Tobin v. O'Brieter

1906 OK 28, 85 P. 1121, 16 Okla. 500, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1906 OK 28 (Tobin v. O'Brieter) 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
Tobin v. O'Brieter, 1906 OK 28, 85 P. 1121, 16 Okla. 500, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 88 (Okla. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Irw.tn, J.:

In this case there are five reasons assigned by plaintiff in error for a reversal of this case. All except one, are based upon erroneous findings of the jury. The first assignment of error is,

“The answer of the jury to interrogatory No. 16, is not supported by the evidence; 2nd, the answer to special interrogatory No. 19, is not supported by the evidence; 3rd, the special findings of the jury, approved by the court, are inconsistent, and contradictory; 4th, the trial court erred in admitting certain incompetent and immaterial testimony on behalf of plaintiff, over the objection of defendant; 5th, the trial court erred in approving the answer of the jury to special in-terrogatorjr numbered one, and in not setting same aside as being unsupported by the evidence.”

It will be borne in mind that it is clearly shown by the pleadings in this case that this is purely an equitable proceeding, being an action which asks for no other relief than the setting aside of a deed on the grounds of fraud and want of mental capacity in the grantors, except that in the petition, the plaintiff asks for damages. But, in the ultimate decision of the case, no damages were awarded by the court, consequently no interest of the defendant has been affected by this allegation in the petition. Nó jury seems to have been demanded by the defendant to try this issue, and no finding *503 on this issue having been found against the defendant, he has no cause for complaint. Now we take it that the law is well established that in an action in equity where a jury is not a matter of right to either party, that the court has the right either oh the request of either party, or of his own motion, to empanel a jury to determine any question or questions of fact that may arise in the case; but in such case, the finding of the jury is merely advisory to the court, who sits only as chancellor, and the findings of the jury are in no way binding upon the court; and where the court has heard all of the evidence in the case, he may disregard any or all of the findings of the jury, and decide the case upon the evidence as taken before him, and whether the court does, or does not set aside the findings of the jury, the ultimate decision of the case is the decision of the court, and in determining the issues in the case the court will be governed entirely by the evidence in the case, regardless of the findings of the jury, or he may take the findings of the jury in connection with the evidence in the case, and from both these sources derive the knowledge upon which he bases his decision, and in such cases, mere erroneous findings of fact by the jury will not of themselves be a cause for reversal; and if the findings of the court are based upon evidence which reasonably tends to support such finding, the decision will not be reversed on the grounds that the evidence does not support (he findings of the jury or of the court.

, In the case of Jonathan Hunt et al., v. W. B. Spencer, reported in the 20th Kansas, at page 126, the supreme court of that state say:

“In a case in which a jury is not a matter of right, the' court may submit certain questions of fact to a jury, and *504 itself thereafter, from the same testimony, make special findings upon matters not submitted to the jury and base its decree upon both the answers of the jury and its own special findings.”

And in the case of Moors v. Sanford, et al., 41 Pac. 1064, the Kansas supreme court say:

"When the issues submitted to a jury are not such as entitle the parties to a jury trial as a matter of right, the court may consider the answers which the jury returns to special questions of fact submitted to it as merely advisory, and it is not error for the court in such case to set aside a finding which is contrary to the evidence, and substitute a finding of its own.”

In Caldwell v. Brown, et al., 44 Pac. page 10, the Kansas supreme court say:

"'When issues submitted to a jury are not such as entitle the parties to a jury trial as a matter of right, the court-may consider the answers as merely advisory, and may disregard any finding not supported by the evidence.”

In the case of Missouri Valley Lumber Company v. Reid, et al., 45 Pac. page 722, the same court say:

“When a jury trial is not a matter of right, and the court submits to a jury certain special questions of fact, the. answers returned thereto are merely advisory; and the court may decide for itself all questions of fact and of law in the case, notwithstanding the findings of the jury.”

Tn the case of Barnes et al., v. Lynch, reported in the 9th Oklahoma, page 156, this court says:

"In cases of equitable cognizance, while the judge may call in a jury, or consent to one for the purpose of advising him upon the questions of fact, he may adopt or reject their conclusions as he sees -fit, and the whole matter must eventually be left to him to determine, and instructions to the jury furnish no ground of error upon appeal. Tt was not *505 only the right, but the duty of the court to have determined all questions of fact as well as of law.”

Now in the case at bar, the court heard the testimony the same as the jury, and the fact that he overruled the motion to set aside certain findings of the jury, would not warrant us in saying that he was not governed in his decision by the evidence; and as he had the undoubted right in a case of this kind to entirely disregard the findings of the jury', and to determine the question for himself regardless of the finding of the jury, and as on examination of the entire record we are not prepared to say that there was no evidence that reasonably tends to support the finding of the court, we do not think that for this reason the judgment and decision of the court should be reversed.

The only remaining assignment of error, and the only one argued by plaintiff in error that is not based upon the verdict of the jury, is the fourth assignment of error, to wit:

“The trial court erred in admitting certain incompetent and immaterial testimony on behalf of plaintiff, over the objection of defendant.”.

Now we think, that considering this assignment of error literally', it contains its own answer, and must fall from its own weight. If the statement of counsel that the testimony was immaterial is true, then the admission or rejection of it would not be sufficient ground for a reversal of the case. Tf it was immaterial, it could not have much, if any weight or effect in determining any issue in the case. But we take it, from the fact that counsel have argued this proposition, that they do not mean that it was immaterial, but that it was incompetent and improper, and that it was material as affecting some issue in the case. Counsel in their brief point out *506 particular testimony that they claim was improperly received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1906 OK 28, 85 P. 1121, 16 Okla. 500, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobin-v-obrieter-okla-1906.