Todd v. Webb

1928 OK 692, 272 P. 380, 134 Okla. 107, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 809
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 27, 1928
Docket18725
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1928 OK 692 (Todd v. Webb) 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
Todd v. Webb, 1928 OK 692, 272 P. 380, 134 Okla. 107, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 809 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

TEBHEE, 0.

In this cause the parties will be referred to in their relative trial positions, where they are not otherwise designated.

The plaintiff, Kate Webb, on November 28, 1926, sued the defendant, W. P. Todd, whose trade name was Todd Machine Company, for the possession of certain personal property in which she alleged a special ownership, or for a money judgment in the value of a certain chose in action on which the suit was predicated. The cause arose by virtue of an appellate judgment in her favor in Hoffman v. Webb, 113 Okla. 150, 240 Pac. 104. Bor purpose of clarity in the cause in hand, chronological recitation of the facts in that case is necessary. There John W. Hoffman, as vendor, on July 6, 1922, brought suit in foreclosure of a vendor’s lien on certain personal property owned by Pete Golden, vendee, to satisfy the unpaid purchase price therefor. In the case, Kate Webb, plaintiff here, was, with the vendee, joined as a party defendant for that she was the holder of a promissory note for $1,270 by the vendee, secured by a chattel mortgage on certain items of the property against which the vendor’s lien was sought to be asserted, and that the mortgage was not made in good faith, by reason whereof the vendor prayed cancellation of the mortgage. Upon the filing of that suit a receiver was appointed who took charge of the property. The mortgagee, on August 7, 1922, by appropriate pleadings in her answer, asserted the validity of her mortgage, and prayed the establishment. of her rights in the property thereby covered. On October 5, 1922, the vendee suffered a default judgment in the amount of $24,000, the unpaid purchase price of the property, in which judgment the court ordered a sale of the property by the sheriff in satisfaction thereof,' and continued the cause as to the mortgagee. In due course, on October 23, 1922, pursuant to the order of sale, the property was sold to the vendor, the plaintiff in that case, which sale was by the court, on November 24, 1922, confirmed.

On February 20, 1924, judgment for the mortgagee was rendered to the effect that her mortgage was superior to the vendor’s lien, and, further, that she was entitled to possession of the property, or failing in this, to a money judgment in the amount of $1,800 against the vendor. On appeal by the vendor, the judgment was modified, in that the validity of the mortgage as a subsisting lien on the property covered thereby was sustained, and it otherwise ordered the cause remanded for entry of such modified judgment and dismissal of the cause as to the mortgagee, and for such further proceedings not inconsistent with that opinion, and without prejudice to the mortgagee’s right to proceed in a proper action for the establishment of such fights as she may have in the property covered by the mortgage. The mandate in that cause was filed and spread of record in the trial court on October 19, 1925, and on November 24, 1925, the modified judgment was entered.

Plaintiff in the cause in hand by her petition pleaded the mortgage involved in Hoffman v. Webb, and the appellate judgment therein, and alleged actual notice thereof by the defendant, and that due and legal demand for the delivery of possession of the property involved in the mortgage was made upon defendant, which was by him refused.

Upon unsuccessful demurrer to the petition, defendant by answer denied the allegations thereof, and by further answer in appropriate form: First, pleaded the proceedings and sale of the property had in Hoffman v. AArebb, substantially! as above narrated as in bar of plaintiff’s claim; second, that he was an innocent purchaser of the property for value; and third, that his having been in the possession of the property as vendee of the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale for more than two years prior to the filing of the suit, plaintiff’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations.

The trial of the cause proceeded before a jury. Upon conclusion of the evidence, by agreement of the parties, the jury were discharged from further consideration of the case, whereupon defendant moved for judgment on the grounds that the evidence clearly showed plaintiff to be not entitled to relief, and that her claim was barred by the statute of limitations. The motion was overruled, and the court found the issues for plaintiff, and thereon rendered judgment in the alternative for the possession of the property, or if the same could not be returned, for a money judgment in the amount of plaintiff’s note and accrued interest thereon, and an attorney’s fee.

The first ground of complaint against the judgment by defendant in proper sequence of our consideration is that the plaintiff’s petition did not state a cause of action. The record shows that this point was not preserved by exception to the overruling of the defendant’s demurrer. It is well settled that where a party fails to except to the overruling of his demurrer to the pleading of the adverse party, such failure renders the ruling *109 -of tlie trial court unavailable for review on appeal. McKee v. Dickerson, 122 Okla. 240, 254 Pac. 57. For that reason this contention does not require our further consideration.

Defendant next contends that plaintiff’s action was barred by the statute of limitations for that he was in possession of the property involved in plaintiff’s mortgage as vendee of the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale for more than two years prior to the filing of this suit. The facts established that the defendant purchased and entered into possession of the property in December, 1922, a little more than 30 days after the sheriff’s sale, and that plaintiff’s suit was filed on November 28, 1925, approximately three years thereafter. Defendant’s contention hereunder is that he is protected in his purchase of the property under section 185, C. O. S. 1921, which provides that an action for the specific recovery of personal property must be brought within two years from the accrual of the cause. The point made is that the accrual of plaintiff’s cause was at the time he, defendant, purchased and took possession of the property. The point is grounded on the theory that defendant was an innocent purchaser, and as such he was protected by the judgment of the court under which the sale to his vendor was made, and from which no appeal had been taken, and that as plaintiff was a party to the case in which the decree of sale was rendered, the judgment had the force of res judicata and operated as a bar to plaintiff’s claim. Defendant supports his argument with certain authorities, as well as the statute cited, which lay down the postulates of law contended for. With them we agree, but the difficulty arises upon their application to the case in hand under the record as we find it.

The decree of sale, which is the measure of the rights of the parties to the cause, expressly continued the controversy as between defendant’s vendor and the plaintiff. The controversy involved a part of the property sold under the decree. As between defendant’s vendor and the defendant vendee in that case, the decree determined their rights in the property, and Thereby concluded them. It did not purport to determine in any wise plaintiff’s claims under her mortgage, for which reason, though she was a co-defendant in the case, it cannot be said that she was a party to the judgment. Con-tmuance of the controversy between defendant's vendor and plaintiff was tantamount to the exception of plaintiff’s claims from the operation of the decree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 692, 272 P. 380, 134 Okla. 107, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-webb-okla-1928.