Valley Abstract Co. v. Page

1913 OK 642, 141 P. 416, 42 Okla. 365, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 11, 1913
Docket2710
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1913 OK 642 (Valley Abstract Co. v. Page) 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
Valley Abstract Co. v. Page, 1913 OK 642, 141 P. 416, 42 Okla. 365, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 367 (Okla. 1913).

Opinions

Opinion by

HARRISON, C.

In October, 1909, John Marsh brought suit against W. IT. and W. N. Nichols to foreclose a real estate mortgage for $1,035, executed to him by the said W. IT. and W. N. Nichols, and also made J. M. Page and Mortgage & Debenture Company parties defendant because of certain interests which they claimed in the land covered by the mortgage; J. M. Page having purchased the land from the Nichols after the mortgage had been given. On December 15th J. M. Page and W. PI. and W. N. Nichols joined in an answer to Marsh’s petition, pleading payment of $848 on the’Mapsh mort *367 gage, and admitting a balance of $200 to be due on same. But in the same answer, and without joining the two Nichols with him in the cross-action, J. M. Page, for himself, filed a cross-action against the Alliance Trust Company (a loan company), and I-Iolmes & ITibbard as one firm, and Valley Abstract Company as another firm, each as agents of the Alliance Trust Company in making the loan, and by permission of the court, over the objection of both firms, made them parties to the suit on the grounds that in the purchase of the land in question from Nichols he had assumed the payment of $848 of the Marsh mortgage, and in order to raise same had obtained a loan of $1,500 through I-Iolmes & Hibbard and Valley Abstract Company from the Alliance Trust Company, and had executed a mortgage on the real estate in question to secure said $1,500 loan, and further alleged that he had received only $478 out of the $1,500 loan, and that thé balance was to be applied on .the Marsh debt, and that Piolines & Hibbard and Valley Abstract Company had undertaken and promised to so apply said sum; that Marsh was claiming that such payment had never been made to him, and that, in the event such payment had been made to Marsh, he prayed for credit on the Marsh note for that amount, but that, if it had not been paid, the mortgage to the Alliance Trust Company be credited to that extent, that is, to the amount which they should have paid to Marsh, or that he be given judgment against Piolines & Hibbard and Valley Abstract Company for said sum. On December 10th Marsh replied, denying any payment had been made upon his mortgage. On January 24, 1910, the two Nichols filed an answer confessing judgment for a balance of $200 due on the Marsh mortgage. On June 8, 1910, the Alliance Trust Company, by its trustee, filed a general denial to the answer and cross-petition of Page and Nichols and cross-petition for the foreclosure of its $1,500 mortgage. On the said date, June 8th, Piolines & Hibbard filed their separate answer to the cross-petition of J. M. Page, and on October 20th the Valley Abstract Company filed its separate answer to the cross-petition of J. M. Page; each of said defendants pleading the statute of limitations against Page’s cause of action. Thereafter Page filed separate replies to the answer *368 of each of said parties. Upon trial the court found that the John Marsh mortgage constituted a first and prior lien against the real estate thereby covered, and that his rights under said mortgage were separate and distinct from the rights of the other parties, and gave him judgment against W. PI. and W. N. Nichols and J. M. Page for the amount of his mortgage, interest, and costs, and decreed the sale of the land to satisfy the judgment. Also gave the Alliance Trust Company judgment of foreclosure against J. M. Page on its $1,500 mortgage, and gave Page judgment primarily against the Valley Abstract Company for $848, and secondary judgment against Holmes & Hibbard for said amount; the same having been found to have been paid to the Valley Abstract Company by the Alliance Trust Company through Plolmes & Hibbard to be applied on the Marsh mortgage, but which the court found had not been paid on said mortgage. From such judgment, the Valley Abstract Company arid Holmes & Hib-bard join in appeal to this court upon thirteen assignments of error.

The first and second assignments will be considered together, as each involves the question whether Page’s cross-petition stated facts sufficient to make the Valley Abstract Company and Holmes & Hibbard proper parties to the action. • This question was raised by demurrer, which was overruled.

It is contended by plaintiffs in error that the issues raised by Page’s cross-action against the Valley Abstract Company and Plolmes & Hibbard were separate, distinct, and wholly foreign to the issues between John Marsh and Page in Marsh’s suit to foreclose his mortgage. This contention, however, is answered by the following transcript of journal entry:

“At .this time comes on the motion of the plaintiff, John Marsh, that collateral issues existing between the defendants herein and their independent causes of action of one against the other be tried separately and apart from plaintiff’s action, and all and each of the defendants ■ admitting in open court that their respective claims- were all subsequent and inferior to the claim of John Marsh, as set forth in his petition, the plaintiff’s cause of action is separated from the various bills and cross-bills existing between the defendants herein,” etc.

*369 Whereupon the court heard the testimony and tried the issues between Marsh and his defendants separately, and gave judgment to Marsh for the amount he sued for; none of the other parties excepting. Then after determining the issues between Marsh and the defendants in his petition, the court proceeded to hear and determine the issues between Page and the defendants in his cross-action, and upon the testimony gave judgment on such issues. So, whatever may have been the insufficiency in the cross-bill as to stating facts sufficient to make the Valley Abstract Company and Holmes & Hibbard proper parties to the original action, the rights of the parties were protected by separate and distinct trials, and plaintiffs in error were thereby given the very relief they sought in their demurrer. Hence their rights in the premises were not prejudiced by being tried jointly with the issues raised in the original action of Marsh’s against W. H. and W. N. Nichols and J. M. Page, and the authorities cited in support of the rule that:

“A cross-action by a defendant against co-defendant or third party must be in reference to the claim made by the plaintiff and based upon an adjustment of that claim. * * * Independent and unrelated causes of action cannot be litigated by cross-actions.”

—are not applicable to this case for the reason that, although it was denominated a cross-action, it was not'so treated by the court, and the parties thereto were given a separate trial.

It is contended by plaintiffs in error, however, that the rights of the parties were prejudiced by being compelled to answer in a forum not their own; that is, out of the county of their residence. If such were the case, plaintiffs in error waived their rights thereunder by invoking and submitting to the jurisdiction of the court in their demurrer.

If there were any question as to the jurisdiction of the court raised by plaintiffs in error, such question was waived by invoking the jurisdiction of the court to pass on the merits of the case in their demurrer, which says: . •

“First.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 642, 141 P. 416, 42 Okla. 365, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-abstract-co-v-page-okla-1913.