Sparlin v. Jackson
This text of 918 P.2d 740 (Sparlin v. Jackson) 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.
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Dispositive of the OHahoma Corporation Commission’s [Commission] dismissal motion is our answer to the question whether Spar-lin and Rozelle’s repeated attempts to have the March 29, 1995 Commission order modified extended the time to appeal from that order. We answer in the negative and dismiss the appeal as untimely.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
OHahoma Corporation Commission Order No. 391039 was entered on March 29, 1995.
[742]*742On April 25, 1995 Sparlin and Rozelle moved for rehearing. By its Order No. 394148 — entered July 26, 1995 — the Commission recast Sparlin’s rehearing plea as a motion to reconsider, granted rehearing and modified its earlier order by no longer requiring immediate forfeiture of her operator’s bond.
Sparlin and Rozelle moved once again for rehearing, this time of both the March 29 order and its July 26, 1995 modification. This motion was denied by the Commission’s December 22, 1995 Order No. 398195, copies of which were mailed to the parties on December 29, 1995. The petition in error came here on February 15, 1996. In its response the Commission moved for the appeal’s dismissal as untimely.
II
COMMISSION ORDERS BECOME FINAL BY FORCE OF LAW AFTER 30 DAYS; SPARLIN’S PLEA FOR REVIEW CAME TOO LATE
A Corporation Commission order must be appealed, if at all, within thirty days of its entry.
The March 29 order was appealable within 30 days of its entry. It became final 30 days later when no appeal was brought. To be effective as a modification of the March 29 order, the July 26 Commission ruling had to be entered within 30 days of March 29.6 If the July 26 order was to be treated as separately appealable, an appeal from that decision would be untimely if brought here after 30 days from its entry.
Because no timely petition in error was lodged here from either order, both are now beyond this court’s reviewing cognizance.7 Sparlin and Rozelle’s plea for review is hence untimely.
Appeals from the Commission must be prosecuted in the manner prescribed for civil appeals from the district courts. Procedural symmetry for district court orders and those of the Corporation Commission is required by Art. 9, § 20, Okl. Const.8 See also [743]*743Art. 5, § 46, Okl. Const.9 A district court order triggers appeal time when it is filed.10 The functional equivalent of district-court “filing” consists of three steps by which a Commission order is deemed entered.
Ill
SUMMARY
The Corporation Commission’s decision to sanction Sparlin for failure to comply with its rules was entered on March 29, 1995. A later order — that claims to modify the March 29 order — was entered July 26, 1995. Spar-lin and Rozelle’s attempt to have these orders modified did not extend the time to appeal for their review. Because no proceedings to review either order was brought here within 30 days of its entry, this appeal must be dismissed as untimely.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
918 P.2d 740, 1996 WL 278215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparlin-v-jackson-okla-1996.