State Ex Rel. Williams v. Smith

1936 OK 465, 59 P.2d 410, 177 Okla. 321, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 668
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1936
DocketNo. 26514.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1936 OK 465 (State Ex Rel. Williams v. Smith) 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. Williams v. Smith, 1936 OK 465, 59 P.2d 410, 177 Okla. 321, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 668 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

John 1). Smith was charged in the district court with the crime of murder and made his appearance bond in the sum of $10,060. The defendants in the present action, who .are also the defendants in error, were his sureties on the appearance bond.

John Smith failed to appear on the date for his trial, and the court ordered his bond forfeited and directed the county attorney to file suit against the sureties thereon. The county attorney filed suit, the defendant, sureties filed motions to quash and dismiss, demurrer and answer. The case proceeded to trial, the defendants appearing by their attorneys, and at the conclusion thereof the trial court rendered judgment against the defendants. The defendants filed their motion for new trial, which was overruled, and no appeal therefrom was ever perfected.

During the following or second following term of court the defendants filed their petition to vacate the aforesaid judgment against them, on the alleged ground of unavoidable casualty and misfortune preventing them from defending that action. A hearing was had on this petition to vacate, evidence was heard, and the court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, vaeat- *322 ing the above-mentioned judgment against them as sureties. The plaintiff appeals from this judgment vacating the former judgment.

The evidence revealed that after the judgment on the bond forfeiture was rendered the defendants began a quite extensive search for the accused, in which' they spent considerable money, and that this search eventually resulted in the apprehension of the accused in the state of Texas, from which place ho was returned by the defendants, lodged in the county jail and eventually tried, found guilty, and sentenced. It further appears that the defendants had paid over $1,000 on the bond and that the county was none the worse off financially by the delay in bringing- the accused to trial.

Under this set of circumstances, it may to some people seem hard indeed to enforce the bond forfeiture against the defendants. The fact nevertheless remains that we are not the makers of the law and that when our natural inclinations conflict with the plain provisions of the statutory law, the latter must shape the course of our decision.

There was no evidence, of any nature whatsoever, tending to prove that the defendants through unavoidable casualty or misfortune were prevented from defending the bond forfeiture action in which the judgment against them was vacated by the instant proceedings, in fací, they did defend that action, and the record affirmatively so shows. That, the accused failed to appear for liis trial was misfortune, — whether “unavoidable” we do not know; but that is not misfortune preventing the defendants from defending against the bond forfeiture action. It is always “misfortune,” for any defendant, when he is haled into court. The misfortune had already occurred when the 'action was filed against the defendants; in fact it caused the filing thereof, and there was no recitation of facts in their petition to vacate, nor in their testimony, which would lead any one to believe that they were prevented from defending the action by casualty or misfortune or by anything else.

The parlies agree that the petition to vacate was founded on the 7th subdivision of section 556, O. S. 1931 (810, O. O. S. 1921), which provides that unavoidable casualty or misfortune, preventing a party from prosecution or defending, may serve as a basis for vacating or modifying the judgment of a district court, at or after the term at which such judgment, was rendered. We have uniformly held that if a judgment rendered at a former term is vacated under this subdivision there must be proof that the moving party was prevented from defending or prosecuting by unavoidable casualty or misfortune. If there is no evidence whatsoever to sustain a judgment vacating a former judgment, purportedly made on that ground, it is most obviously beyond our power to affirm the judgment. Under section 2820, O. S. 1931, dealing with the forfeiture of bail bonds, and providing that “* * * if at any. time before the final adjournment' of court the defendant or his bail appear and satisfactorily excuse his neglect, the court may direct the forfeiture to be discharged upon such terms as may be just,” the power of the court to discharge th© forfeiture is limited to that particular term of court; but when action is filed and judgment is actually entered against the sureties, and it is not sought to vacate that judgment until a subsequent term of court, the 7th subdivision of section 5'56, supra, applies as in any other action.

We stated in Burton v. Swanson, 142 Okla. 134, 285 P. 839, that the purpose of the subdivision is to give the party an opportunity to be heard on the merits of his defense, and when the party has once been heard, he has no remedy under the said 7th subdivision. We quote from that decision as being particularly appropriate to this case:

“* * * The 7th subdivision of section 810, supra, requires the unavoidable casualty and misfortune to have been such as to prevent the party from prosecuting or defending. The record in this case shows that plaintiffs were present and participated in the proceeding and defended the action. There is nothing in the 7th subdivision, supra, that applies to the inability of a party to discover the evidence necessary to constitute a defense. The purpose of that provision is to give a party litigant an opportunity to prosecute or defend an action when he has been prevented from prosecuting or defending the cause by some unavoidable casualty or misfortune. The unavoidable casualty or misfortune therein referred to consists of some act or thing affecting a party to the litigation and has no relation to a fact or thing that affects a party’s ability to ascertain or discover evidence sufficient to constitute a defense.”

We deem it unnecessary to re-emphasize the above principle by copious quotations from prior decisions. The following opinions, some of which involve the question of vacating judgments rendered at prior terms on bail bonds, sufficiently announce that principle as emanating from the statute itself, any needed changes in which muse be made by the Legislature and not by the *323 court: Burton v. Swanson, supra; Hall et al. v. Holloway et el., 62 Okla. 192, 162 P. 186; McAdams v. Latham, 21 Okla. 511, 96 P. 584; Foltz v. Deshon, 122 Okla. 42, 249 P. 358; Provins v. Lovi, 6 Okla. 94, 50 P. 81; Thompson et al. v. Caddo County Bank, 15 Okla. 615, 82 P. 927; Petros v. Fox-Vliet Drug Co., 138 Okla. 253, 280 P. 812; Tracy et al. v. State ex rel. Fancher, Co. Atty., 60 Okla. 109, 159 P. 496; Gavin v. Heath, 125 Okla. 118, 256 P. 745. In particular see Grammer v. State, 105 Okla. 72, 231 P. 505; Seaba et al. v. State, 144 Okla. 295, 290 P. 1098; Price v. State, 169 Okla. 343, 37 P. (2d) 254.

In addition to the foregoing, it does not appear that there was any defense to the action in the first place. Even if the accused had appeared a few days after the bond forfeiture, and before the action on the bond had been filed, it would not have been a defense to the action on the bond, although it may have been sufficient to warrant the trial judge in exonerating the sureties within that, term under the provisions of section 2820, supra. In State ex rel. Buckley v. Drake, 40 Okla. 538, 139 P.

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1936 OK 465, 59 P.2d 410, 177 Okla. 321, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-williams-v-smith-okla-1936.