Murrell v. City of Sapulpa

1931 OK 85, 297 P. 241, 148 Okla. 16, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 787
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
Docket22029
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1931 OK 85 (Murrell v. City of Sapulpa) 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
Murrell v. City of Sapulpa, 1931 OK 85, 297 P. 241, 148 Okla. 16, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 787 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

MeNEILL, J.

This is an appeal from an order and judgment of the district court of Creek county rendered on December 13, 1930, in cause No. 1S400, wherein F. E. Murrell, plaintiff in error, as a resident taxpayer of the city of Sapulpa, Okla., had subsequently intervened in said cause in which the American National Bank of Sapulpa, Okla., a corporation, was plaintiff, and the city of Sapulpa, municipal corporation, was defendant. Said plaintiff in error, as intervener, sought to vacate and set aside the judgment rendered in said cause in favor of said plaintiff and against the said city of Sapulpa. The judgment sought to be vacated was rendered August 3, 1929, and it appears that on said dare the defendant city entered its appearance without service of summons and filed a general denial; that on the same day a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the city of Sapulpa, in the sum of $256,948.59 and interest thereon from August 3, 1929, until paid; that said suit was instituted by said bank against said city upon various warrants theretofore issued by said city of Sapulpa, which warrants at the time of the institution of the suit were alleged to be owned by said bank.

Soon thereafter an application, after statutory notice, was filed in the district court of Creek county, cause No. 18459, styled,

“In the Matter of the Application of the City of Sapulpa, Creek County, State of Oklahoma, to determine the Existence, Character, and Amount of its legal outstanding judgment indebtedness and to issue its bonds to fund the same,”

—to refund the outstanding indebtedness of said city of Sapulpa, evidenced by said judgment in said cause No. 18400, and judgment was accordingly entered therein on the 7th of September, 1929; that thereafter, on the 17th of February, 1930, J. E. Faught, a taxpayer of the city of Sapulpa, commenced an independent action, being No. *18 38692, styled, “J. E. Fauglit v. City of Sapul-pa, a Municipal Corporation,” seeking to collaterally attack tlie said judgment rendered on August 3, 1929, in No. 18400.

From an adverse decision in tlie district court, said Fauglit appealed to tlie Supreme Court of this state, and after the transmittal of the mandate of this court to the district court of Creek county, the present cause was hied on behalf of the said' intervener.

The petition in this latter case alleges in substance that the warrants sued on in cause No. 18400, which were reduced to judgment therein, and which were the basis of the funding bond issue, were null and void for the reason that they were issued beyond the approved estimate and for the reason that they were issued in excess of the debt limit of said city of Sapulpa for the year in which they were issued; that unless said judgment is vacated and the bonds declared void an annual tax levy will be made and extended, to the damage of the taxpayers of said city; and that if said judgment be vacated and a new trial given in said cause, the intervener can show a good and legal defense to said warrants.

This action of the intervener was permitted by the court for the reason that this court in the aforesaid cause of ,T. E. Faught v. City of Sapulpa, sustained the regularity of the funding procedure, but did not pass upon the validity of the warrants merged in said judgment.

In this case, to set aside aforesaid judgment, summons was regularly and duly served upon said plaintiff, the American National Bank of Sapulpa, defendant, city of Sapulpa, by said intervener. Thereafter said plaintiff and said defendant filed separate answers by way of general denial. The issues joined, said cause was regularly set for trial on the 16th day of December, 1930. The intervener introduced his evidence and rested. The plaintiff and defendant thereupon introduced their evidence, and the court rendered its judgment against said intervener denying the petition of said inter-vener to have said judgment vacated. A motion for new trial was duly filed, same was overruled,, and the cause is before this court to reverse the action of the trial court in refusing to vacate said judgment.

The evidence introduced on behalf of the intervener in this cause was to the effect that no shorthand notes were made, or recorded by the proceedings in ease No. 18400; that a hearing was had; that the warrants were introduced in evidence, ordered canceled by the court, clerk, and that said warrants have ever since the date of said judgment been in the possession of the court clerk and that each of the same has written across the face of the warrants “Canceled in judgment August 3, 1929. Ray H. Weak-ley. Court Clerk, O. C. Johnson, Deputy.” This was all the evidence the intervener introduced in this case. Thereupon the in-tervener rested, and then said defendants introduced their evidence. Said plaintiff called as one of its witnesses, John R. Nicholson, a certified public accountant of the staff of W. O. Liggon & Company, who had been engaged as a public accountant for about 15 years, auditing accounts in cities and municipalities during that time, and; doing general accounting work, having performed work for the officials of the city of Sapulpa, board of education of Tulsa, Wewoka, and Stillwater, and various and sundry counties of the state of Oklahoma. He testified that he audited the funding bond issue account to ascertain whether or not the warrants on which the American National Bank got a judgment against the city of Sapulpa on the 3rd of August, 1920, were legal warrants or not; that the warrants covered the fiscal years, 1920-1921, 1921-22, 1923-24, 1924-25, and 1925-26, respectively, stating that he examined each of the warrants separately, checking each of them separately, going back to the vouchers themselves, to the minutes of the city council, in ordering the items to be paid, and that every one of those warrants represented by the fiscal year within the estimate, legal, and outstanding as indebtedness against the city, as shown by the records, the excise board records and the various audits; that he had checked the estimate sheet, in the county clerk’s office, and the copy of the same at the city hall, and the appropriation ledger; that he took each, voucher for every warrant, pay roll, and examined the invoices on the voucher; that there was not a warrant in any year that exoeeded the estimate for such fiscal year. All these warrants cohering these fiscal years were introduced in evidence. Each of the .fiscal years was testified to by the witness, all to the same effect, that he checked each one of the warrants to ascertain whether or not they were issued on proper vouchers, and whether or not each warrant was issued against the specific estimate for which it was intended; and that each warrant was issued against the proper fund and within the proper estimate as shown by the records; that the records were complete with the exception of the 1920-21 financial statement and estimate for said> city, which does not seem to ha re been in. *19 the county clerk’s file, but was supplied from the city clerk’s office where the same was on file.

Mr. Berry, vice president of the American National Bank of Sapulpa, testified, in substance, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 85, 297 P. 241, 148 Okla. 16, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrell-v-city-of-sapulpa-okla-1931.