Morrissey v. Shriver

1923 OK 125, 214 P. 702, 88 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 27, 1923
Docket10823
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1923 OK 125 (Morrissey v. Shriver) 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
Morrissey v. Shriver, 1923 OK 125, 214 P. 702, 88 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 624 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.

Tin's action was commenced by Dan Morrissey to recover judgment on a promissory note .executed by Dias A. Sliriver and wife and to foreclose a mortgage. A number of parties were joined as defendants for the purpose of foreclosing any equity of redemirtion which they had, or claimed to hare, in the property covered by the mortgage, and among them was J. O. Severns, of Oklahoma City, Okla. On February 3, 1915, the case coming on for trial, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against all of the defendants for the amount sued for and foreclosure of the mortgage. Thereafter the property was sold at foreclosure sale and ’Bid in by C. W. Flattery. On September 17, 1915, plaintiff filed his motion to confirm the sale, and on September 17, 1915, C. W. Flattery filed his objections to the confirmation. On April 1, 191S, J. B. Sparrow filed his objections to the confirmation of the sale and a motion to vacate the sale and judgment in so far as it affected his rights as holder of special sewer warrants issued against the said property,, Thd motion of J. B. Sparrow, after setting" out the proceeding's which had been had in t&e case, recites that the judgment purports to> foreclose the rights and interests of persons holding liens upon the premises by virtue of tax warrants and that at the time of the commencement of the suit and rendition of the judgment there were sewer certificates which were a lien upon said lands and prior to all other liens, as follows :

For the year 1911 the sum of $1,634.10 i
For the year 1912, the sum of $1,471.54!
For the year 1913, the sum of $1,377.90

—and alleges that the said J. B. Sparrow is the owner of the tax warrants and was ■ not made a party to the action, and that he had no knowledge of the foreclosure proceedings prior to the foreclosure sale. On April 16, 1918, an order was mads overruling the motion to confirm foreclosure sale and sustaining the motion of Sparrow ■to vacate the judgment in so far as it pertained to J. B. Sparrow and sustaining the objections of J. B. Sparrow to the confirmation of the sale. On May 24, 1918, ■plaintiff filed his motion to vacate judgment" as to certain of the defendants; tvbich-motion was on the same date sustained and permission' was granted to file a supplemental petition against such defendants and against the defendant J. 3'- Sparrow, and on May 24, 1918; the supplemental petition was filed, and as against the defendant J. B. Sparrow alleged" that after the plaintiffs mortgage had been executed a certain sewer was built upon a part of the real estate so mortgaged, and in payment for the construction thereof certain sewer warrants were issued, which warrants are now claimed by the defendant J. B. Sparrow, who claims a lien upon the premises by reason thereof. The plaintiff then denies that Sparrow is the owner of" the warrants or that the warrants are a lien upon the real estate mortgaged to the plaintiff; but alleges that if they are owned by Sparrow and are a lien upon the property, such lien is inferior to the plaintiff’s lien. Then follows the prayer that plaintiff be adjudged to have the first lien on said property and that same be foreclosed. J. B. Sparrow thereafter filed his answer, alleging the issuance of the warrants and asserting a first lien on the property by reason thereof. To this answer, the plaintiff filed a general denial. The case was tried on February 2S. 1919, and judgment was was rendered for the plaintiff on his note and mortgage, but decreeing that J. B. Sparrow had a first Ijep *271 on the property ior the payment of the sewer tax warrants. From this judgment, plaintiff has prosecuted' -this appeal.

In the first assignment of error the plaintiff complains of the action of the trial court in permitting Sparrow to intervene in this action, but it is our opinion that this contention is without merit because, regardless of Sparrow’s rights to intervene in this action over the objection of the plaintiff, the record shows that after the court had permitted him to intervene and had vacated ithe 'judgment, the plaintiff voluntarily asked permission to file supplemental petition against Sparrow and other defendants, and he cannot now complain of the action of the court in permitting Sparrow to be made a party to the suit.

Under the second assignment the plaintiff urges that the court erred in adjudging Sparrow to have a lien against the property because the property involved was not a part of the incorporated city of Oklaho'ma City at the time the plaintiff’s mortgage was executed by Shriver, but was thereafter platted by Shriver.. without the knowledge or consent of the mortgagee. Por this reason plaintiff contends that' Shriver could not dedicate the streets and alleys out of plaintiff’s security. The question of the dedication of streets and alleys has no application to the facts in this cane, because the statutes under which sewers are constructed do not provide that they shall be constructed under streets and alleys, but they may be constructed through any part of a person’s property provided the statutory proceeding is followed. That being the case, it would not be material whether there were any streets and alleys in this particular adddMon to Oklahoma City.

It is next insisted that J. B. Sparrow is bound by the judgment which was entered against J. O. Severas foreclosing any lien claimed for sewer warrants. J. O. Severas was the contractor who constructed the sewers across the property involved and to whom the warrants were delivered in payment for the improvement. He was one of the original parties to the suit, and judgment by default was rendered against him on February 3, 1915. We are of the opinion that Severas being made a party to the suit does not preclude the rights of persons to whom the warrants had been sold and who were the owners of such warrants at the time the suit was brought, or the rights of any persons except those taking from Severas after the suit was brought. In Cressler v. Brown et al., 79 Okla. 170, 192 Pac. 417, this court said:

“The general rule is that no one, except the parties and their privies, is bound by a judgment. The general rule is that a party is not privy to a judgment involving property, or a right, unless he acquires his interest either after the suit is brought in which the title is involved, or after the judgment was rendered.”

It is also contended that the former judgment is binding because the municipal corporation of Oklahoma City was made a party to that suit and judgment rendered against it, and that the tax-collecting authority is the only necessary party to a suit of this character, and a judgment against it is binding on the holders of special warrants. In Ex parte Holman, 28 Iowa, 88, the court said:

“It is a fundamental, vital principle of the law that no man can be 'affected by any judicial proceeding to which he is not a party. No' person can be concluded unless he has had a day in court. The law, before it decides against any man, or any man’s rights, gives him an opportunity to be heard. I do not say that the bondholders are absolutely necessary parties to such a suit; but I do hold that if not parties, they are not bound, and the proceedings and decrees are, as to them, res inter alios acta.”

In A., T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Commissioners of Jefferson County, 12 Kan. 127, the second paragraph of the syllabus is as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 125, 214 P. 702, 88 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrissey-v-shriver-okla-1923.