United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Ballard

1915 OK 595, 145 P. 396, 44 Okla. 807, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 754
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 24, 1914
Docket3925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1915 OK 595 (United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Ballard) 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
United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Ballard, 1915 OK 595, 145 P. 396, 44 Okla. 807, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 754 (Okla. 1914).

Opinions

The judgment attempted to be appealed from in this case reads in part as follows:

"Whereupon the court rendered judgment on the verdict for the plaintiff for the amount found to be due plaintiff from the defendant by the jury. *Page 808

"It is therefore considered, ordered, and adjudged by the court that Marian Ballard, as the administratrix of the estate of Randolph Ballard, deceased, have and recover of and from Geo. W. May and the United States Fidelity Company, a corporation, the sum of $454.60, and all of her costs in this suit laid out and expended."

It will be observed that this is a joint judgment against George W. May and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company. George W. May did not join in the appeal to this court, nor was he made a party thereto.

The defendant in error has presented a motion to dismiss the appeal for the want of necessary parties, on the ground that the judgment complained of was a joint judgment against George W. May and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company alone appeals, and has not made George W. May a party, either as plaintiff or defendant, and did not serve him with case-made or summons in error, and that, therefore, this court has no jurisdiction of the appeal, and the same should be dismissed. The plaintiff in error, in response to this motion, has presented an ingenious argument in its brief to the effect that George W. May was not a necessary party to the appeal, inasmuch as his rights would not be injuriously affected by the judgment rendered in this court, for the reason that he is the principal and primarily liable for the payment of the judgment. It is contended that it appears from the record that George W. May was the principal and the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company was surety, and that under section 5179, Rev. Laws 1910, it was the duty of the clerk in such cases, in entering the judgment, to certify to these facts, and that this court should consider the record as though the clerk had certified to the true relation of the parties. We cannot agree with counsel as to the effect and operation of this statute upon the judgment. It is true that the statute gave the trial court the right to find the relations of the defendants upon evidence, either record or parol, and to declare that one was principal and the other surety, and to direct the clerk to enter the judgment accordingly. Kupfer *Page 809 v. Sponhorst et al., 1 Kan. 77; Bank of Stockham v. Weins,12 Okla. 502, 71 P. 1073. However, in the absence of a finding by the trial court and the direction of the clerk, and the entering of judgment accordingly, the statute does not authorize or empower the appellate court to find the relationship existing between the parties to the judgment. This question cannot be raised for the first time in this court.

In Bank of Stockham v. Weins, supra, 12 Okla. at page 505, 71 Pac. at page 1074, the court says:

"The record discloses that the judgment was a joint one against the plaintiff in error and defendant in error. The law seems to be well settled that where a judgment is joint, against two or more defendants, both are regarded as principals, unless by proof aliunde one is shown to be a surety, and where one of them pays the whole amount of the judgment, he is not therefore entitled to an execution, for use against his codefendant, unless he himself has been judiciously determined to be only a surety. 2 Black on Judgments, sec. 996.

"The mode of rendering a judgment in order to make it appear upon the record who was the principal debtor, and who was surety, is controlled by the statute in Oklahoma as well as in Nebraska; the provisions of the Code being the same in both jurisdictions. Oklahoma Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 485; Nebraska Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 511.

"In this case there was no question of suretyship raised in the court in which the judgment was rendered, and which is made the basis of this action, and hence it cannot be considered for the first time in this court."

In Vaught v. Miners' Bank of Joplin, 27 Okla. 100,111 P. 214, the judgment was against three defendants, one of them appealed, and in dismissing the case the court said:

"Vaught alone instituted proceedings in error in this court without making the receiver a party.

"In Strange et al. v. Crismon, 22 Okla. 841, 98 P. 937, it was held that: 'A petition in error by two of three defendants, against whom judgment was entered jointly for the recovery of a specified sum, to which the other defendant is neither made a party plaintiff nor defendant in error, must be dismissed for want of necessary parties.' *Page 810

"In that case a great many authorities are cited to support the decision of the court, both from the Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory and the Supreme Court of Kansas. In one of the Kansas cases cited (Great Western Manufacturing Co. v. TrueRichardson, 57 Kan. 661, 47 P. 537), it is said that: 'The rule is well settled, and has often been enforced by this court, that all persons against whom a joint judgment has been rendered must be made parties to a proceeding to reverse such judgment, and that a failure to join any of them either as plaintiffs or defendants is ground for the dismissal of the case.'

"The latest expression by this court on the question may be found in Seibert v. First National Bank of Okeene,25 Okla. 778, 108 P. 628. In that case, after citing with approvalStrange et al. v. Crismon, supra, and other Oklahoma cases, it was said: 'The rule requiring parties having an interest that may be materially affected by the judgment when brought before the appellate tribunal is in no sense a technical one; on the contrary, it is a rule of great importance and is required in order to secure to a litigant his day in court.' "

In the case of Southwestern Surety Co. v. Hall, 40 Okla. 447,139 P. 305, judgments were rendered against the principals and the surety company, and the surety company alone prosecuted the appeal, without making the principals parties thereto, and the court, in sustaining the motion to dismiss, said:

"The rule is well settled in this state that all parties to a joint judgment must be joined in the proceedings in error either as plaintiffs or defendants" (citing a number of cases).

In National Surety Co. v. Oklahoma Presbyterian College forGirls, 38 Okla. 429, 132 P. 652, there was a judgment against M. J. Gill, principal, and the surety company. The surety company alone appealed, and in sustaining the motion to dismiss the appeal because Gill had not been made a party, the court said:

"All parties to a joint judgment must be joined in a proceeding in error in this court, either as plaintiffs or as defendants in error, before such judgment can be reviewed; and, where the review is sought by means of petition in error and case-made, service of the case-made within the time prescribed by the statute must be had upon all parties against whom the joint judgment is rendered who do not join in the appeal as *Page 811

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1915 OK 595, 145 P. 396, 44 Okla. 807, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-and-guaranty-co-v-ballard-okla-1914.