OPALA, Justice.
The single issue for our decision is whether the general unreserved jury verdict in this common-law action became the “filed judgment” in the § 990A [12 O.S.1991] sense by operation of 12 O.S.1991 § 696.11 [§ 696.1]. We answer in the affirmative and dismiss the appeal as untimely.
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
James G. Rodgers [Rodgers] brought a common-law claim against two physicians and their employers [doctors or defendants]2 for bodily injury caused by a tainted blood transfusion, from which he contracted “Type C” hepatitis,3 a fatal disease. Although in support of his single claim4 Rodgers urged several alternative theories of recovery, the trial court confined the case on submission to but one of them — that of negligence. Rodgers’ wife sued for loss of consortium. Her claim was derivative of that pressed by the husband.5 Both claims went to the same jury concurrently. Its verdict in favor of all the defendants6 — accepted below without judicial reservation7 — was received by the [402]*402clerk on March 6,1992 and became the “filed judgment” by operation of § 696.1.8 A me-morialization of proceedings that led to the verdict, including the trial court’s presubmission ruling which confined the plaintiffs’ claims to the single theory of negligence, was incorporated in a journal entry filed March 26, 1992.9 The Rodgers’ petition in error came here on April 17, 1992, less than thirty days after the March 26 journal entry’s filing, but more than thirty days after the clerk’s March 6 record entry of judgment in conformity with the verdict. The appeal is hence fraught with a fatal jurisdictional infirmity.
I
THE GENERAL UNRESERVED JURY VERDICT, RATHER THAN THE TRIAL COURT’S PRESUBMISSION RULING ON THE APPLICABLE THEORY OF RECOVERY, DISPOSED OF THE RODGERS’ CLAIMS
The doctors seek this appeal’s dismissal for untimeliness. They urge us to apply the teachings of Jaco Production Company v. Luca,10 which holds that a judicially unreserved general verdict — entered by the clerk in a common-law action — becomes transmuted into a filed judgment eo instante by force of 12 O.S.1991 § 696.1.11
The Rodgers argue the verdict did not resolve all the issues because the district court had “sustained defendants’ demurrer to the evidence ” on some of the “claims.” They would have us treat each of their multiple alternative theories of recovery as a distinct cause of action (or as a separable claim ).12 According to the Rodgers, no judgment was entered until the trial court memorialized both the jury’s verdict and its presubmission ruling in the single journal entry of March 26, 1992.13
Oklahoma jurisprudence utilizes the transactional approach for its definition of a “cause of action.”14 Although different theo-[403]*403ríes of liability may be pressed in support of each claim, only a single cause of action can ordinarily be predicated upon one occurrence or transaction.15 The single offending event that Rodgers (husband) complains of is the pathogenic blood transfusion. His evidence shows that when he was hospitalized for a colonoscopy, Dr. Hood recommended a pre-procedure blood transfusion. According to Rodgers, when he objected and questioned its necessity, Dr. Hood told him the physicians would try to do without it. Later, a nurse brought the blood and told him Dr. Higgins had ordered it. Rodgers told Dr. Higgins that (1) he was concerned about the blood and (2) his brother in Arkansas, who had the same blood type, could be summoned at once to donate the needed quantity. Rodgers testified that Dr. Higgins (1) assured him it was not necessary for his brother to donate blood, (2) repeated the “just-don’t-worry-about-it” phrase three or four times and (3) told him “everything will be fine.” Although Rodgers’ signature appears on a consent form for authorizing the transfusion, he does not remember signing it. A few months after the procedure he began to exhibit symptoms of a liver disease later diagnosed as hepatitis.
At pretrial Rodgers identified what he called his “claims” or “causes of action” as: (1) fraud and misrepresentation, (2) breach of warranty and (3) execution of a blood transfusion without his informed consent.16 In law all of his asserted grounds constitute nothing more than three distinct and alternative theories of recovery.17 Defendants “demurred” to the evidence at the close of the case; they contended the proof was insufficient to support any claim against them, especially one founded on breach of warranty or on fraud and misrepresentation. The trial court ruled the facts warranted the claim’s submission on a want-of-due-care theory of the plaintiffs’ allegations that (a) the doctors did not completely and accurately inform Rodgers about the risks from the ■blood transfusion, (b) as a result of their omission he withdrew his objection to the procedure’s execution and (c) later suffered bodily injury. In short, the critical nisi prius mid-trial ruling withheld from submission two of the three theories tendered by the plaintiffs: (1) breach of warranty and (2) fraud and misrepresentation.18
A plaintiff who states a claim and proves its facts is entitled to any relief affordable by law;19 the pleader need not correctly identify any applicable theory of recovery.20 The trial court must charge the jury on all the legal issues the evidence tenders?21 In this case, the trial court ruled the evidence called for instructions on the theory of negligence and on the wife’s loss of consortium. Plaintiffs’-pressed submission of the claim on other theories was rejected as unwarranted by their proof.
