Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Co. v. North American Car Co.

1926 OK 893, 251 P. 1010, 123 Okla. 57, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
Docket15373
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1926 OK 893 (Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Co. v. North American Car Co.) 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
Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Co. v. North American Car Co., 1926 OK 893, 251 P. 1010, 123 Okla. 57, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 483 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Tillman county by the defendant in error, as plaintiff, against plaintiffs in error, as defendants, to recover $10,475.96 rentals due the plaintiff by the defendants, as evidenced by a certain rental or lease contract, whereby the plaintiff. North American Car Company, leased to the defendant Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Company a certain number Of oil tank ears at a stipulated rental per month for a period of three years, and the amount sued for was the -balance due the plaintiff by de-defendants under the terms of the rental contract. It is disclosed by the record that the defendant Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Company was succeeded by the Omar Consolidated Gas Company, and that the Omar Consolidated Gas Company was succeeded by the Omar Gas Company. The first-named defendant was a corporation, and the two other defendants were common-law trusts, and seem to have -been organized under the laws of Colorado. The reorganizations appear to have been brought about for the purpose of increasing the stock and assets of the company to meet outstanding indebtedness and obligations then due, and the organizations were 'effected by an exchange of stock held in the old company for stock issued by the new, and no other or additional consideration passed, and that all of the property owned by the old company was transferred and assigned to the new, and that all debts and liabilities of the old company are alleged to have been assumed by the new; that the persons who were the officers of the corporation were named as trustees of the common-law trust, appellants here.

The Omar Gasoline Company, the last of the three to be created by the reorganization heretofore mentioned, filed an answer by way of general denial, and further answering specifically denied that it assumed, or was in anywise obligated, for the indebtedness sued upon by the plaintiff, North American Car Company. The other defendants named defaulted.

Upon the trial of the case to the court and jury, the jury returned a verdict in favor of thle answering defendant, Umar Gasoline Company, and against the plaintiff, finding that there was no liability on the part of the Omar Gasoline Company. Judgment was rendered by the court in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and no appeal was taken by the defendant m error, North American Car Company, from this judgment.

•Subsequent to the return of the jury’s verdict, the court rendered default judgment against the defendants Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Company and the Omar Consolidated *58 Has Company, and sustained the attachment which had been duiy executed, wheieby ¡1 certain pipe line was atrached, which a._eord-ing to the allegations of the plaintiff's petition had been duly assigned and conveyed to each succeeding organ.zation, and was at the timé of the institution of this suit in the possession of, and owned and controlled by, the last-named defendant, Omar Gasoline Company, against whom no judgment was -obtained. From the judgment of the court sustaining the attachment and foreclosing same for the purpose of paying, or being applied upon the judgment of the defaulting defendants, the appellants prosecute this appeal and assign numerous specifications of error.

The first proposition urged by appellants is that the judgment sustaining the attachment against the Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Company is void, for the reason that the affidavit for publication is wholly insufficient to warrant a judgment against the Texas-Omar Gasoline & Oil Company, and they cite as an authority in support of this contention the case of Morgan v. Stevens, 101 Okla. 116, 223 Pac. 365, wherein this court places a construction on sections 5612 and. 5613, C. L. 1909, authorizing service by publication and providing the kind of affidavit necessary to be filed as. follows:

“Under Sections 5612 and 5613, Comp. Laws 1909, an affidavit for service by publication, which alleges that the defendant is a nonresident of the state and service can not be had upon him within the state, is not void or voidable, because facts are not stated therein showing that plaintiff, by the use of due diligence, was unable to make service of summons upon the defendant; but, where the affidavit alleges that the defendant is a nonresident of the state and service of summons cannot be made on said defendant within the state, with due diligence, the affidavit is fatally defective, and judgment rendered thereon is void.”

Wherein the court holds that an affidavit which states, “that the defendant is a nonresident of the state and service cannot be had upon him within the state,” is sufficient but. “where the affidavit states that the defendant is a nonresident of the state and service of summons cannot be made on said defendant within the state, with due diligence, the affidavit is fatally defective.” The distinction made is rather subtle and difficult of comprehension, but in any event we do not see that the construction given is of any avail to the appellants in this case, ■because the affidavit filed in this cáse recites that “the plaintiff, with due diligence, is unable to make service of the summons upon the defendants to be served by publication or either of them within this state,” which is in accord with the law as amended, being section 250, G. S. 1921, which provides;

“Where any or all of the defendants reside out .of the state, or where it is stated that in the affidavit for service by publication that the plaintiff with' due diligence is unable to make service of summons upon such defendant or defendants within the state.”

The affidavit complained of is in the exact language of the late statute, and hence we conclude that it is sufficient, and that there is no merit in appellants’ contention in this particular.

Appellants also make the contention, under this first proposition, that there was no competent evidence introduced, justifying the court in Ihe rendition of the judgment here attacked. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment is more properly raised under the secona proposition urged, and we pass same for the time being.

The second proposition urged is that •

“The trial court erred in not holding that the allegations of the defendant in error’s petition were conclusive, and in sustaining the attachment against the property of the plaintiff in error, the Omar Gasoline Company, after a verdict of the jury and a decision of the court in favor of appellants

And they contend that the verdict of tne jury, and the judgment of the court based thereon in favor of the defendant Omar Gasoline Company “ipso facto” releases the attachment, and that the judgment rendered against the, other two defaulting defendants would not authorize an attachment against the property which plaintiff in its petition alleged to be the property oí tfie answering defendant, in whose favor judgment was rendered. And cite the case of Lane Implement Co. v. Lowder & Manning, 11 Okla. 61, 65 Pac. 927, and the case of Bank of Buchanan v. Priestly, 87 Okla.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 893, 251 P. 1010, 123 Okla. 57, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-omar-gasoline-oil-co-v-north-american-car-co-okla-1926.