Oklahoma Historical Society v. Wabaunsee

1979 OK 56, 594 P.2d 361, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 17, 1979
DocketNo. 51209
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1979 OK 56 (Oklahoma Historical Society v. Wabaunsee) 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
Oklahoma Historical Society v. Wabaunsee, 1979 OK 56, 594 P.2d 361, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 188 (Okla. 1979).

Opinion

OPALA, Justice:

The question before us is whether the Court of Appeals correctly held that an earlier opinion by this Court in Burkhart1 precluded unsuccessful litigants therein from later seeking a new trial by petition pursuant to 12 O.S.1971 §§ 651(9) and 655 on the grounds of impossibility to secure appellate record.

After their appeal was dismissed in Burk-hart for failure to complete a record within the six-months’ limit,2 appellees herein3 petitioned the district court for § 655 relief. Their contention was that the “impossibility” the law called upon them to establish came to manifest itself when this court dismissed the appeal.4 In order to meet the thirty-day time limit in § 655 [for seeking new trial after impossibility has arisen], appellees had filed their petition in the lower court a short time before we denied rehearing in Burkhart. The trial court allowed them the relief sought. On this appeal from that order granting them a new trial the Court of Appeals reversed, holding dismissal in Burkhart constituted an absolute bar to another trial in the cause.

Sections 651(9) and 655 provide an effective and useful mechanism a party may invoke to secure a retrial where, through no fault of his, an appellate record cannot be secured.5 The remedy is affordable within the sound discretion of the trial court whose action will not be disturbed by [363]*363an appellate tribunal unless it is shown to have resulted from arbitrary acts or error in resolving some unmixed question of law.6

The Court of Appeals did not consider here the merits of the trial court’s new-trial order. Instead, it addressed itself solely to appellants’ argument that our prior dismissal in Burkhart barred appellees from § 655 relief.

Section 655 relief by new trial is available to any party who, after bringing an appeal, timely discovers that either no record may be procured or the obtainable fragments of the whole will not suffice for meaningful review. Impossibility of securing a record is recognized as a ground for relief so very independent of, and collateral to, appellate review that it can be invoked in the trial court even while the appeal, though eventually doomed to failure, is still pending. This is essentially what happened in this case.7

While dismissal of an appeal can ordinarily be likened in its effect to an affirmance in the sense that trial court’s judgment at once becomes enforceable, a disposition effected by such mode does not operate to make the judgment impervious to § 655 proceedings. A dismissal operates as a re-transfer of the cause to the trial court where it then stands in the same posture as if no appeal had ever been taken.8 If entered after the maximum time for appeal has expired, the dismissal bars another appeal from the same judgment but does not preclude later litigation of issues that are collateral to the appeal that failed. In short, relief under § 655 continues to be available if failure to procure record arises after the appeal has been brought.9

Our opinion in Burkhart merely held that the appeal there failed because no record had been placed before us for review. This disposition neither reached, explored nor concluded appellees’ § 655 claim to a new trial.10

We next pass to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial. Appellant Oklahoma Historical Society argues the effect of our dismissal in Burkhart was to affirm the trial court’s judgment then on review, while appellant Burkhart contends that dismissal stands as a bar to trial court’s exercise of any power over its original judgment. These arguments, both aimed at defeating any relief under §§ 651(9) and 655, fail directly to address the issue of whether another trial, based on the showing made, was correctly granted.

Our review of the record indicates the trial court considered evidence of when and how it became impossible to secure appellate record and whether petition for new trial was timely filed in face of various occurrences. It also heard argument of why a narrative statement could not be compiled and serve here as an authorized substitute for a transcript of proceedings [as contemplated by Rule 1.20, 1.22 and 1.23 [364]*364of Rules of Appellate Procedure in Civil Cases, 12 O.S.1971, Ch. 15, App. 2],

A statutorily-sanctioned request for new trial presents largely a matter within the trial court’s discretion. Since an affirmative disposition of the request merely places the parties in the position of having to try the issues again, the argument for reversal of the trial court’s order allowing relief must be stronger than where the claim of error is grounded upon refusal to grant the relief.11 The record does not show any abuse of legal authority or transgression of allowable bounds. We cannot hence hold the trial court erred in its decision.

Opinion by Court of Appeals vacated, trial court order affirmed and cause remanded.

LAVENDER, C. J., IRWIN, V. C. J. and WILLIAMS, BARNES, SIMMS, DOOLIN and HARGRAVE, JJ., concur.

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Related

MATTER OF ESTATE OF BURKHART v. Wabaunsee
1979 OK 56 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
1979 OK 56, 594 P.2d 361, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-historical-society-v-wabaunsee-okla-1979.