[404]*404Nisi prius refusal to instruct the jury on alternative theories of recovery is distinguishable from an order that sustains a demurrer to the evidence in support of a cause of action or of a claim. If the trial court’s presubmission ruling had (1) withheld either Rodgers’ or his wife’s claim in its entirety or (2) severed from jury trial claims against some of the four defendants, the general verdict might not have been disposi-tive of all the issues in this common-law action.22 An adjudication of all multiple claims and the settlement of the rights and liabilities of all the parties to those claims is a sine qua non of an appealable event unless there be “an [earlier] express [judicial] determination that there is no just reason for delay [of an appeal]” and “an express direction for the [immediate] filing of judgment.”23 The verdict in this case did not leave any issue or claim undecided.
When the trial of this case began (1) Rodgers had but one claim ex delicto for damages against four defendants, all answerable jointly and severally and (2) his wife had a single claim against the same four parties for her loss of consortium. Both of the Rodgers’ claims went to the jury against all of the four defendants in the case.24 Its verdict favors all the defendants. In short, the only demands the Rodgers ever had — one claim by each of them — were finally disposed of by the single jury verdict.
The district court’s mid-trial ruling does not represent an order appealable before judgment; nor does it leave post-verdict issues to be resolved. Had this case been timely appealed, any error in withholding from the jury’s consideration the rejected plaintiffs’ theories of fraud and breach of warranty, if properly preserved, clearly would have been reviewable on appeal from the judgment entered by force of § 696.1 upon the general unreserved jury verdict.25
II
A
APPEAL TIME IN A COMMON-LAW ACTION IS TRIGGERED BY THE TRIAL COURT’S UNRESERVED ACCEPTANCE 26 OF A GENERAL JURY VERDICT AND THE CLERK’S ENTRY OF JUDGMENT INTO THE RECORD PROPER, WHICH TASK IS NECESSARILY PRECEDED BY FILING
“A judgment is the final determination of the rights of the parties in an action.”27 [405]*405Specific statutory provisions control the process of transforming a general unreserved jury verdict in a common-law action into a judgment. The terms of § 696.1 provide:
“When a trial by jury has been had, judgment must be entered by the clerk in conformity to the verdict, unless it is special, or the court order the case to be reserved for future argument or consideration.” [Emphasis provided.]
Recent case law28 unequivocally teaches that under the provisions of 12 O.S. 1991 § 990A29 [§ 990A], read together with the specific terms of § 696.1, appeal time in common-law30 actions decided by a general verdict is triggered by (1) the judge’s failure to “reserve” (withhold) judgment and (2) the clerk’s entry of judgment into the record proper31 — an entry which is necessarily preceded by the verdict’s filing. These acts transmute the verdict by force of § 696.1 into the legal equivalent of a filed judgment in the § 990A sense.32 The prevailing party is hence entitled to entry of judgment in his favor the day the jury verdict is returned and accepted without reservation,33
"A. An appeal to the Supreme Court may be commenced by filing a petition in error with the Clerk of the Supreme Court within thirty (30) days from the date the final order or judgment is filed_” [Emphasis provided.]
