Case ID: okla_40/html/0542-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "TURNER, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

SPIES v. STONE.
    No. 3401.
    Opinion Filed March 24, 1914.
    (139 Pac. 951.)
    JUSTICES OF THE PEACE — Appeal—Jurisdiction of County Court. The law announced in the first section of the syllabus in Holcomb v. Chicago, E. I. & P. Ey. Co., 27 Okla. 667, 112 Pae. 1023, rules this case.
    (Syllabus by the Court.)
    
      Brror from District Court, Bryan County;
    
    
      Summers Hardy, Judge.
    
    Action by J. E. Spies against R. A. Stone. Judgment for defendant before a justice. On appeal to the district court, judgment went for plaintiff. From the granting of a motion to vacate the judgment, plaintiff brings error.
    Affirmed.
    
      Hatchett & Ferguson, for plaintiff in error.
   TURNER, J.

On September 22, 1908, plaintiff in error sued defendant in error before a justice of the peace, which resulted in a judgment for defendant. Thereupon plaintiff appealed to the district court, where defendant’s motion to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction was overruled. Later there was judgment rendered and entered for plaintiff, and defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled. One of the grounds of the motion was error in overruling defendant’s said motion to dismiss. Defendant did not appeal, but on January 23, 1911, moved the court to vacate the judgment, upon the ground that the same was void. The court sustained the motion, and plaintiff excepted, and brings the case here.

For the reason that the provisions of the Constitution (article 7, secs. 14, 18) conferred upon the county courts of the state exclusive appellate jurisdiction of all appeals from judgments of justices of the peace in civil cases (Holcomb v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 27 Okla. 667, 112 Pac. 1023), the district court was without jurisdiction to enter the judgment, and hence the same was void. Rev. Laws 1910, sec. 5274, provides: “ * * * A void judgment may be vacated at any time, on motion of a party, or any person affected thereby.” Phoenix Bridge Co. v. Street, 9 Okla. 422, 60 Pac. 221; Nicoll v. Midland, etc., 21 Okla. 591, 96 Pac. 744; Harding v. Gillett et al., 25 Okla. 199, 107 Pac. 665.

Affirmed.

All the Justices concur.