State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Brown

1923 OK 659, 218 P. 816, 92 Okla. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 801
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1923
Docket11835
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1923 OK 659 (State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Brown) 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
State Ex Rel. Freeling v. Brown, 1923 OK 659, 218 P. 816, 92 Okla. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 801 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Oklahoma county by the state of Oklahoma ex rel. S. P. Freeling, Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma, as plaintiff, against J. B. Brown, defendant, on the 24th day of May, 1920, to recover upon a promissory note executed by the defendant J. B. Brown on the 3rd day of December, 1918, at Weatherford, Oklahoma, in the sum of $2,882.12, made payable to the Farmers State Bank, Weatherford, Oklahoma, and which said note was then held by the State Banking Commissioner as part of the assets of the Farmers State Bank, which had' heretofore become insolvent and taken over by the State Bank Commissioner. The petition prayed for judgment in the sum of $3,302.42, with interest from May 18, 1920, at ten per cent, per annum until paid and judgment in the sum of $288, attorney’s fees. The petition was duly verified. On the same day an affidavit in garnishment and bond as required by the statutes was filed asking for garnishment summons upon John Eck-hardt and Bemund & Bemund. Garnishment summons was duly issued and served upon the defendant J. B. Brown and the garnishees. The garnishee defendant John Eck-hardt answered showing an indebtedness to the defendant Brown in approximately the sum of $5,000. The garnishee defendants Bemund & Bemund answered not indebted.

Thereafter, on the 10th day of June, 1920, the defendant J. B. Brown filed his motion to discharge the garnishment, and which, in substance, claims the funds in the hands of John Eekhardt to be the proceeds of the sale of a 160-acre tract of land near Weatherford, Okla., and which proceeds of sale the defendant claimed he intended to reinvest in a homestead for himself and family, and claimed. that the land sold was his homestead, and for said reasons claimed the proceeds of said sale as exempt and not subject to garnishment.

On the 12th day -of July, 1920, the court rendered a personal judgment in the sum of $3,303.42, with interest from May 18, 1920, at ten per cent, per annum, and for $288, attorney’s fees against the defendant J. B. Brown.

*138 And on the 13th day of July, 1920, the court heard the evidence upon the motion to discharge the garnishment, and sustained tjie motion and dissolved the garnishment. To this ruling of the court, the state excepted, filed its motion for a new trial, on July 15, 1920, which was heard on July 17, 1920, and overruled. The state saved its exceptions, gave notice of appeal in open court, and the case is now before this court for consideration. It should be added that Rena Brown, wife of the defendant J. R. Brown, at the request of A. J. Welch, attorney for said J. R. Brown, was added as one of the movants without objection on the part of the state.

Seven assignments of error are complained of, but they all go to the one controlling issue, wherein the court sustained the motion of defendants to discharge the garnishment, and thereby holding that the money garnisheed was exempt, being the proceeds derived from the sale of 130 acres of land, claimed by defendants to be their homestead, and which they intended to reinvest in another home. And the real question to be determined is whether or not the 160 acre tract sold was, in fact, a homestead, or impressed with the character of a homestead.

Defendants in error raise two questions in their brief. First, that this appeal should be dismissed, for the reason that the garnishment summons runs in the name of “State of Oklahoma,” instead of “The State of Oklahoma,” as required by law, and cites the'cases of Phoenix Bridge Co. v. Street, 9 Okla. 422, 60 Pac. 221; Powell v. Bank, 56 Okla. 44, 155 Pac. 500; Bank v. Lowenstein, 52 Okla. 259, 165 Pac. 1127.

But the fact that all parties concerned appeared and pleaded to the merits of the case, we think, constitutes a waiver of the defects complained of. And, second, defendants in error insist that plaintiff in error has failed to conform to rule 26 of this court in preparing brief, but there seems to have been a substantial compliance therewith, and as there has never been a strict and rigid enforcement of the rule, we Will not attempt to so apply it at this time.

The facts as to the real question involved in this case as disclosed by the record are as follows: That the defendants in error, J. R. Brown and wife, homesteaded on a tract of land in Oklahoma Territory at the opening of the Cheyenne country, and later sold it and reinvested the proceeds thereof in the tract in controversy in Custer county, Okla., on December 20, 1910; that on December 11, 1900, he purchased a residence in Weatherford, Okla., and lived there with his family most of the time until 1911, the year following the purchase of the farm, the proceeds of which are now in controversy, at which time he, together with his family, consisting of his wife and one son, moved to the farm and made a crop and remained there the greater part of the year, and then moved back to the place in Weatherford for the purpose, as he states, of placing his son in school, and the family continued to live there until August, 1919, at which time that property was sold, and a portion of their household effects, farming implements, and live stock were removed to the farm and left in charge of the tenant, Mr. Lamar, who was occupying the farm, and had so occupied same from year to year for a number of years, and at that time had re-rented for the year 1920. Mr. Brown and family moved to Chelsea, Okla., but did not establish any residence or home there.

The evidence further discloses that Mr. Brown, sometime prior to the sale of the Weatherford home, had lost his health, and had spent considerable time in hospitals, and had undergone a major operation, and had incurred a great deal of expense, which he was unable to meet, and gives this as a reason for selling his home in Weatherford. And after the sale of same, he returned to the hospital in Kansas City, and Mrs. Brown also became ill and was forced to go to the Kansas City hospital, where they both underwent major operations. And at about that time, February, 1920, .the attending physicians advised Mr. Brown that he was suffering from a disease of the bladder and the same had been caused, or at least greatly aggravated, by the character of the water he had been accustomed to drinking. That the water of Custer county, Okla., contained gyp in such quantities as to make it detrimental to his health, and advised him to remove from that part of the state. Whereupon Mr. Brown discussed the matter of selling the Custer county farm with his wife, who at first demurred, and expressed a desire to retain it as a home, but on being assured by her husband that they would reinvest the proceeds derived from the sale of same in another farm, she gave her consent to the sale. And in February, 1920, the property was sold and in May, 1920, this suit was instituted and a portion of the proceeds garnisheed. Soon after the sale of the land defendants were discharged from the hospital, and shortly thereafter came to Oklahoma City and rented a rooming house, and seemed to be making some effort toward buying a farm in Oklahoma county, and contend that they would have purchased one, if the *139 funds in controversy bad not been garnisheed.

These facts are largely established by the testimony of Mr. and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 659, 218 P. 816, 92 Okla. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-freeling-v-brown-okla-1923.