, the object of this suit being to set aside the judgment in the damage suit.

The damage suit was 'begun November 4, 1914, by Bert Cowan, through his father as next friend. Summons in said suit was served on McBride December 7, 3914. After service of summons, John R. Hadley, attorney for McBride, filed demurrers to Cowan’s petition, and nothing further seems to have been done in the action until October 7, 1916, when said demurrers were overruled and McBride given five days to answer. No answer was filed, and after the expiration of said five days, the court made an order adjudging defendant, McBride, in default. Before any further action was taken, the. attorney for Cowan, J. B. Rutherford, died, and Chas. A. Dickson, an attorney, having been employed by Cowan, procured a hearing in the cause, which was had on January 8, 1917, and upon the proof offered judgment was rendered in favor of Cowan against McBride in the sum of $3,000.

Bert Cowan having in the meantime attained his majority, and having been substituted for his father as next friend, the suit was thereafter prosecuted in Bert Cowan’s own name.

After the judgment was rendered, no further action was taken until September 25, 1919, when, upon learning that McBride had property in the county subject to execution to satisfy, said judgment, Cowan, caused execution to be issued and levied upon such property; thereupon McBride employed other counsel, through whom a stipulation was entered into 'between the parties that thie court might make an order permitting the release of the property levied upon until McBride could bring suit to vacate Cowan’s judgment for damages, conditioned further that McBride execute a bond to secure Cowan against loss. Upon such stipulation, the court made the order stipulated for, and McBride made the bond to Cowan for $5,000 to secure Cow-an against detriment sustained by reason of the suit to set aside Cowan’s judgment for damages.

In October, 1919, McBride brought suit— that is the suit herein — to set aside said judgment. The material grounds alleged for setting aside said judgment were:

(1) That Cowan obtained his judgment through a conspiracy to defraud entered inte between Cowan and his attorney, J. B. Rutherford, on Cowan’s part, and John R. Hadley, attorney for McBride, on McBride’s part, whereby it was agreed, or alleged to have been agreed, that McBride would make no further appearance, and Cowan have judgment by default.

(2) That Cowan was not in the employment of McBride at the time of the alleged injury, and that he procured judgment upon his own perjured testimony, toy swearing that he was in McBride’s employ.

(3) That during the time between the filing of Cowan’s suit and the date of execution against McBride’s property, McBride’ had been adjudged a bankrupt and had been discharged from bankruptcy, thereby relieving him of all liability on Cowan’s judgment.

After the filing of this suit, based principally upon the three grounds above mentioned, Cowan filed a demurrer to McBride’s petition upon the grounds that it failed to state a valid reason for setting aside the judgment for damages, and also upon the ground that the action was barred toy statute of limitation. The demurrer, however, was *132 overruled and cause set for trial December IT, 1919.

McBride appears to have exercised no diligence to get ready for trial in the meantime, and did not appear on the day the cause was set for trial. His attorneys, however, Wells & Lee, appeared and filed motion for continuance. The court overruled the motion for continuance, and also entered an order dis--missiug McBride’s petition. Thereafter McBride perfected an appeal from said order of this court, and in McBride v. Cowan, 80 Okla. 72, 194 Pac. 208, this court reversed the judgment, not for overruling the motion for continuance, but for dismissing plaintiff’s petition without offering him opportunity to defend, and remanded the cause to the trial court with instructions to reinstate plaintiff' petition. The cause having been reinstated pursuant to mandate of this court, McBride filed an amended petition. The allegation as to the conspiracy, alleged in the first petition, was abandoned, and the grounds alleged in the amended petition and relied upon for setting aside the judgment for damages were:

(1) That Cowan was not in his employment at the time the alleged injuries were received.

(-2) That Cowan procured his judgment through perjury by testifying that he was in McBride’s employ.

(3) Por the reason that such judgment ¡Had been obtained in violation of an agreement between counsel for McBride and counsel for Cowan that no further proceedings would be taken until McBride had gone through his bankruptcy proceedings and received his discharge in bankruptcy.

Issue was joined as to each of the above grounds, the cause went to trial, and McBride introduced his testimony in support of his grounds for setting aside the judgment and rested; thereupon Cowan demurred to the sufficiency of the evidence; the court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the action, and from such orders of the court this appeal is perfected. It primarily involves only the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the setting aside of the judgment.

McBride filed case-made and petition in error in this court December 13, 1921; on the 28th day of February, 1922, an order was made advancing the cause and setting same for the April, 1922, term. Plaintiff in error had filed no brief, but on March 18, 1922, defendant in error filéd brief on the merits of the case, wherein he discussed and undertook to answer all the errors assigned in the petition in enaw, which' are as follows:

“i'lj Said court erred in overruling motion of the plaintiff in error for a now trial.
“(2) Said court erred in not rendeung judgment for the plaintiff in error.
“(3) Said court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence.
“(4) Said court erred in refusing and ruling out competent and legal evidence on the part of the plaintiff in error.”

Thereafter, on April 11, 1922, xfiaintiff in error filed brief, which, though being plaintiff in error’s first brief, is more of the nature of a reply brief to the brief filed by defendant in error. Later, January 31, 1923, plaintiff in error filed typewritten supplemental brief.

As heretofore stated, the conspiracy alleged to have been made between McBride’s attorney and Cowan and his attorney, Rutherford, which appeared in the case of McBride v. Owen, 80 Okla. 72, 194 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 291, 216 P. 104, 90 Okla. 130, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-cowan-okla-1923.