State Ex Rel. Lankford v. Collins

1918 OK 441, 174 P. 568, 70 Okla. 323, 6 A.L.R. 603, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 834
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1918
Docket8749
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1918 OK 441 (State Ex Rel. Lankford v. Collins) 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. Lankford v. Collins, 1918 OK 441, 174 P. 568, 70 Okla. 323, 6 A.L.R. 603, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 834 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEWART.. C.

The plaintiff in his official capacity as bank commissioner having taken over the assets of the insolvent Union State Bank of Muskogee, Okla., brought suit against defendants on a promissory note executed by the defendants to such bank in the sum of $3,500 and also instituted garnishment proceedings naming the Modern Woodmen of America, a fraternal insurance association with local camp and organization at Muskogee, as garnishee. Muskogee Camp No. 7114, Modern Woodmen of America, filed verified answer in the garnishment proceedings denying that it owed any money or held any property belonging to the said Emma R. Collins. Thereafter the Modern Woodmen of America filed answering affidavit admitting that it was indebted to the defendant Emma R. Collins in the sum of $2,000 upon a benefit certificate issued on the life of her son, Oakey F. Collins who died April 30, 1916, and setting forth that the garnishee is a fraternal insurance association, organized for the benefit of its members and their beneficiaries with death benefits payable to the families, heirs blood relatives, or persons dependent upon its members, and further facts showing that the indebtedness owing to the defendant Emma R. Collins, under section 3498. Revised Laws 1910, was not subject to attachment, garnishment, or to be taken ur appropriated by any legal or equitable proceeding or by operation of law to pay the debts or liabilities of a certificate holder or any beneficiary named in the certificate or any person having a right thereunder. Later the defendant Emma R. Collins filed motion to dissolve the garnishment, pleading the same state of facts set forth in the answering affidavit of the Modern Woodmen of America, and asking that the garnishment be dissolved and the money released. Motion to strike the motion to dissolve garnishment was filed by the plaintiff and overruled by the court, and afterwards the plaintiff filed reply and answer to the affidavit of the garnishee and also response to defendant’s motion to dissolve, in which reply and resnnr.se flie plaintiff denied that the $2,000 named was exempt from garnishment for the debts of the said Emma R. Collins, asserting that the said Emma R. Collins was a nonresident of the state of Oklahoma, not entitled to the benefits of the exemption laws of the state of Oklahoma, and had not and cannot'meet the conditions and requirements of article 3, c. 38, Revised Laws 1910, relating to fraternal insurance associations. After hearing the testimony, the court sustained the motion of defendant to dissolve garnishment and discharge the garnishee, from which action of the court, the plaintiff prosecutes error to this court.

It is undisputed that the Modern Woodmen of America is a fraternal insurance association as contemplated and defined by statute, and that the defendant Emma R. Collins w.as the mother of Oakey F. Collins, deceased and the beneficiary named in the certificate issued on the life of the said Oakey F. Collins. The evidence shows that, at the time the action was brought, the defendant Emma R. Collins was living in California with her husband, T. J. Collins, the n+her defendant. The question of nonres-idence is in dispute. But on the assumption that she was a nonresident, we will under *325 take to construe that part of article 3, c. 38, Revised Laws 1910, relating to fraternal insurance associations, being running section 3198, Revised Laws 1910, which read as follows:

•‘The money or other benefit, charity, relief or aid to be paid, provided or rendered by any association authorized to do business under this article shall not be liable to attachment by trustee, garnishee or other process, and shall not be seized, taken, appropriated or applied by any legal or equitable process, or by operation of law, to pay any debt or liability of the certificate holder, or of any beneficiary named in any certificate, or any person who may hare any right thereunder.”

It is claimed by plaintiff in his brief that it is the settled policy of this state that exemption laws are not available to nonresidents, and therefore Emma R. Collins cannot claim the benefits of the section quoted. Our general exemption statute is found in Chapter 34, Revised Laws 1910, and provides for certain exemptions to heads of families, as well as to persons not heads of families who are residents of the state. If the statute under consideration in the case at bar is construed to be an exemption statute, it is not a part of the general exemption statute, and we have no general law which either in effect or in words deprives nonresidents of (he benefit of exemptions other than as defined in chapter 34, supra. If we hold that the provisions of section 3498, supra, do not inure to the benefit of nonresident beneficiaries, we must do so by construction, and not because of express statute ; for there is nothing in the section under consideration, or in the entire chapter on fraternal insurance associations, which can be construed as authority for holding that the protection afforded does not apply to nonresidents. In fact, the language of the section is strongly-in favor of applying the protection to nonresidents as well as to resL dents, in that it is provided that the money or benefit shall not be taken to pay the debts or liabilities of “any beneficiary named in the certificate or any person who may have any right thereunder,” language broad enough to comprehend all persons, resident or nonresident. It is true that, as a rule, exemption laws have no extraterritorial effect : but it does not necessarily follow that, where property situated in this state is the subject of litigation in our courts, the according of rights or privileges fixed by statute as to such property to any and all litigants, resident, or nonresident, would be given extra territorial effect to such laws We may say that in the ease at bar, if the presumption was necessary, it would do no violence to legal principles to presume that the law of the defendant’s residence is the same as the law of this state; there being no showing or claim to the contrary in the record. In this action it is the res which, i’3 the gist of the contention, and, in the absence of an express statute making a distinction between residents and nonresidents, it would be the duty of the courts to give to nonresidents the same rights in the subject of the litigation which would be accorded to residents.

In 11 Ruling Case Law, p. 505, it is observed :

“While some courts have taken the position that, where an exemption statute is not expressly made applicable to nonresidents, it will not be given effect in their fav- or, the better view is that, unless an exemption statute is expressly confined to residents, it applies to nonresidents as well, even though such nonresidents be aliens.”

In view of our statutes abolishing the rule of strict construction as to statutes in derogation of the common law and the uniform holdings of this court that exemption laws are to be construed liberally, the latter view would be more in harmony with the genius of our laws and the settled policy of this court. On an investigation of the authorities. we find that the courts of some states, especially where statutes in derogation of the common law are strictly construed, still hold to the strict construction of exemption laws and, on a theory that exemptions are not favored, hold that exemption laws do not protect nonresidents unless they are specifically included in the statute. The great weight of authority is to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 441, 174 P. 568, 70 Okla. 323, 6 A.L.R. 603, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lankford-v-collins-okla-1918.