The dissenters must concede not only that the judgment on a general unreserved jury verdict is rendered by operation of law, but also that under § 696.1 the judgment must be at once entered by the clerk without judicial imprimatur. Yet, after a vain search for uniformity that would supply [406]*406an identical time trigger for three distinct case-deciding mechanisms, the dissents succeed only in abandoning fidelity to the legislative history of § 696.1 and to that statute’s text by making the clerk’s entry of judgment (which presupposes its filing) ineffective to trigger appeal time until a judge-signed journal entry is placed of record. By sheer judicial fiat the dissents would resurrect a scheme the legislature threw out when it repealed the Judgments and Appeals Act passed in 1990 (effective January 1, 1991).34 The provisions of the repealed § 1001A35 required a separate document for every judgment and those of § 1001C36 mandated the trial court to prepare and sign the judgment after a general verdict and then deliver it to the court clerk for filing. The legislature clearly eliminated those two requirements when it reenacted the then-defunct § 696 as § 696.1.37 It is this very reenactment that revived the pre-1991 procedural regime for entry of judgments in common-law actions decided by a general unreserved jury verdict. That regime unequivocally commanded, as it does today, that judgment on these verdicts be entered without judicial intervention.,38 The resurrected § 696 makes judges powerless to change a general unreserved verdict39 except by vacation40 and new trial process.41
B
WHEN THE LEGISLATURE REENACTED § 696 as § 696.1 AND ADOPTED § 990A,42 IT KNEW THE JUDICIAL GLOSS THAT HAD BEEN CAST UPON UNRESERVED ACCEPTANCE OF A GENERAL JURY VERDICT AND UPON A CLERK’S MANDATORY DUTY TO ENTER MATTERS OF RECORD WITHOUT JUDICIAL IMPRIMATUR
When the legislature restores verbatim previously enacted statutes, it is pre[407]*407sumed to be familiar with and to adopt their extant case-law construction.43 The judicial gloss that had been cast upon unreserved acceptance of a general verdict is that judgment must follow the verdict by force of law, even though it might not have been memorialized and entered on the court’s journal.44 That lore was well known to the § 696 revi-vers.
The adoption of an amendatory act indicates legislative intent to change the law then in force.45 The legislature could easily have retained the § 1001 requirements that every judgment be contained in a separate document46 and that a judge-signed memori-alization be filed after a general jury verdict,47 if this procedure was indeed meant to be essential for triggering appeal time. If a journal entry was to be a sine qua non, the legislature would not have repealed those requirements nor reenacted § 696’s command for the clerk’s entry of judgment.48 Jaco, decided after § 696’s restoration as § 696.1, remains true to our extant jurisprudence declaring that a filed general unreserved jury verdict becomes the court’s judgment without judicial intervention. Section 696.1 represents a restored right of the prevailing party. It is too valuable to suffer abrogation by judicial fiat.
Walker v. St. Louis-San Francisco By. Co.49 does not hold, as one dissent seems to counsel, that judicial action is required to effect judgment after a general unreserved jury verdict has been accepted. Rather, Walker teaches that a judge has authority to add prejudgment interest to a jury verdict where applicable.50 Walker is not inconsistent with Jaco’s teaching that appeal time in a common-law action runs from the clerk’s entry of judgment upon the general unreserved verdict.
The legislature must be charged with knowledge that matters to be “entered by the clerk” are to be incorporated into the “record proper” in the § 82.1 sense51 and that filing must precede entry.52 Before 1969, when notice of appeal was a prerequisite for appellate review,53 the court clerk had a mandatory duty to “enter notice of appeal” and there was no requirement that notice of intention to appeal be contained in any journal entry,54 The clerk’s “duty of entry” was held accomplished by incorporating the notice into the record proper55 — i.e., [408]*408by making it a part of the judgment roll.56 Contrary to a dissent’s suggestion, record entry of judgment is never effected by a clerk’s minute posted on the appearance docket.57 Entry is accomplished by the clerk’s incorporation of the verdict into the judgment roll58 — a purely ministerial act which by force of § 696.1 transmutes the verdict into a filed judgment.
Although “filing” and “entry” are not synonymous, the two concepts are closely interwoven.59 The clerk may “enter” only that which is already “on file.”60 Filing of the judgment simply refers to its delivery to the clerk for entry and preservation.61 Every document’s entry is preceded by its filing— whether the entry be made (1) on a docket,62 (2) on the court’s journal,63 or (3) into the [409]*409judgment roll.64 In short, each “entry" presupposes an earlier “filing.”
In sum, § 696.1 commands that, upon a general verdict’s acceptance without reservation, the clerk mustie the verdict in the case and enter it in the judgment roll. This the clerk did in the case before us. The law does not require that a verdict meeting § 696.1 standards be contained in a judge-signed journal entry before its transmutation into judgment.65 We should not read into the law that which is not there.
