Wilson v. Oil Well Supply Co.

1925 OK 571, 238 P. 415, 111 Okla. 63, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 421
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1925
Docket14524
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1925 OK 571 (Wilson v. Oil Well Supply Co.) 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
Wilson v. Oil Well Supply Co., 1925 OK 571, 238 P. 415, 111 Okla. 63, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 421 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This is an appeal from the district; court of Creek county, Okla., wherein the defendant in error; the Oil Well - Supply Company, was plaintiff, *64 and the plaintiff in error, Douglas Wilson, was defendant, to recover the sum of $663.61, with interest. The action is based upon a certain check given by the defendant, Douglas Wilson, to the plaintiff, for the amount sued for, in payment of supplies furnished the defendant by the plaintiff. Payment on said check was refused on presentation of same and duly protested. In answer to the plaintiff’s petition, the defendant pleaded as a bar, and as res judicata, a judgment of the district court of Butler county, Kan., rendered on the 8th day of January, 1923, in a ease wherein the plaintiff, the Oil Well Supply Company, was plaintiff, and the defendants, Douglas Wilson et al., were defendants, wherein judgment was rendered against the said Douglas Wilson in favor of the said Oil Well Supply Company for $748.47, upon an account for goods and supplies alleged to have been sold and delivered by the said Oil Well Supply Company to the said Douglas Wilson; and the defendant further avers that said check, the basis of the instant suit, and upon which the said Oil Well Supply Company based its action in the district court of Creek county, Okla.,’ was made and delivered for and' as payment of said account for goods and supplies sued upon, and placed in judgment in the district court of Butler county, Kan., and that there was no other or different consideration for said check, and that said judgment was a bar to the further prosecution of this action.

In reply to the answer of the defendant, the plaintiff admitted that the allegations or averments of the defendant’s answer were true and correct; that the account sued upon ill the district court of Butler counry, Kan., was the identical account for which the the check was given, which is the basis of this suit pending in Creek county, Okla., attached to its reply a copy of the judgment obtained in the district court of Butler county, Kan., and made the same a part thereof, and further alleged in its reply that the said Douglas Wilson, defendant in this ca-'o was entitled to an offset or counterclaim against said judgment, and that the account and check sued upon in this cause has been merged in said judgment, and prays for judgment against said Douglas Wilson for the amount of said judgment. The defendant, Wilson, filed a motion to strike from said reply the allegations of the plaintiff’s reply concerning the judgment and the prayer of plaintiff’s reply, for the reason that same constituted a departure and set forth an entirely new cause of action from the cause of action alleged in plaintiff’s petition.

The motion to strike was overruled by the court, exceptions duly taken and allowed, and thereafter both the plaintiff and the defendant interposed motions for judgment on the pleadings. The court denied the motion of plaintiff in error, Wilson, and sustained the motion of the defendant in error, the Oil Well Supply Company, and rendered judgment on said judgment of the district court of Butler county, Kan., in the amount thereof, to wit $748.48, in favor of the Oil Well Supply Company, and against the said Wilson; from which order and judgment of the court, appellant prosecutes this appeal and sets forth various assignments .of error, which all go practically to one question, that of the error of the court in denying the motion of the appellant, Wilson, to strike, and in rendering judgment on the allegations of the reply asking for judgment upon the judgment of the district court of Butler county, Kan., entirely abandoning the prayer of plaintiff’s petition for judgment on the check.

Section 4737, Rev. Laws 1910, sets forth the manner of pleading, and requires that the petition must contain:

“A statement of facts constituting the cause of action, in ordinary and concise language and without repetition.”

And further provides:

“When the answer contains new matter, the plaintiff may reply to such new matter, denying, generally or specifically, each allegation controverted by him; and he may allege in ordinary and concise language, and without repetition, any new matter not inconsistent with the petition, constituting a defense to such now matter in the answer.”

In this ease, the cause of action stated in plaintiff’s petition is based on the protested check and the protest fee, and it prays for judgment in the sum of $663.61; in the reply, no denial of the averments or allegations of the defendant’s answer is made, but all of the substantial averments contained in the answer are admitted, and it is further alleged that the check, which was the basis of the cause of action as set forth in its petition, had been merged in the judgment of the district court of Butler county, Kan., and set forth the judgment of said court, and concludes with a prayer for judgment based on the judgment of the district court of Butler county, Kan., and for the amount thereof, to . wit, $748.48.

In the case of Johnson v. State Bank of Seneca, 59 Kan. 250, 52 Pac. 860, we find the following language:

“The district court erred in admitting the *65 evidence of the plaintiff below under the pleadings in the case. The reply constituted what is called a ‘departure’ in pleading. A departure is a statement of matter in a reply, replication, rejoinder or subsequent pleading, as a cause of action or defense, which is not pursuant to the previous pleading c,f the same party, and which does not support and verify it; and a test of departure in a reply is the question whether evidence of the facts alleged in it would be, if received, contradictory of .the allegations of the petition. 6 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 460; Bliss, Code Pl. (3rd Ed.) §396; Baker v. Long, 17 Kan. 341. The petition alleged ownership, positive and unqualified, in the plaintiff. The reply admitted the ownership to be that of a mortgagee, which is ownership qualified and special. The allegations of these pleadings required for their support an entirely different character of evidence. The reply, therefore, was not pursuant to the petition, and did not support and verify it. * * *”

In Beakey v. Meerschen, 78 Kan. 538, 97 Pac. 478, the court held:

“Where the defendant in a civil action files an answer, which in addition to a defense * * * alleges facts which constitute a new * * * cause of action by way of set-off, and prays for judgment * * * plaintiff may not in his reply aver new matter which constitutes a counterclaim or set-off, on which he asks for affirmative relief, but his statements must be confined to facts which constitute a defense to the answer. ”

In the case of National Fire Insurance Co. v. Nichols, 85 Okla. 24, 204 Pac. 272, this court held:

“Where, in an action on an insurance policy, the petition alleges that the insured has fully complied with all the terms and conditions of the policy, and the insurance company answers that the insured has not complied with the condition requiring proof of loss, and the reply admits the allegations of the answer, and by way of avoidance sets forth facts sufficient to constitute a waiver, the allegations cfi the reply constitute a departure.”

In the case of Smith v. Nichols, 5 Bing. N. C. 208, 7 Scott.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 571, 238 P. 415, 111 Okla. 63, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-oil-well-supply-co-okla-1925.