Venator v. Edwards

1927 OK 209, 259 P. 596, 126 Okla. 296, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 19, 1927
Docket16947
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1927 OK 209 (Venator v. Edwards) 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
Venator v. Edwards, 1927 OK 209, 259 P. 596, 126 Okla. 296, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 145 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

HALL, C.

This case is an outgrowth or side issue of the ease of Burnham v. Edwards, 125 Okla. 272, 257 Pac. 788. In that case Burnham was sued on a contract of suretyship growing out of his signing a super-sedeas bond. He was the losing party in the trial court; he gave notice of an appeal to this court and had an order entered staying execution and superseding the judgment, pending the filing of a supersedeas bond. He timely filed the bond, and the court clerk approved the same. The bond was regular and in statutory form, except that it showed upon its face that the justification of the sureties was made in the state of Arkansas, and other facts appeared clearly showing that all of the sureties resided in that state. The principal’s name to the bond was affixed thereto by his attorney, who had conducted this litigation in the courts.

The defendant in error then filed a prae-cipe for execution on the judgment. The ■court clerk, who is plaintiff in error in this particular action, refused to issue the execution, an'd upon his refusal the defendant in error commenced in the district court an action in mandamus to compel him to issue the execution, in disregard of the bond. At the final hearing, the court issued the writ •or order of mandamus against the court clerk, directing him to issue the execution. Erom this order and judgment the defendant appealed to this court.

That part of the bond which is under attack is as follows:

“In witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names this the 24th day of August, 1025. J. F. Burnham, by Chas. R. Freeman, Atty. W. C. Brooks, R. B. Henry. J. G. Henry, J. M. Henry.
“State of Arkansas, County of Pope. “(Regular justification clause.)
“I, W. C. Brooks, am worth the sum of $25,000; I, R. B. Henry, am worth the sum •of $80,000; I, J. G. Henry, .am worth the sum of $75,000; I, J. M. Henry, am worth the sum of $75,000; and that we hereby •waive the service of summons upon us and enter our appearance and confess judgment herein for the amount found 'due the said Tony Edwards in the event that said judgment be affirmed by the Supreme Oourt or that said appeals be not perfected or dismissed. W. C. Brooks, J. H. Henry, R. B. Henry, j. M. Henry. Subscribed and sworn to before me on this the 24th day of August, 1925. Ireme Howell, Notary Public. (Seal) My Com. Exp. Feb. 3, 192— Approved this the 26 day of Aug. 1925. B. F. Venator, Court Clerk.’’

In view of the recitals in this part of the bond and a letter from the Peoples Exchange Bank of Russellville, Ark., which was attached to the bond, we are safe in presuming that all the sureties on this bond reside in the state of Arkansas.

The plaintiff in error contends that the court had no authority to issue a writ of mandamus ordering him to issue an execution as long as the supersedeas bond stood approved, .and no proceeding had been taken to vacate or set it aside. Citing In re Application of Epley, 10 Okla. 631, 64 Pac. 18.

On the other hand, defendant in error contends that the bond tendered, and which was approved by the court clerk, was not merely defective or irregular, but absolutely void. In support of their contention, counsel for defendant in error cite sections 794 and 886, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, and cite and briefly quote excerpts from Whitmore v. Stewart (Kan.) 59 Pac. 261; Stafford v. Union Bank, etc. (U. S.) 17 How. 275, 15 L. Ed. 101.

Section 886 of our statute aforesaid prescribes the qualifications of sureties on all bonds and undertakings in this state; one of the requirements being that they must be residents of Oklahoma. Section 794 < f the aforesaid statute sets forth the various statutory requirements of supersedeas bonds.

While the question is not altogether free from debate, we think that the contention of plaintiff in error is fully sustained by the great weight of authority, and by several decisions of this court, namely, In re Epley, 10 Okla. 631. 64 Pac. 18; Deming Investment Co. v. Farriss (Okla. Sup.) 50 Pac. 130; Drainage District No. 5 of Oklahoma County v. Ferrell, 32 Okla. 381, 122 Pac. 698; and Deil v. Blanchard, 102 Okla. 35, 225 Pac. 962.

The case of In re Eply, supra, deals largely with the remedy in such cases, but the cases of Deming Investment Co. v. Fariss, Drainage District No. 5 of Oklahoma County v. Ferrell, and Deil v. Blanchard, supra, deal with both the remedy to be pursued and the effect of a defective super-sedeas bond when such defect arises out of the failure to comply with some apparently mandatory provision of the statute.

The case of Drainage District etc., v. Ferrell, 32 Okla. 381, 122 Pac. 698, involved an appeal to the district court from an order *298 of the comity commissioners. Tlie provision of the statute authorizing appeal from such commission requires the bond to be executed “with at least two good and sufficient freehold sureties.” Two bonds were involved in that case. The first bond was assailed by a motion to dismiss the appeal; the objection lodged against it was the fact that it was signed only by the principal, with the notation on the bond that $100 in cash was the surety, which cash was deposited with the clerk. After the motion to dismiss was lodged, the appellant asked leave to file a new bond, which leave was granted, and the new bond was filed but failed to describe the sureties as “freehold sureties.”

This court sustained the ruling of the trial court in refusing to dismiss the appeal, .and cited numerous cases in support of the rule that in such ■ case a new bond may be required on proper motion, but the bond is operative until the appellant is given an opportunity to amend the bond or file a new one. In the course of the opinion, the court, through Commissioner Brewer, said:

“It may be admitted that the filing of a bond is a prerequisite in cases of this kind. But must the undertaking conform in every possible way with the requirements of the statute? Or is the filing of a bond in substantial compliance with the statute, duly approved by the proper officer, sufficient upon which to found jurisdiction in the district court? * * * Is there not a difference between a purported bond that, because of its inherent vices, is a mere nullity and one that is merely irregular and does not conform to all the requirements of the statute? There unquestionably is a difference. * * * A case very much in point is that of Farnum v. Davis et al., 32 N. H. 302. It Is held: ‘The want of two sureties on a reef gnizance entered into upon an appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace, in a civil cause, is merely an irregularity in the proceedings, and not a jurisdictional exception.’ In that case, two sureties were required by the statute. See also, People v. Erie, 6 Wend. (N. Y.) 549; Reynolds v. Renselaer, 11 Wend. (N. Y.) 174. The contention that the new bond allowed in this case is a nullity, because the sureties are not specifically described in the bond as ‘freeholders,’ we do no- think can be sustained. * * * If the sureties offered were not freeholders, and upon timely objection for that reason this fact was ascertained, then they would not be sufficient, and competent sureties would have to be offered.”

In the case of Deming Investment Company v.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 209, 259 P. 596, 126 Okla. 296, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venator-v-edwards-okla-1927.