C
THE MEANING JACO PLACES ON § 696.1 GIVES FORCE AND EFFECT TO RELATED STATUTES AS WELL; IT IS CONSISTENT WITH THE PRINCIPLE THAT THE LEGISLATURE IS NEVER PRESUMED TO DO A VAIN AND USELESS ACT
The relevant portions of § 696.1 as well as all enactments on related matters must be considered together to give force and effect to all of them66 The legislature is never presumed to do a vain and useless act.67 The meaning placed by Jaco on § 696.1 is consistent with the irrefutable legal verity that today’s procedural regime treats general jury verdicts68 differently from those that are special or advisory69 (or those which are ordered “reserved” by the court).70 For the former class, judgment de cursu71 (one entered by the clerk without judicial intervention) is the prescribed norm, while antecedent judicial action via a journal entry is required to effect a judgment in the latter instance.72
If we were to require a judge-signed journal entry for transformation of a general unreserved verdict into a “filed judgment,” effect could not be given to the clear commands in both § 696.1 and § 697.1.73 Rather, a general unreserved jury verdict would be treated exactly the same as special verdicts and those that have been reserved. In other words, the court would have to “order [the] judgment [to] be entered”74 by a signed journal entry. As the dissents would have it, the legislature’s return to the time-tested command of § 696 (now § 696.1) would be in vain and ignored. Jaco must stand if we are to give full force both to §§ 696.1 and 697.1 and to the legislature’s most recent procedural design for triggering appeal time.75
[410]*410D
THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE JUDGMENT UPON A SINGLE CAUSE OF ACTION;76 TO AVOID AN ABSURD RESULT, THE JUDGMENT THE CLERK MUST ENTER WITHOUT JUDICIAL IMPRIMATUR UNDER THE COMMAND OF THE RESTORED § 696.1 MUST BE THE JUDGMENT FOR ALL PURPOSES
Section 696.1 must be construed in a reasonable and sensible manner that avoids an absurd result.77 When, as here, a general unreserved jury verdict is returned on March 6, judgment that is both executable and ap-pealable must be entered by the clerk at the same time. The winner at once becomes judgment creditor entitled to issue execution. If the loser — now judgment debtor — wants to appeal immediately, he must start counting to thirty. If the loser wants to stay execution or to postpone the appeal time’s trigger, he must start counting to ten. This is so because a motion for new trial,78 which suspends the running of appeal time, must be filed within ten days after the verdict is rendered.79 Counting from the verdict is clearly not a novel nor a unique concept in our law.
The dissents’ fears that Jaco’s teachings will result in wholesale dismissal of appeals is unfounded. Jaco’s authority applies only in a narrow subclass of cases, where the litigant defeated by a general unreserved jury verdict appeals directly from the judgment without first bringing a timely new trial motion.80
Absurdity would doubtless flow from the dissents’ suggestion that only a judge-signed memorialization of the proceedings can trigger appeal time in this common-law action. Although there might be a tempting allure in the illusion of uniformity the dissents hope to bring about, we would be robbed of the present law’s conceptual symmetry that makes appeal time’s commencement coincide with the time a judgment becomes executable and also with the temporal point at which postjudgment interest begins to run. A general unreserved verdict that is transmuted into judgment by the command of § 696.1 becomes an executable judgment when the verdict is filed. It will support entry upon the judgment docket once a § 25.1 affidavit81 is also filed. Were we to yield to the dissents and to their counsel, only lip service would be paid to the notion that there can be only one judgment upon a single cause of action. The dissents would create several parallel tracks, each resulting in a judgment [411]*411for some but not for all purposes.82
The symmetry we preserve today, which eoncededly falls short of perfection, is essential — not simply for its own sake — but also because the legislature doubtless intended that a general unreserved verdict becomes efficacious qua judgment for all purposes at the same time, whether it be for computing postjudgment interest,83 for issuing execution,84 for bringing an appeal, or for suspending a judgment’s effectiveness pending its appellate review. After all, appeals are but a continuation of the same case after judgment.85
E
THIS COURT MAY NOT SUBSTITUTE ITS JUDGMENT FOR THE WILL OF THE LEGISLATURE THAT IS CLEARLY EXPRESSED IN A STATUTE86
The title of an act is an additional guide to ascertaining legislative intent.87 The words “restoring prior law ” appear in the title of the act we construe today. Had the legislature intended that the clerk-entered general unreserved verdict be anything other than a judgment for all purposes, it would not have fully restored the provisions of § 696 nor repealed those in § 1001.
