Schneider v. Republic Supply Co.

1926 OK 889, 252 P. 45, 123 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
Docket17164
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1926 OK 889 (Schneider v. Republic Supply Co.) 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
Schneider v. Republic Supply Co., 1926 OK 889, 252 P. 45, 123 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 497 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, 0.

The plaintiffs in error were defendants, and the defendant in error was plaintiff in the trial court, and they will be hereinafter designated as they appeared in that court.

This appeal is prosecuted by the defendants to reverse judgment of the district court of Oklahoma county rendered against them in favor of the plaintiff: upon a promissory note in the sum of $2,719.93. The note was signed by Washita Ranger Oil Company, by its treasurer. J. B. Bohlen, made payable to the plaintiff, the Republic Supply Company.

It was charged in plaintiff’s iDetition that the Washita Ranger Oil Company was a co-partnership composed of various individuals named as defendants therein, by7 whose authorized agent, J. B. Bohlen, the note was, on the 16th day of April, 1921, executed and delivered to the plaintiff, due 30 days thereafter.

The answer of the defendants contained a general denial of the allegations contained in the plaintiff’s petition, a specific denial of tie existence of a partnership and of the authority of J. B. Bohlen to execute the note sued pn, and further pleaded that there had been a judgment rendered on the 12th day of April, 1922, by the district court of Washita county, upon the identical note set out in plaintiff’s petition, in which action the matters in controversy had been finally adjudicated, and that the judgment there rendered constituted a bar to plaintiff’s action.

The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and resulted in *99 a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the amount sued for. From this judgment and from an order overruling their motion for a new trial, the defendants appeal to this court for review. The specifications of error relied on by the defendants for a reversal of the judgment are presented under three propositions as follows :

“ (1) The judgment rendered in the district court of Washita county on the identical note sued on in this case is a complete bar to this action, and the defendant in error is estopped from further litigating same.”
“(2) Judgment having been rendered in Washita county against the Washita Ranger Off Company, J. B. Bohlen, and Dr. A. Weber, the claim became merged in judgment and is extinguished and cannot be the basis of a second suit.”
“ (3) Agency when denied under oath must be clearly established by the party alleging same.”

We shall consider these propositions in their order. The record discloses, and it is not seriously disputed, that the Washita Ranger Oil Company, a copartnership composed of some 60 members, purchased in the years 1020 and 1921 from the plaintiff, on open account, a quantity of oil well supplies and equipment. On the 16fh day of April,. 1921, there remained a balance unpaid on the open account of $2,719.13. which was converted into a promissory note, signed by the Washita Ranger Oil Company, by J. B. Bohlen as treasurer; indorsed on the back by Dr. A. Weber and J. B. Bohlen, as president and treasurer of the Washita Ranger Oil Company, and also indorsed by them individually, and delivered to the plaintiff due and payable 30 days thereafter. On the 12th day of April, 1922, the plaintiff, Republic Supply Company, instituted its action in the district court of Washita county against the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a joint stock association, J. B. Bohlen, and Dr. A. Weber, president and treasurer of said association, as indorsers on said note, and on the 7th day of December. 1922. thereafter, recovered a judgment in that court against Washita Ranger Oil Company, a joint stock association, J. B. Bohlen. and Dr. A. Weber, jointly and severally, in the sum of $2 ;719.93, with interest and attorneys’ fees added.

After the rendition of this judgment in Washita county, the plaintiff. Republic Supply Company, on April 27, 1923, filed therein its motion to make additional parties defendant which included the defendants in the instant ease. On May 26. 1923, this motion was withdrawn by the plaintiff. On May 25, 1923, it instituted the instant case in the district court of Oklahoma county against the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a copartnership composed of more than 60 individuals, whom it named as defendants in the action, seeking a recovery upon the promissory note which formed the basis of its action in Washita county.

The .findings of the trial court, to the effect that the defendants and each of them were copartners under the trust agreement introduced in evidence, clearly established the status of the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a copartnership at the time fEe action in Washita county was instituted, and not a corporation or joint stock association. If, in that action, an attempt had been made to sue the copartnership and to obtain a judgment against the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a copartnership, then a judgment rendered in that proceeding on the same promissory note here sought to be recovered on would undoubtedly constitute a bar to the instant action.

If it be conceded that the ifiaintiffs the instant action obtained a judgment in the district court of Washita county against the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a co-partnership upon the identical note which is the subject of the instant action, then the liability of the defendants under the contract would undoubtedly merge in the judgment, and the judgment would constitute a bar to another action subsequently brought on the same obligation. But we are unable, from the record here presented, to say that the plaintiff ever obtained a judgment in any court prior to the rendition of the judgment in its favor in Oklahoma county against the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a copartnership.

• The judgment obtained in Washita county, shown in the record, did not result from an action brought against the defendants in the instant case as copartners under the name of the Washita Ranger Oil Company, because there was no attemp; to join the defendants here named in that action as members of the copartnership. On the other hand, the only members of the copartnership named in that action were joined as defendants by virtue of their indorsement of the note executed by Washita Ranger Oil Company as a joint stock association. Whatever may have been the legal capacity or lack of legal capacity of the Washita Ranger Oil Company as a joint stock association to sue and be sued in the action brought in Washita county, it is blear that the defend *100 ants in the instant case were not parties thereto in the capacity in which they are impleaded in the instant case.

In the instant ease they are made parties in their individual capacity, as contemplated by the rule announced in Cox v. Gille Hardware & Iron Co., 8 Okla. 483, 58 Pac. 045.

The general rule applicable to the situation presented in the instant case is seated in 15 Ii. C. L. page 1012, as follows:

“It is a well-established principie that a former judgment does not have the effect of r'es judicata and is not admissible as conclusive evidence of a material fact therein adjudicated unless the second suit is not only between the same parties but between them in the same right or capacity. * *

Again in Lamar Co. v. Talley (Tex. Civ. App.) 127 S. W. 272 (affirmed in 104 Tex. 295, 137 S. W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hildebrand v. Gray
1993 OK CIV APP 182 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1993)
Kasan v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
1976 OK CIV APP 38 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1976)
Laws v. Fisher
1973 OK 69 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1973)
Smittle v. Eberle
1960 OK 137 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1960)
Butterick Co., Inc. v. Molen
1946 OK 359 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)
Karchmer v. Unger
1939 OK 484 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
Buckholts v. Wright
1939 OK 387 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
Roxoline Petroleum Co. v. Craig
1931 OK 160 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)
Raasch v. Dancy
1927 OK 351 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 889, 252 P. 45, 123 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-republic-supply-co-okla-1926.