United States Smelting Co. v. McGuire

1925 OK 568, 253 P. 79, 123 Okla. 272, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1925
Docket14928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1925 OK 568 (United States Smelting Co. v. McGuire) 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 Smelting Co. v. McGuire, 1925 OK 568, 253 P. 79, 123 Okla. 272, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 223 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment and decree of the district court of Murray county. The defendant in error, on May 22, 1923. obtained a judgment in said court vacating and setting aside a judgment obtained by the plaintiff in error, on November 16, 1921, in said court in cause No. 1416, wherein the plaintiff in error was plaintiff and the defendant in error was defendant, and wherein the plaintiff in error recovered a judgment of $724.63.

The defendant in error filed his petition on Jun'e 6, 1922, to set aside the said judgment rendered against him at a previous term of the court, alleging, among oth'er things, that the judgment was rendered in his absence upon false and perjured tesli-mony. Issues were joined and the cause proceeded to trial before the court, which *273 entered, a judgment in favor of the defendant in error vacating and setting aside the judgment obtained by the plaintiff in error on November 16, 1921, in cause No. 1416, and ordering the clerk to place said cause on the trial docket for a new trial.

In the trial court, the plaintiff in error was the defendant and the defendant in error was the plaintiff, and they will be referred to in this opinion as they appeared in the trial court.

The judgment of the trial court is assailed by the defendant on several grounds. Among other things, it is said that the petition of plaintiff was insufficient to allow the introduction of testimony thereunder and that its demurrer to thie evidence interposed at the close of the evidence should have been sustained and judgment rendered in its favor.

The record, as brought here for review, discloses two separate judgments. One of these judgments purports to find that all of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition are sustained by the evidence. In the other, there are incorporated sis findings of fact in which it is found in effect that none of the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition are sustained by any evidence except that in which it was asserted that the plaintiff had a meritorious defense to the original action.

The journal entry of judgment first referred to does not show when it was actually filed with the clerk, although, it purports to have been made on the 22nd day of May, 1923. The judgment last referred to above was filed on the 14th day of June, 1923, and contains the following special findings of fact:

“1. That the Smelting Company on November. 16, 1921, obtained judgment in cause No. 1416 against Mr. McGuire for $724.63.
“2. Tha't said judgment was obtained upon the day the cause was regularly set for trial; that Mr. McGuire made default and his counterclaim was dismissed for want of prosecution. ,
“3. That Mr. McGuire on December 1,1921. filed a motion to vacate; on December 12, 1921, he filed an amended motion and affidavit to vacate; on December 13, 1921, he filed a motion for a new trial which was on that day overruled; that he gave notice of appeal and filed a supersedeas bond; that said appeal was' not perfected.
“4. That the hearing in this proceeding was had upon the allegations in the petition which stated that in cause No. 1416 Smelting Oompany obtained its judgment by falsehood, fraud, and perjured testimony; that all other allegations in the petition had been stricken by the court upon the hearing of the demurrer to said petition.
“5. That the plaintiff in this cause herein did not produce at the hearing herein any of the evidence which was introduced by the defendant herein at the trial of the aforesaid cause No. 1416 had on November 16, 1921, in this court and upon which the court in that cause rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant; that the plaintiff herein did not at the hearing introduce any testimony or evidence showing or tending to show there was any perjured testimony whatever used, procured or introduced at the trial of said cause No. 1416 on November 16, 1921, and upon which this court based its judgment therein.
“6. The court does find however, that the plaintiff herein, C. L. McGuire, did at the hearing herein on this day submit and introduce testimony herein which showed that he, as defendant in said original cause No. 1416, had a meritorious defense thereto.”

It further appears from the record that the judgment containing the special findings of fact was objected to by the plaintiff and a request made by him at a, hearing before the trial judge, had upon certain suggestions of amendments to the case-made, that said judgment be eliminated from the case-made on the ground that the findings of fact embodied therein were not requested at the time of the trial, but this request was overruled and the case-made was thereupon signed and settled as a true and correct case-made containing both judgments.

The record and evidence, when viewed in their entirety, fail, we think, to support the judgment of May 22, 1923. In any event there being a conflict between the general findings and the special findings, the special findings must control.

The trial court when the ease-made was signed and settled, having before it the entire record and having its .special attention called to the question as to whether or not the defendant requested special findings of fact, it must be presumed that it would not have incorporated this journal entry of June 14, 1923, in the record if for any reason it would have been improper, by reason of the failure of the defendant to make timely request for the findings of fact embodied therein.

Since the trial court found that no issue had been submitted to the court except whether or not there had been false and perjured testimony used by the defendant in the procurement of the judgment of November 16, 1921, and since, it also found that the plain *274 tiff did not, at the heading, introduce any evidence showing or tending to show the use or procurement of, perjured testimony by the defendant, there is only one question left for determination, and that is whether or not the court erred as a matter of law, in finding and concluding that the plaintiff was entitled to a new trial for the sole reason that he had established á meritorious defense.

In the case of Olentine et al. v. Alberty et al., 82 Okla. 9, 198 Pac. 296, this court said:

“A judgment upon default will no.t 'be vacated upon a showing that the party had a meritorious defense; it must be made to further appear that he was prevented from making a timely presentation of it upon some of the grounds named by the statute for granting such relief.”

In Western Coal & Mining Company v. Green, 64 Okla. 53, 166 Pac. 154, the court said:

“We think the plaintiff in error made a sufficient showing for the purpose of' the motion that there was merit in the proposed defense to the action. The prima facie showing made by it was not contested by defendants in error, if indeed it was permissible to do so. However, this alone is not sufficient. A judgment rendered upon default against a party duly summoned to answer, but who fails to' do so within the time fixed therefor, may not be set aside merely because such party had a meritorious defense.

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Related

Hays Trucking Co. v. Maxwell
1953 OK 245 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
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1934 OK 427 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 568, 253 P. 79, 123 Okla. 272, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-smelting-co-v-mcguire-okla-1925.