The dissents propose to run a rescue mission for dilatory lawyers. They hope to bring about the well-nigh unattainable goal of dismissal-proof appeals,88 but nonetheless fall short of achieving complete uniformity. Under the provisions of § 993A, which prescribe appeal time for interlocutory decisions, the time would still run from the pronouncement rather than from the filed entry’s date.89 Our adoption of the dissents’ approach would hence bring about uniformity for only some appeals, leaving to sheer conjecture the point in time when interest would begin to accrue, execution may issue, vacation quests be brought, or dormancy occur.90 The dissents hope to save this appeal from dismissal but cannot accomplish their goal without judicial disregard of plain legislative intent.
Once transmuted into judgment by force of § 696.1 upon its unreserved acceptance and entry into the judgment roll, a general jury verdict becomes a judgment that is enforceable, appealable and subject to supersedeas as well as to accrual of post-[412]*412judgment interest. Recognizing the same temporal points for all incidents of a judgment fulfills the legislature’s intent to restore the prior law, preserves the needed symmetry of the present procedural regime 91 and protects both litigants and courts from a veritable nightmare.92
F
IN THE ABSENCE OF ANY COMPELLING REASON TO OVERRULE JACO, WE MUST FOLLOW ITS TEACHINGS AND APPLY THEM TODAY TO THIS APPEAL
Simply stated, stare decisis means to abide by decided cases.93 This time-honored rule “serves to take the capricious element out of law”94 and give it stability. Jaco has settled the outcome of today’s quest for dismissal; its teachings must govern here. Unless precedents are “palpably bad,” judicial surgery in upsetting them must be avoided.95 The dissents suggest no cogent reason to discard Jaco;96 they merely press for adoption of an alternative analysis of the applicable statutes. Their counsel, if accepted, would reinstate a procedural design that the legislature has already tried and expressly eliminated from the body of our statutory law.
When the justices of the United States Supreme Court are called upon to reassess their commitment to a prior holding as binding precedent under the doctrine of stare decisis, they must appraise (1) whether the rule has proved to be intolerable by defying practical workability, (2) whether the rule is subject to the sort of reliance that would add special hardship to the consequences of overruling and inequity to the cost of repudiation, (3) whether related principles of law have developed so far that the old rule remains no more than a remnant of abandoned doctrine and (4) whether facts have so changed or come to be viewed so differently that the old rule has been robbed of significant application or justification.97
We must be mindful of these factors as we revisit Jaco today. Jaco’s authority does not suffer from unworkabilily. Jaco’s teachings have been applied at least ten times since it became effective in February 1992; only one other dismissal precipitated by Jaco has come to our attention.98 Jaco’s approach is more practical by far than that counseled by the dissents. Under the latter, once the triers have spoken, entry of judgment could lag while the journal entry is being crafted. A time-honored rule of practice casts on the victorious party the responsibility of preparing a journal entry. The appealing party— nearly always the defeated litigant — has no firm control over the process. Jaco’s more workable solution eliminates judicial and party control over the judgment’s entry;99 pure [413]*413legal process effects the judgment. Above all, Jaco’s teaching represents fidelity to the recent legislative reaffirmation of its will to repudiate the common-law practice that made verdicts depend on judicial imprimatur, and gives full effect to the repeal of yesterday’s requirement for a judge-signed journal entry after a general unreserved jury verdict.
The consequences of overruling Jaco could indeed cause (a) hardship to present and future litigants who might encounter delay in obtaining a judge-signed journal entry, (b) inequities to those whose eases have been decided under Jaco, (e) disservice to lawyers, courts, and litigants alike by making them subject to yet another change in procedure and (d) subversion of the court’s legitimacy and erosion of public confidence in the court’s decisions. No recent development has robbed Jaco of its soundness; its controlling rule has been expressly reaffirmed at least ten times since February 1992.100 In sum, the arguments advanced by the dissents for Jaco’s demise offer no compelling reason to depart from settled law in favor of judicial abrogation of a freshly reenacted legislative mandate.
