Winemiller v. Stewart

1926 OK 1006, 257 P. 288, 125 Okla. 230, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
Docket16923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1926 OK 1006 (Winemiller v. Stewart) 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
Winemiller v. Stewart, 1926 OK 1006, 257 P. 288, 125 Okla. 230, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 17 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAF, C.

This appeal is from, a judgment for a broker’s commission for the sale of certain oil and gas leases. Only two grounds relied on ror reversal are argued in the briefs. The first is that the court erred in denying the motion to consolidate this case with two other cases then pending, in which each of the plaintiffs was seeking to recover a commission for the same sale upon the ground that he was the procuring cause of the sale.

Section 324, C. S. 1921, provides:

“Whenever two or more actions are pending in the same court, which might have been joined, the defendant may, on motion and notice to the adverse party, require him to show cause why the same shall not be consolidated, and if no cause be shown, the said several actions shall be consolidated.”

It is apparent that the case does not come within the statute. Each of the plaintiffs claiming the entire commission of the sale, the actions could not have been joined.

In Ortman v. Union Pac. Ry. Co., 4 Pac. 858, the Supreme Court of Kansas, in considering the same statute, held, and we think correctly, that:

“Where cases cannot be consolidated under the provisions of the statute, the court has no authority as a matter of convenience, and economy, ¿o require several cases upon the same general subject to be considered and determined by the same jury at the same time, if the parties thereto object.”

It is not argued, however, that the cases should have been consolidated, but the contention is thus stated in the brief:

“The motion to consolidate filed by the defendants contained the substantial provisions of a bill of interpleader and at least was in the nature of such bill, and therefore should have been sustained and the different claimants to this commission required to interplead so that it could be determined whoi was lawfully entitled to such commission. Especially is this true when the said motion to consolidate is considered in connection with the petition of plaintiff and the amendment thereto.”

The motion reads:

“Gomes now the defendant P. R. Williams, and shows to the court that this suit and the suit of H. H. Medlin et al. v. P. R. Williams et al., No. 25370 in this court, and the» suit of Robert S. Matthews v. J. H. Winemiller et al., being No. 25371 in this court, are suits instituted against this defendant and his codefendants J. H. Winemiller and Kansoma Oil & Gas Company, in one of which suits also L. W. Baxter is made a defendant; that all of said suits arc by parties claiming a commission as broker or agent for the sale of a certain oil and gas mining lease formerly owned by this defendant and his codefendants; that these defendants do owe a commission for the sale of said property, but that they d© not owe but one commission; that only one person or group of persons is entitled to said commission.
“Defendant further shows to the court that Dessa L. Hanna, who is named as a defendant in this case, has filed a suit against this defendant and his codefendants J. H. Wine-miller, Kansoma Oil Company, and other defendants, in the district court of Osage county, Okla., alleging in her petition that she is entitled to the commission for the services for which the plaintiffs in the different suits in this court are claiming. The said suit in the district court of Osage county, Okla., being cause No. 8338 in said court.
“The defendant further shows to the court that, in order that this entire matter may be litigated and the rights of all parties determined, it is proper that said causes Nos. 25370 and 25371 and 25407, in this court, be consolidated by order of this court, and that all other and further proceedings be conducted in the one cause.
“Wherefore, premises considered, defendant asks the court to make an order consolidating all of said actions in one cause, and directing the parties to file all further proceedings and to take and conduct all further proceedings in the said consolidated cause of action.”

We think the motion does not contain the necessary averments of a bill of interpleader or for a proceeding in the nature of inter-pleader. The only distinction between the two is that in the latter the plaintiff may claim an interest, .while in the former he cannot. Guaranteed State Bank of Durant v. D'Yarmett et al., 67 Okla. 164, 169 Pac. 639.

*232 In pursuing the remedy of interpleader, the bill of complaint must allege positively that the plaintiff claims no interest in the subject-matter; that he is indifferent to the claims, and is ready and willing to deliver the thing or fund, or pay the debt, or render the duty to, the rightful claimant, but that he is ignorant or in doribt which is the rightful one, and is in real danger or hazard by means of such doubt from their conflicting demands; and must algo bring or pay or offer to bring or pay the entire thing, «fund, or money in controversy into court. Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (3rd Ed.) vol 4, sec. 1328. It is apparent that the motion contains no such allegations or tender.

It will be observed that the motion to consolidate, which the defendants ask to be construed as a bill of interpleader, or in the nature of a bill of interpleader, was made by one of the defendants only and not joined in by the other two defendants. The allegation “that these defendants do owe a commission for the sale of said property, but that they do not owe but one commission,” cannot be construed as an allegation or admission of the defendant Williams that they owe the full commission claimed, by the several plaintiffs. The admission there made, that the defendants do owe a commission, could not be held to be binding upon the other two defendants who appeared by separate attorneys and filed separate answers. As to whether one of three defend-ants jointly and separately liable could avail himself of the remedy of interp’eader it is not necessary to decide, but it is clear that in such case it would be necessary for the one to 'bring into court or offer to bring . into court the full amount claimed. The several claimants could not be required to interplead and try out the issues joined among themselves until it was definitely settled that the judgment for the prevailing party would be satisfied. It has always been held that one seeking the remedy of inter-pleader is acting in the capacity of an impartial stakeholder, and, as such, required to bring into court, or offered to bring into' court, the full amount claimed, so that all that is required of the respective claimants is that they shall try out the issues joined between them, and, when the issues are thus determined, the litigation is at an end. Construing the language most strongly in favor , of the defendants, “that these defendants do owe a commission for the sa’e of said property,” it cannot be held to mean that they owe the full amount of the- commission claimed by the different plaintiffs, or, if so, .that it would be forthcoming to satisfy any judgment recovered by the prevailing claimant.

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Related

PALLESEN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY v. Warren
1965 OK 74 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1965)
Williams v. Hanna
1931 OK 565 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)
Winemiller v. Matthews
1926 OK 1005 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 1006, 257 P. 288, 125 Okla. 230, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winemiller-v-stewart-okla-1926.