Myers v. Garland

1927 OK 20, 252 P. 1090, 122 Okla. 157, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 25, 1927
Docket17752
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1927 OK 20 (Myers v. Garland) 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
Myers v. Garland, 1927 OK 20, 252 P. 1090, 122 Okla. 157, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 152 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

BRANSON, C. J.

¡Herein is presented error from the district court of Tulsa county. Judgment in favor of the defendant R. F. Garland, and against the plaintiff, F. F. Myers, was entered dismissing the petition on a plea to the jurisdiction of the court. The plea was sustained, for that the pleadings showed the same cause ■ had been filed in the district court of Seminole county by the plaintiff against the defendants, and same had not by final judgment been disposed of.

On August 26, 1926, the instant case was filed. Some months prior thereto, the plaintiff, Myers, had as plaintiff sued the said defendant Garland in the district court of Seminole county, the petition in the district court of Seminole county pleading the identical state of alleged facts as the said petition filed herein. On the 25th day of August, 1926, the district court of Seminole county sustained a plea to the jurisdiction of that court, from which judgment the plaintiff perfected an appeal to this court, which was docketed and disposed of herein as cause No. 17811. Plaintiff contended in the district court of Seminole county that the jurisdiction lay in that county, for that, as he argued, the petition sought to vacate and set aside certain instruments affecting real estate located and situated in Seminole county.

The petition was construed as being one ■ to declare a partnership and for an accounting, and that since the defendant Garland was served in a county other than Seminole, the special appearance and plea to the jurisdiction ended the ease. This action of tne district court was on November 23, 1926, in the said cause No. 17811. sustained by this court (Myers v. Garland, 122 Okla. 71, 251 Pac. 34). The controlling proposition of law announced in the opinion of this court, as contained in the syllabus, is as follows:

“A bill in equity filed by one member of an alleged partnership against another member thereof for a declaration of the partnership, and for an accounting, in which it is charged that certain property was and is partnership property, is a transitory action,, and the venue thereof is governed by section 207, O. O. S. 1921, and this is true even if an estate in real property is by the bill drawn in question, the plaintiff pleading that the estate in the real property belongs to the partnership as such. Such allegations, if traversed by the defendant in a court of competent jurisdiction, would form an issue for trial as an incident to the primary r’elief prayed in the bill, to wifi the declaration of the partnership, the determination of its assets, and the accounting as between the members thereof. ”

The opinion from which the above quotation is taken discloses that from the time plaintiff invoked the jairisdi'ction of the Seminole court, up to the time the said opinion was written, plaintiff was contending. that.his suit was in reality} a .suit to vacate, certain instruments affecting read estate and the district court of Seminole county had, exclusive jurisdiction. The decision against him .on this contention has become final. On the day after the rendition of judgment, by the), district court of Seminole county, the same plaintiff filed in. the district court of Tulsa county the instant action, the petition fifed being in haec verba the same as the petition filed in Seminole county, except the style thereof.

On filing this second case, the petitioüér demanded that a receiver be appointed, that an injunction] be issued restraining the defendant from disposing of certain properties pending the suit. The district court of Tulsa county, as above set out, sustained a plea to its jurisdiction, and to secure a reversal thereof the plaintiff assigns as error the action of the court in sustaining such plea, the failure of the court to appoint a receiver and grant the injunction.

We deem it unnecessary, to discuss this last petition), for it is, .as stated supra, the *158 same as the cue interpreted by this court in said, cause No. 17811.

It is tlie contention of tlie plaintiff in this cause that the order and judgment of the district court of Tulsa county herein shotrl|d now be reversed, because it has now been finally determined ’that the district court of Seminole county had no jurisdiction, and the defendant Garland being a resident of Tulsa county, arid summons having- been had upon him in the instant case in said county, his suit to. declare a partnership, determine the assets, and require an accounting was properly before that court, and •that the action of tire district court in dismissing the same should be reversed for further proceedings.

The first contention of the plaintiff is that, as a matter of law, there was no action pending after the district court of Seminole county had entered an order dismissing plaintiff’s petition, although plaintiff appealed from said order and prosecuted error in this court; and he further contends as a-matter of law that the district court of Tulsa county was not justified in sustaining the plea to the jurisdiction of said court and dismissing the petition, but should have merely stayed the proceedings to await the action of this court on plaintiff’s appeal from the judgment of the district court of Seminole county.

While it is true, as plaintiff contends, that the law presumes that the judgment of the district court of Seminole county dismissing! plaintiff’s petition was correct}, yet this presumption was not a conclusive one, but was subject to be overturned by this court on the assignments of error which plaintiff himself prosecuted to reverse said' judgment, in which event the district court of Seminole county would have been, from the date of the filing of the petition therein, possessed of full and exclusive jurisdiction in the very same matters pleaded in the district court of Tulsa county, and under such conditions, if the district court of Tulsa county . had assumed jurisdiction, the same being invoked subsequent to the filing of the action in Seminole county, there would have been ■ a conflict in the jurisdiction of two courts of co-ordinate powers. Such a condition has never received the sanction of this court. Parmenter v. Rowe, 87 Okla. 158, 200 Pac. 683, and cases therein cited. The records in these two appeals are susceptible of no. interpretation but that the plaintiff was insisting on the same relief in the district court of Tulsa-.- county as he was insisting this court should require the district court of Seminole county to grant him. Had the district court of Tulsa county appointed a receiver, issued the injunction plaintiff sought}, and this court on the rendition of its said opinion ordered the district court of Seminole county to proceed with granting this identical relief, we deem it no one would contind but what the district court of Seminole county, having acquired the in'ior jurisdiction, would hold it to the exclusion of the-district court of Tulsa county, and this would have involved tlie defendant in not only - troublesome, but vexatious, expensive, and unwarranted litigation. At the same time contending that the district court of Tulsai county had jurisdiction on the same alleged causes of action pleaded in the-identical language, between the same parties, plaintiff was contending this court should require the Seminole county district, court to retain jurisdiction and grant relief.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 20, 252 P. 1090, 122 Okla. 157, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-garland-okla-1927.