Ill
ORDERLY PROCESS MANDATES THAT WE APPLY JACO TO TODAY’S APPEAL
This court’s reviewing cognizance is invocable only “in the manner provided by law.” Art. 7, § 4, Okl. Const.101 We are powerless to entertain a plea for corrective relief lodged after the expiration of maximum statutory time. Failure to bring a timely appeal constitutes a jurisdictional defect.102 By operation of 12 O.S.1991 § 990A,103 viewed in conjunction with § 696.1,104 the appealable event for common-law actions resolved by a general unreserved verdict arises upon the clerk’s filing of the jury verdict, qua the court’s judgment, preparatory to its entry upon the judgment roll.105 Appeal must be lodged within thirty days of such verdict’s filing.106
Judgment in this case was filed on March 6,1992. This was accomplished in the following sequential stages: (1) after the jury returned from deliberation, the verdicts were read aloud; (2) the court examined the verdict forms and showed them to the lawyer; (3) the judge announced he would “accept the verdict forms as rendered” and enter “these verdicts as a judgment in the case;” (4) the verdicts were filed to await their entry on the judgment roll and on the court’s judgment docket. By operation of § 696.1 these verdicts ripened eo instante into a “filed judgment” in the case. Nothing remained to be done after March 6. The March 26 journal entry, although perhaps critical for securing the court’s review,107 did not trigger■ appeal time.
[414]*414Jaco’s effective date is February U, 1992;108 the general unreserved verdict in this ease came on March 6, 1992. Jaco’s109 teaching clearly requires that this appeal be dismissed as untimely. Today’s dismissal may appear harsh; yet fundamental fairness in litigation process cannot be afforded except within a framework of orderly procedure.110 We cannot provide a dismissal-proof environment for lawyers. No area of the law may lay claim to exemption from the range of orderly procedure’s basic strictures — not even the process by which a general unreserved jury verdict is transmuted into judgment by operation of § 696.1. Chaos, caprice and ad hoc pronouncements would inevitably follow from the slightest departure. Procedural rules must be applied mechanically to avoid the uncertainties that arise when exceptions are created.111 Evenhanded fairness calls for undeviating enforcement of conformity to orderly process.112
SUMMARY
Rodgers’ claim for bodily injury and his wife’s derivative claim for loss of consortium arose from Rodgers’ single pathogenic blood transfusion. Each plaintiff had but a single claim.113 Both were decided by the general unreserved verdict for all four defendants. Any preserved error in the proceedings which culminated in the claims’ submission would have been reviewable in a timely appeal from the judgment entered by force of § 696.1 upon the general unreserved jury verdict.
If allowed to carry the day, the dissents would (a) defer the verdict’s effectiveness, (b) make its legal force dependent upon judicial intervention and (c) substitute this court’s will for that of the legislature by lawlessly abandoning fidelity to the legislative history and to the text of § 696 that stands restored verbatim as § 696.1 Recent jurisprudence which effectuates the legislature’s unmistakable recommitment to § 696 and its intent to dispense with affirmative judicial action as a prerequisite for “entry” of a judgment— Jaco and its progeny114 — would have to stand overruled. This scheme, if adopted, would cause us to (1) sacrifice the law’s conceptual symmetry for the illusion of simplicity and uniformity, (2) ignore settled principles of statutory construction and (3) throw settled law to the winds without any semblance of a compelling reason. The court would be open to criticism that “justifiable reexamination of principles had given way to drives for particular results in the short term.”115
The only judgment in this case was that “filed” and “entered” upon the judgment roll on March 6, 1992 in obedience to the command of § 696.1. The appeal must be dismissed as untimely.
APPEAL DISMISSED.
[415]*415LAVENDER, V.C.J. and SIMMS and WATT, JJ., concur.
HARGRAVE, J., concurs by reason of stare decisis.
HODGES, C.J., ALMA WILSON and SUMMERS, JJ., and CHAPEL, S.J., sitting by designation in lieu of KAUGER, J., who recused, dissent.
[416]*416APPENDIX
THE STATUTORY SYMMETRY OF AN EXECUTABLE JUDGMENT'S ENTRY FOR THREE DIFFERENT CLASSES OF DECIDING MECHANISM UNDER 12 O.S.1991 §§ 22 ET SEQ. (LAWS 1991, C. 251 §§ 1 ET SEQ.)
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CATEGORY I: Under the terms of 12 O.S.1981 § 697 (now 12 O.S.1991 § 697.1), construed together with 12 O.S. 1991 § 990A, no judgment exists until the court's affirmative approval of a special verdict is effected by a filed journal entry.
CATEGORY II: The terms of 12 O.S.1981 § 696 and of its progeny, § 696.1, construed in conjunction with § 990A, require no judicial approval for a verdict to become the court’s judgment in the action. Peoples Electric Co-op. v. Broughton, 191 Okl. 229, 127 P.2d 850, 853 (1942); Jaco Production Co. v. Luca, 823 P.2d 364 (1991).
CATEGORY III: As in Category I, no judgment exists until it is effected by a filed journal entry. 12 O.S.1991 § 990A.