Strother v. Bolen

1919 OK 148, 181 P. 299, 72 Okla. 310, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 385
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 13, 1919
Docket10453
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1919 OK 148 (Strother v. Bolen) 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
Strother v. Bolen, 1919 OK 148, 181 P. 299, 72 Okla. 310, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 385 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an original action of mandamus wherein Minnie Strother is plaintiff and J. W. Bolen, judge of the Seventh judicial district of the state of Oklahoma, is respondent.

In an action pending in the district court of Seminole county, over which Judge Bolen presides, the relator herein, a party thereto, filed an affidavit seeking to disqualify the said judge from trying the case. A showing was attempted to be made in said affidavit establishing the bias and prejudice of the respondent. This he held insufficient to justify his certifying to his disqualification. Whereupon this action was brought and a writ of mandamus sought to compel a change of judge.

The plaintiff’s application to this court for writ of mandamus is duly verified, to which is attached as exhibits thereto copies of the petition of the plaintiff, and answer and cross-petition of the defendant in a cause pending in the district court of Seminole county, wherein O. D. Strother is plaintiff and Minnie Strother, the applicant herein, is defendant, wherein the plaintiff, O. D. Strother, brought an action for divorce against the defendant, Minnie Strother, upon the grounds of extreme cruelty, and wherein the defendant, Minnie Strother, in her answer and cross-petition therein, sued for a divorce from ¡the plaintiff upon the same grounds, anid for permanent alimony, and to establish her property rights in the property of the plaintiff, and in which action a hearing was had in said cause before the respondent, as judge between the said parties on the 6th day of July, 1918, on the defendant Minnie Strother’s motion for alimony pendente lite, at the conclusion of which the respondent made an order for the defendant for $200 attorney’s fees, $50 a month for the support of the defendant pendente lite, and $25 suit money, and thereafter the defendant, Minnie Strother, presented application to the respondent for the disqualification of such respondent, which application was overruled by the respondent, who reduced 'his ruling to writing, signing the same, and copy of defendant’s application for alimony pendente lite and respondent’s ruling thereon,, and the defendant’s application for disqualification atad the respondent’s ruling thereon, and a transcript of the testimony taken by the respondent upon the hearing of the defendant’s application for alimony pendente lite, duly certified by the reporter, are all attached to the plaintiff’s application herein and made a part thereof, to which application of the plaintiff herein the respondent had filed herein his verified answer, to which verified answer the plaintiff herein had filed a reply consisting of a general denial.

The plaintiff herein has presented in support of her said application her own affidavit and those of her attorneys of record, to wit, William 'S. Wittier, Malcolm E. Rosser, and John W. Willmott. There is also presented herein the affidavit of one S. D. Powell, A. B. Douglass, and A. L. Frederick, containing an itemized list and appraisement of the property of the plaintiff in said divorce action; also O. D. Strother’s affidavit, containing an- itemized list and appraisement of his property and an itemized list of his indebtedness at the time of said hearing, is presented by the defendant.

The specific grounds upon which the plaintiff herein based her right of action are that said defendant, Hon. J. W. Bolen, is so biased and prejudiced against her and her cause of action against the said O. D. Strother, and is so biased.and prejudiced in favor of the said O. D. Strother and his cause of action against the plaintiff, that this plaintiff cannot secure and have before said defendant a fair and. impartial trial, and alleges in support thereof:

“That the said O. D. Strother, almost immediately after the decision of the said defendant upon the motion of this plaintiff for alimony pendente lite, became a very active worker in the campaign for the election or the re-election of the said defendant as judge of the Seventh judicial district, and secured many citizens of said Seminole county and in and about the town of Seminole and who pledged themselves to vote for.the said defendant judge, all of which facts were well known to said judge, and this plaintiff further alleges that, by reason of the activity of ithe said O. D. Strother in. procuring the reelection of the defendant as judge of said district in manner aforesaid, the said defendant is further biased and prejudiced in favor of said O. D. Strother, though unconsciously against the plaintiff.”

The actions and sayings of the respondent relied upon by the plaintiff as set forth in her affidavit and those of her attorneys in substance are: That the said respondent, at the hearing of her motion for alimony pendente lite, insisted upon going into the merits of the cause upon said hearing over the objection of her counsel when said defendant was not prepared on the merits and had no proof to offer in rebuttal of said merits of the cause, and that the respondent commented upon the *312 nativity of the said Minnie Strother, inquiring what her maiden name was, which happened to be Ulrich, evidently supposing that she was German-born, and that by his attitude and actions accepted as absolute facts all statements made by attorney for plaintiff in said cause in reference to and upon the merits of said cause when there was no trial upon said merits, that he could noit understand, and thought it was highly improper for any litigant in his court to be represented by so many counsel from all over the United States, remarking that this woman has a St. Louis lawyer, a prominent firm representing her from Muskogee, and also local counsel, and that there was entirely too much marshaling of forces, and no necessity of having so many' lawyers, and that, when she was placed upon the witness stand, the respondent examined her on his own motion and asked her if she did not intend to break up Oscar Strother, and stated that he did not believe in tolerating any attempt on the part of any woman to break up her husband and mulct him for attorney’s fees, and in commenting upon the question of 'the correction of one of the nieces of the said Minnie Strother, who was no kin to Oscar Strother, that he, the court, began fighting school teachers when he was about the age of 14 or 10 years, and that in his opinion it was right for children to indulge in a rebellious attitude, and, further, that the objection of said Oscar D. Strother to the correction of the nieces of the plaintiff was proper and showed that he was a good man, and not a bad man as it was! attempted to show by the cross-petition of the defendant in said cause; that he asked her what her earnings had bees before she was married, and as to what occupation the brother of the plaintiff, Alexander Wolfe, was engaged in, as to what he was earning and as to what her relations were with her other kinsfolk, in all of which inquiry he showed a hostile and partisan attitude toward the defendant, and as to whether her brother paid any board to said Oscar D. Strother while he stayed at the home of the parties, and that he commented upon the fact that the said Oscar D. Strother had evidently married a woman beneath his station of life, and that, of course, such marriages never led to any good.

The respondent in his answer herein denies the allegations of the plaintiff, except such as are admitted.

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Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 148, 181 P. 299, 72 Okla. 310, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strother-v-bolen-okla-1919.