Owens v. Owens

1953 OK 310, 264 P.2d 341, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 27, 1953
Docket34752
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1953 OK 310 (Owens v. Owens) 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
Owens v. Owens, 1953 OK 310, 264 P.2d 341, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 628 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The question here has to do with the validity of that portion of the judgment in a divorce case which allowed attorneys fees against the husband after granting a divorce and alimony and child support and child custody.

It is contended that the attorneys fee allowance is void on account of the manner in which it was stated in the judgment. It referred to the item of attorneys fees as follows:

“The court . further finds that, beginning on June 4, 1943, and extending down to and including the present date the defendant Esther Webb Owens, has had the services in this proceeding and in related proceedings in the Supreme Court of Oklahqma of H. L. Smith as attorney and that beginning on approximately February 5, 1945, the defendant has had the services of Guy S. Manatt as associate attorney assisting the said H. L. Smith in this court; and the court finds that for the services of said counsel for the defendant, the plaintiff O. O. Owens, should make payment of the sum of $2,000.00 and that said amount should include the $200.00 required of the plaintiff for the said H; *342 L. Smith in the aforesaid order of this court entered on July 23, 1943.
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, O. O. Owens, pay to said attorneys on or before March 1, 1945, the said sum of $2,000.00 and that the plaintiff also pay the costs of this action.”

It appears that plaintiff paid $200 of the said attorneys fees through the court clerk’s office and some time later an execution was issued for the balance of $1,800, with interest, resulting in this proceeding.

Plaintiff filed a motion to quash the execution attacking the form of the attorneys fees allowance. Thereupon, after application and hearing, the court granted a nunc pro tunc order correcting the judgment so that as to the attorneys fees item it should read as a judgment “against the plaintiff O. O. Owens and in favor of the defendant Esther Webb Owens, for the use and benefit of defendant’s attorneys H. L. Smith and Guy S. Manatt.”

Plaintiff continues in his contention that the judgment was void as to the attorneys fees allowance, and prosecutes this appeal from the overruling of his motion to quash execution on that ground.

Plaintiff contends that the judgment for attorneys fees as stated in the original judgment, or as stated in the nunc pro tunc order is void as being a judgment in favor of persons not parties to the action, and contends that any order directing payment to the attorneys is void.

Plaintiff contends that the nunc pro tunc order is not supported by sufficient evidence, and also contends that the judgment as purportedly corrected by the nunc pro tunc order is still invalid, and therefore in effect contends that the nunc pro tunc order made no material or substantial change in the judgment as originally entered. We need not consider these contentions as to the nunc pro tunc order because we find the whole matter may be disposed of upon our consideration of the attorneys fees allowance as made and set out in the original judgment.

In urging that the judgment was void plaintiff places prime reliance upon the decision of this court in Kennedy v. Chadwell, 202 Okl. 491, 215 P.2d 548. That case is not in point because we were there considering the validity of a judgment rendered in California. We of course tested it by the California law. The highest court in that State had taken the view that a requirement of payment direct to attorneys was wholly void, so we applied the California law, and since the judgment was void in Califorina, where it was. rendered, it could not be enforced here.

This court has never held that an attorney’s fee allowance in a divorce case was void if ordered to be paid direct to the attorney. We have always taken a view contrary to California, because we have’ held that the attorneys for the wife in a divorce case have a personal interest in the allowance of attorneys fees to the extent that the attorneys may in their own name enforce the payment of the same to themselves and for their own private benefit,, though the wife does not participate in such proceedings with the attorneys, and though the wife might in fact be anagonistic to-such enforcement by the attorneys. See Smith v. Smith, 169 Okl. 305, 36 P.2d 886, Kelly v. Maupin, 177 Okl. 44, 58 P.2d 116, and Statser v. Statser, 205 Okl. 608, 239 P.2d 764.

This court has, over many years, recognized the validity of allowances of attorneys fees in divorce cases when the language used by the Judge and written in the journal entry named the attorneys in various ways, and in some cases where it referred to them, but did not name them. See Stumpf v. Stumpf, 173 Okl. 1, 46 P.2d 315.

In Kelly v. Maupin, 177 Okl. 44, 58 P.2d 116, the court made a temporary order directing the defendant to pay $1,500 as temporary attorney’s fee. Soon thereafter the original divorce parties, Mr. and Mrs. Kelly, adjusted their differences and Mrs. Kelly filed a dismissal of her divorce action. Thereafter Mr. Maupin, attorney for Mrs. Kelly, sought in his own name to have the defendant Mr. Kelly cited for contempt for failure to obey the, original attorney’s fee order. The defendant appeared and sought *343 to defeat the attorney’s application on the ground, among others, that the action had theretofore been dismissed, and that Mr. Maupin was not a-party to the litigation, and therefore could not seek relief in the action. The trial court held that Mr. Maupin “had a real interest in the controversy to the extent of the attorney’s fee allowance and therefore had a right to seek an enforcement of the order.” The trial court, however, decided that the attorney’s fee should be reduced to $750. The previous order was therefore modified to that extent and the defendant was directed to pay that sum.

The defendant Mr. Kelly appealed and reasserted, in substance, the contentions made before the trial court. This court affirmed, pointing out that the attorney acquired a right in the attorney’s fee allowance, and commenting on the effort to dismiss without consulting the attorney. This court there cited decisions from this and other courts sustaining the affirmance of the trial court.

(Emphasis given certain words here, and hereafter in this opinion is supplied by us.)

In Sherry v. Rowe, 181 Okl. 119, 73 P.2d 134, we had this situation: After the plaintiff in a divorce action, the wife, had dismissed the action, her attorney sought and obtained an order against the husband for an attorney’s fee to be paid to him by the husband. We held that order to be void, not because it was made direct to the attorney, but because the order was made after the action had been fully terminated by effective dismissal thereof.

In French v. French, 188 Okl. 430, 110 P. 2d 286, the wife filed suit against her husband and on the same day the court granted a temporary order requiring the husband to pay “to said plaintiff the sum of $110.00 within five days of this date for her attorney's fee and expenses in prosecuting this suit”, and a few days later the parties became reconciled and the plaintiff filed written dismissal of her action and paid the court costs. About two months later her attorney in the divorce action, Ernest F.

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Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 310, 264 P.2d 341, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-owens-okla-1953.