Rourke Dunn v. Bozarth

1924 OK 617, 229 P. 495, 103 Okla. 133, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1924
Docket13584
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 617 (Rourke Dunn v. Bozarth) 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
Rourke Dunn v. Bozarth, 1924 OK 617, 229 P. 495, 103 Okla. 133, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 264 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEPHENSON, C.

Emily Culbertson commenced her action in the justice court against S.. A.-Rourke in forcible entry and detainer proceedings for possession of premises owned by the plaintiff and leased by the defendant. Judgment went for plaintiff for possession. The defendant S- A. Rourke, as principal, and A. Dunn, as surety, executed and filed appeal bond in the proceedings on appeal to the district court- In the .district court judgment went for the plaintiff for. possession. Thereupon the defendant perfected his appeal to the Supreme Court, where the cause was affirmed. Emily Culbertson, the obligee in the appeal bond, assigned the bond in writing to Hughes, Bozarth & Anderson. The assignees commenced this action on the appeal bond against the principal and surety. The defendant questioned the right of the plaintiffs to maintain their action on the bond and assignment, and the plaintiffs'1 caused Emily Culbertson to be made a party defendant in the cause. She admitted the assignment of the bond to the plaintiffs and her purpose to permit the plaintiffs to recover thereon, but in the event the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover on the assignment and bond, that she be permitted to have judgment on the obligation against the defendants. In the course of the trial the court held that plaintiffs were entitled to recover on the assignment and bond. No cross-appeal has been filed on the judgment or ruling denying Emily Culbertson the right of recovery. In reciting the history of this case the plaintiffs in error say, in substance:

(a) S. A. Rourke was in possession of the premises as the tenant of Emily. Culbertson for whiclt the owner received • judgment for the possession in forcible entry and detainer proceedings;

(b) That Hughes, Bozarth and Anderson, went into the possession of the premises under Rourke and occupied the same as the tenants of Rourke, and continued in the possession at ail times during the forcible entry and detainer proceedings.

(c)' During the latter part of the occupancy and during the forcible entry and detainer proceedings, held the premises by lease from Emily Culbertson.

The defendants claim this is an action in tort and was not assignable. The action is not based on the wrongful possession. The action is on the appeal bond, and the wrong alleged is the failure of the defendants to perform the final judgment of the district court, according to the terms of tee bond. It may be that the breach of the bond is the result of a tortious act, but this does not make the suit on the bond an action in tort. Any action Emily Culberson might have had on the bond was ex contractu, and she had a right to assign the same. The assignees were authorized by law to maintain the action in their own names on the bond for i‘s breach. Corpus Juris, vol. 1, page 1010, section 141; Green v. Conrad et al. (Mo.) 21 S. W. 839; State ex rel. Hinde v. U. S. Fid. & Gty. Co. (K. C. [Mo.] Ct. of App.) 115 S. W. 1081; State ex rel. Myers v. Mathieson (Springfield [Mo.] Ct. of App.) 232 S. W. 181; Craig v. Encey, 78 Ind. 141; Stuart.v. Mills (St. Louis [Mo.] Ct. of App.) 79 S. W. 988.

Complaint is made as to the sufficiency of the appeal bond given in the forcible entry and detainer proceedings. Particular attention is called to the fact that the bond does not recite any given sum of money as fixing the bounds of plaintiff’s recovery. The bond recites that S. A- Rourke, as principal, and A. Dunn, as surety, are bound to Emily Culbertson, for the performance of the conditions of the bond. The conditions of the bond are:

*135 ' 1st. That the principal should, not commit waste on the premises.

2nd. Perform all parts of any judgment that may be returned against him in the appeal.

3rd. In case the judgment is given against him in the district court, he will pay double rents or double the use and occupancy of said property from the date of the undertaking until the delivery of the said property to the obligee. •

4th.- All damages and costs that may be awarded against him.

This bond is given pursuant to section 1019, Comp. Stat. 1921. The parties could not determine the amount of plaintiff’s damages at the time of the execution of the bond, as it was not known how long the litigation would continue. The* conditions of the bond are within the provisions of section 1019, supra. Under the provisions of section 1019, the defendants could not limit plaintiff’s right of recovery by fixing any certain sum of money in the bond as' the extent of their liability, unless by consent and acceptance by the obligee. The defendants say they were entitled to show that the possession of the premises by the defendants during the forcible entry and detainer proceedings, if unlawful, was not wilful on their part- The defendants further say the plaintiffs’ right to recove^ double the rental value does not attach until after the giving of notice to quit and deliver possession to the owner.

In making this offer, the defendants were seeking to govern the action by section 6005, Comp. Stat. 1921, as construed in Shield v. Mitchell, 92 Okla. 135, 218 Pac. 696. The latter section has no relation to . the recovery on an appeal bond given in a forcible entry and detainer proceeding. The action applies where the tenant holds over and after notice to quit has been given to him by the owner. This section has no connection with the action now under consideration. The defendants below attempted to show in this action,. their possession did not go to the entire of the premises involved in the forcible entry and detainer proceedings. This was an effort to relitigate the questions involved in the forcible entry and detainer proceedings. The defendants claim this right by the provisions of section 1050, Comp. Stat. 1921, in the following language:

“Judgments, either before a justice or in the district court in actions brought under this article (forcible entry and detainer proceedings), shall not be a bar to any other action brought by either party.”

By the language of. the section it is made to exclude from its scope a forcible entry and detainer action, once the subject-matter of a trial.

The only issue involved in the trial of a forcible entry and detainer action is the fight of possession, Faust v. Fenton, 75 Okla. 68, 181 Pac. 940. Tire forcible entry and detainer proceeding in which this bond was given was against S- A. Rourke, and charged the latter with being in the wrongful possession of the entire -premises. If the defendant was not in possession of the entire premises, such showing would have been a good defense to that extent in the prior proceeding. Whe'thér the defendants were in the exclusive 'possession was an issue in the-case. "Both the plaintiff and defendant treated- the exclusive possession as being in the defendant; It was further acknowledged to be true on the part of the defendant by giving the appeal bond whereby he willingly bound himself to answer to the plaintiff in damages for withholding the entire possession, if it were found to be wrongful. It is a well-settled principle of law that in a collateral proceeding issues of fact once tried between the parties, or which might have been presented for consideration in the trial, cannot again be called into question between and among the parties and their privies. Corrugated Culvert Co. v. Simpson Twp., 51 Okla. 178, 151 Pac. 854; McIntosh v. Holtgrove, 79 Okla. 63, 191 Pac. 739.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 617, 229 P. 495, 103 Okla. 133, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rourke-dunn-v-bozarth-okla-1924.