McLain Land & Investment Co. v. Kelly

1901 OK 40, 66 P. 282, 11 Okla. 26, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1901 OK 40 (McLain Land & Investment Co. v. Kelly) 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
McLain Land & Investment Co. v. Kelly, 1901 OK 40, 66 P. 282, 11 Okla. 26, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 3 (Okla. 1901).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

MoAtbe, J.:

It is argued in the brief of the plaintiff in error that no question was raised by the motion to dissolve the injunction, except that of the sufficiency of the petition, and that the motion ought to have been overruled, since the-petition averred that “no judgment was ever rendered against the plaintiff whiffh was authorized by the pleadings, in any *29 causes ever pending between the plaintiff and the Swofford Brothers Dry Goods company, and that if any such appears ■of record, the same is wholly and absolutely void for want of jurisdiction to enter said judgment in the court attempting or pretending to enter the same.”

But we cannot sustain this view since it is averred in the motion that the injunction ought to be dissolved, for the reason that it was “improvidently and wrongfully granted,” and that “the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief prayed for in its petition.” These averments were sufficient to raise the issue as to whether there was, in fact, at the time of the filing of the petition any cause ever pending between the plaintiff and the Swofford Brothers Dry Goods company, and whether or not, if any such judgment did appear of record, it was or was not void for want of jurisdiction in the court to enter it.”

No copy of any judgment was furnished in the case-made. But, inasmuch as the fact of the existence of such a judgment, with the jurisdiction to enter the same, was sufficiently raised by the- averment of the motion to dissolve, and the judgment and proceedings which led up to it were not brought here for examination, the ruling of’ the court below will be affirmed.

The ease-made shows that the execution was issued in behalf of the “Swofford Brothers Dry Goods company,” but the sheriff’s notice of sale sets forth that “notice is hereby given that by virtue of an execution issued by the clerk of the district court * * * * within and for Kingfisher county, in an action wherein Swofford Brothers Dry Goods is plaintiff, and the McLain Land and Investment company, defendant.”

*30 While the judgment was recovered and the execution-issued in favor of the Swoiford Brothers Dry Goods company, the notice of sale omits the word "company" in reciting the name of the plaintiff company, and it is contended that this is an error fatal to the proceedings, and that the-failure of the court to continue and make permanent the injunction on that account is reversible error.

We do not find it to be so. The statute under which the sale was made provides, Statutes of 1893, that:

“(4350) Sec. 472. — Lands and tenements taken on execution shall not be sold until the officer cause public notice of the time and place of the sale to be given, for at least, thirty days before the day of sale, by advertisement in some newspaper printed in the county, or, in case no newspaper-bo printed in the county, in some newspaper of general circulation therein, and by putting up an advertisement upon the-courthouse door, and in five other public places in the county, two of which shall be in the township where such lands and tenements lie. All sales made without such advertisement shall be set aside, on motion, by the court to which the execution is returnable."

It will thus be seen that while the statute directs explicitly that notice of the 'time and place of sale shall be given for thirty days by advertisement, the particular method of which is described, that it does not require the officer to specify in the notice of sale the names of either the plaintiff or defendant in the judgment or the name of the judgment, debtor whose property is being so sold. It does provide that all sales made without the advertisement as described in the statute, shall be set aside on motion by the court to which the execution is returnable. But the statute nowhere prescribes that the name of the judgment debtor shall be in *31 serted in tbe advertisement or that the omission of his name shall constitute an error for which the sale may be set aside or invalidated. . And in the absence of a statute requiring it, a sale will not be vitiated by the failure of the notice to set out the names of the parties. (20th Ency. of Pl. & Pr. p. 197.)

It was held in Chapman v. Morrill, 19 Hun. (N. Y.) 318, that:

“No objection is made to the notice except that the name of the defendant in the execution is not given. The statute does not seem to require it. The notice is to be six days; it must describe the property to be sold under the execution, and it must state the time and place of-the sale; all this was done. It was of no importance to the public whether the execution debtor was named or not.”

In Harrison v. Cachelin, 35 Mo. 79, the sheriff, having an execution against A. B. and C., in- his advertisement stated that by virtue of an execution against A. “and others,” be had levied upon, etc., describing the time and place of sale and the property to be sold. It was held that the advertisement complied with the statute, and that the title of B. and C. passed by the'sheriff’s sale and deed.

The judgment of the lower court will be affirmed.

Irwin,( J., having presided .in the court below, not sitting; all of the other Justices coneurrring.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1901 OK 40, 66 P. 282, 11 Okla. 26, 1901 Okla. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-land-investment-co-v-kelly-okla-1901.