Sutton v. State Ex Rel. Selby

1922 OK 158, 206 P. 818, 86 Okla. 120, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 2, 1922
Docket10628
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1922 OK 158 (Sutton v. State Ex Rel. Selby) 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
Sutton v. State Ex Rel. Selby, 1922 OK 158, 206 P. 818, 86 Okla. 120, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 121 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

NICHOLSON, J.

This is an action brought to recover the sum of $500 upou a forfeited appearance bond executed by A. L. Sutton, as principal, and J. Co.ody Johnson,' A. H. Tyson, and T. H. Traylor, as' sureties, given to answer a charge in the county court of Oklahoma county.

The petition is in the ordinary form 'of actions of this character, and no complaint is made of the sufficiency thereof. The amended answer, after admitting the execution of the bond for the appearance of A. L. Sutton at the next term of court, avers that the case of the state of Oklahoma against A. D. Sutton was set for trial on the 7th day of December, 1916; that on said day said A. L. .Sutton and his attorney were present in said court ready for trial; that on said day, when the case was called for trial, the same was, on motion of the county attorney, stricken from the docket for that term of court; that Sutton lived at or near Wewoka, and that his attorney resided outside of Oklahoma City; that on the 7th day of December, 1916, the county attorney, Charles Selby, informed said Sut- • ton and his attorney that Sutton was not needed and that said case against him had been or would be dismissed; that the state of Oklahoma, through the county attorney’s office, desired to pse him later as a witness against some other people and he would be notified in the event they wanted him; that relying upon said statement of the county attorney, and being misled thereby, Sutton and his attorney returned home; that living outside of Oklahoma county, neither 'Sutton nor his attorney received any notice of the setting of said case for trial on the 26th day of February, 1917, and in fact had been, by the statement and promise of the county attorney, led to the belief that said case had been dismissed, and relying solely upon said statement, they made no effort to inform themselves as to the condition of the docket; that Sutton informed his bondsmen that the case had been or would be dismissed and they relied upon said information, and had no knowledge of the setting of said ease on February 26, 1917, and for that reason neither they nor Sutton were present in the county court on that day; that neither Sutton nor his bondsmen had any notice or knowledge of the order forfeiting said bond until this action was filed against them and summons served upon them during the month of Oc- ■ tober, 1917, and for this reason, not knowing that said 'bond had been forfeited, they were precluded from making a motion in the county court to set aside such forfeiture until two regular terms of the county court had been convened and adjourned; that said A. L. Sutton had been ready and willing at all- times to appear in said court, had been at or near Wewoka at all times, and could have been found at all times; that he was prevented from being at said trial 'by reason of a 'mistake ' and reliance upon the ‘ assurance of the county attorney that said' case had been or would be <lis- *121 missed, and by reason thereof was prevented by the state of Oklahoma, through its assistánt attorney, from being present at said trial, and because thereof the defendants were not liable upon such bond, and the order forfeiting the same should be set aside and held ¡for naught. '

To sustain this defense, the defendant A. L. ¡Sutton, who was the defendant in the case in the county court, and the one who gave the bond, testified in substance that he and his attorney,- one Wattman, were present in the county court on December 7, 1016, the day the ease was first set for trial; that they went to the office of the county attorney and had a conversation with Mr. Selby, the then assistant county attorney, in which Selby said that he was not after,, Sutton, but was after the agent at Newalla, and if ¡Sutton would tell the truth about it, he would let him go; that Sutton replied that he did not know anything against the agent; that Selby then asked him where certain other parties lived, to which Sutton replied that some of them lived in Pottawatomie county, and Selby then said: “Well, you can go back home and find some of the other, boys; I will let you go, and you need not come back any more unless we let you know. If we need you any more we will let you know.” He further testified that Selby reguested him to obtain statements from other parties who had been obtaining liquor at the express office at Newalla; that he procured these statements and gave them to Wattman to send to Selby; that he told his bondsmen that the case against him had been dismissed, and that he had no notice or knowledge of the setting of said case against him .the following February, and did not know his bond had been forfeited until he was served with a summons in the case at bar.

E. W. Wattman testified that he was attorney for ¡Sutton in the ease in the county court; that he resided at Wewoka in 1916; that he anff Sutton were in court ready for trial on December 7, 1916, when the case was set for trial; that he and Sutton went to the office of the county attorney and had a conversation with Mr. Selby in which Selby said that he had had considerable trouble at Newalla with the agent (.here ordering whisky and carrying it into the Indian Territory, and he wanted .to break up that practice; that Selby stated that he would dismiss the case, but he wanted -Sutton and his people to aid him in procuring evidence' against the agent, and told Sutton that he wanted him to go home and get the other Suttons’ statement; that Selby stated he wanted to strike the ease from the assignment and when Watt-man got the affidavits he required he would dismiss the case; that Wattman said to Selby “Why not dismiss it now?” and Selby replied, “Oh, I will not do it now, but you get the affidavits and I will dismiss the case.” He further testified that he sent the affidavits- as requested. On cross-examination he stated in answer to .a question by Mr. Selby: “¡You said that when these statements came in, you were of the opinion you would dismiss the case.”

For the plaintiff, Charles B. Selby testified that he was county attorney, and was assistant county attorney on December 7. 1916; that Sutton and Wattman, his attorney, came to the county attorney’s office ; that Judge' Zwiek, the county judge, was not in the office, but Mr. Brents, special agent for the government in liquor cases, was there; that Selby said to the defendant and his attorney that one D. W. Holstein, who had ¡been the railroad agent at Newalla, -had been violating the prohibitory laws, in that he had been taking orders for whisky and alcohol, representing certain foreign liquor dealers, and that there were four cases pending against him then; that he wanted to convict Holstein, and that he wanted to know what the facts were: that he had some leaves from the express book showing the receipt of shipments of whisky in the name of various parties, including the defendant Sutton and three or four other 'Suttons; that he wanted to know the facts and that if Holstein had taken orders from Sutton and his relatives and friends, and had ' transmitted these orders, he wanted to use Sutton and his relatives as -witnesses, and if he did use ¡Sutton, of course, he would not prosecute him. He said to Wattman, “You understand and know the.

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Related

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1953 OK 279 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
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1930 OK 141 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 158, 206 P. 818, 86 Okla. 120, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-state-ex-rel-selby-okla-1922.