Smith v. Wheeler

44 P. 203, 4 Okla. 138
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 P. 203 (Smith v. Wheeler) 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
Smith v. Wheeler, 44 P. 203, 4 Okla. 138 (Okla. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BiERER, J.:

Defendant in error has moved this court, for a dismissal of the appeal of the plaintiffs in error, on the ground that there is not one hundred dollars, exclusive of the costs, in controversy, and he relies upon general § 4436, § 559 of the Civil Procedure act, to-sustain his motion.

This section .provides: “No appeal or proceeding in error shall be had or taken to the supreme court in any civil action unless the amount or value in controversy, exclusive of costs, shall exceed one hundred dollars ($100), * * * *>> except in certain cases, which does not include the one in controversy.

If it were within the province of the legislature of this Territory to provide in what cases appeals might be had, and in what cases they might not be had, this section of the statute would, of course, deny plaintiffs in error their right of appeal in this case, but our legislature has no such power.

Part of § 9 of the Organic Act of this Territory provides:

“ Writs of error, bills of exception, and appeals shall be allowed in all cases from final decisions of said district courts, to the supreme court under such regulations as *140 may be prescribed by law, but in no case removed to the supreme court sliall trial by jury be allowed in said court.”

Now the judgment appealed from is a final decision of one of the district courts which are provided for by the Organic Act, and all the power the legislature has in the premises is to make regulations for taking such appeals. And the right to regulate the manner of taking such appeals does not give the legislature the right to deny them. The motion of the defendant in error is, therefore, overruled.

The contention of the plaintiffs in error is that the second paragraph of their answer stated a good defense, because the landlord has the common law right to dis-train for rents due, and that this right, as the common law exists in this country, gives the landlord the right to seize, under such distress, personal property of the lessee upon the leased premises, even though the same had been mortgaged by the lessee,

We have no statute which in terms either grants the light to distrain for rent, as it existed at common law or as modified by English statutes, or abolishing the right to distrain for rent; one or the other of which statutes has been passed in many if not most of the states of the Union. But § 3874, which is § 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure of this Territory, provides:

“ The common law, as modified by constitutional and statutory law, judicial decisions and the condition and wants of the people, shall remain in force in aid of the general Statutes of Oklahoma; but the rule of the common law, that statutes in derogation thereof, shall be strictly construed, shall not be applicable to any general statute of Oklahoma; but all such statutes shall be liberally construed to promote their object.”

*141 The common law is, and has been since this statute took effect, August 14, 1893, (and this cause arose since then), in force in this Territory, under the terms and conditions of this section.' Under this section the common law is in force in aid of the general Statutes, but it should not be so construed as to be violative of either the letter or spirit of the general Statutes, or of our laws and institutions.

The law of distraint for rent was one of the outgrowths, and one of the rigorous institutions, of the feudal system, under which the landlord was a nobleman and the tenant a serf. Under such a rule of action the tenant’s property might be seized and taken from him by the landlord, without any adjudication or decree making him the landlord’s debtor. The liberality of our laws does not, in spirit or in word, permit of such procedure.

In Montana the legislature adopted the common law, so far as it was applicable and of a general nature, as part of the law of that Territory, and under such am enactment the right to distrain for rent was claimed there, but was denied by the supreme court in the case of Bohm v. Dunphy, 1 Montana, 333, and was held to be inconsistent with our institutions, and particularly inapplicable in that territory.

This right was also denied in Massachusetts as early as 1827, in the case of Butterfield v. Baker, 5 Pickering, 522, which case was followed and approved in Wadte, appellant, 7 Pickering, 100.

The right of the landlord to sieze the property of the tenant for the payment of rent, except by legal process, was denied in Knox v. Hunt and Porter, 18 Missouri, 243, although the statutes of that state gave the landlord a lien on the property for such rent. The court there said:

*142 “ A landlord lias a lien upon the crops grown upon the demised premises in any year for the rent of that year, (R. C. 1845), but this lien can only be enforced by process of law. ”

Prior to 1846 it was frequently held in New York that the common law right of distress for rent existed in that state, but by an act that year passed by the legislature the right was abolished.

And it is worthy of notice that in the case of Coburn v. Harvey, 18 Wisconsin, 156, it was held by the supreme court of that state for the first time, contrary to the prior impressions of the judges of the court, that this right existed there, and that the legislature very promptly, two years thereafter, abolished the right.

In Dutcher v Culver, 24 Minnesota, 584, it appears that after a cause was submitted in the supreme court, •and before the decision of the court was rendered, the legislature of that state abolished the common law right of distress for rent, as it was held in that case to have existed there before its abolishment.

These are but instances taken from some of the leading states of the Union, where the people long ago considered this summary process to be unnecessary to the needs of this country, and this example, as before ■ suggested, has been followed in very many of the states.

Within the spirit and meaning of our Statutes the landlord is a creditor and the tenant a debtor. Sections 2657 • and 2658 provide that a debtor is one who is, or may become, liable to pay money to another; and that a creditor is one in whose favor an obligation exists, by reason of which he is, or may become, entitled to the payment of money.

Our Code is ample in making provision for the litigation and determination of disputed rigl ts, and contení- *143 plates that these disputes should be settled judicially before a claim is enforced. Even with reference to chattel mortgages it is provided (§ 3204) that the mortgagor may, by application to, and an order made by, the jugde of the district court, require the mortgagee to foreclose his mortgage by an action in court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 P. 203, 4 Okla. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wheeler-okla-1896.