Court Opinion

ID: 9817900
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 04:56:47.4548+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:38:05.656243
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
THACKER, C.
Plaintiff in error was plaintiff below and commenced action before a justice of the peace against Barry Turner, defendant below, to recover $35 as rent on a portion of a building in the city of Ploldenville, and $25 additional as damages to such building. Soon after commencement of suit, plaintiff caused 33 pair of roller skates, appraised at $23.45, a skating rink floor appraised at $30, and chairs and benches appraised at $2, to be taken in attachment as the property of defendant. From a judgment in the justice coui-t plain-' tiff appealed to the county court, giving a bond containing a recital that plaintiff “obtained judgment against the above-named defendant * * * for the sum of only thirty dollars, but not for full amt. of claim, and costs of suit, taxed at $-, and said plaintiff herein intends to appeal from such judgment to the county court of said county”; but no reference was made to the attachment. The entry of judgment in the justice court is not before us, and the record does not disclose the disposition, if any, made of the attached property in the justice court. In the county court the defendant in error was allowed to interplead, upon a *712plea in which she alleges ownership, right, and demand and refusal of possession, and that the attached property, worth $220 and having a usable value of $25 per month, was delivered to plaintiff and by him converted to his own use, “a large part thereof being lost, destroyed, or damaged,” with prayer for judgment for possession of said property or, if that cannot be had, for its said value, also for said “usable value/’’ As to right to interplead, see St. Okla. 1893, sec. 3918; section 4701, Rev. Laws 1910, and cases there cited. The interpleader recovered verdict and judgment against plaintiff for the property valued at $156, or for its value if the property could not be had, and for $180 as damages for its detention.
There was not only no objection to the interplea, but no objection was made nor exception taken to the introduction of any evidence, to the giving or refusing to give any instruction to the jury, or to any other action of the trial court prior to the motion for new trial.
It is stated in brief for defendant in error and admitted in supplemental brief for plaintiff in error that the case-made does not show that it contains all the evidence and that no error based thereon can be considered. There has been no request for leave to amend the case-made in this respect, if in fact it does contain all the evidence; and, in this state of the record, we are unable to determine any error assigned except such, if any, as may appear upon an examination of the “record proper,” consisting, as stated in Tribal D. Co. v. White Bros., 28 Okla. 525, 114 Pac. 736, and in other cases, “of the petition, the process, the return, pleadings subsequent thereto, reports, verdicts, orders, and judgments.”
It is urged by the plaintiff in error that the county court had no jurisdiction of the claim of the interpleader because the appeal bond does not show appeal in respect to the attachment (see Becker v. Steele et al., 41 Kan. 173, 21 Pac. 169, and cases there cited); but, even if it should be conceded that the inter-plea was dependent upon the continued existence of the attachment and that this is a jurisdictional matter which could not be waived by the parties (and in respect to this see School Dist. v. *713Gautier, 13 Okla. 194, 73 Pac. 594; Groenmiller v. Kaub, 67 Kan. 844, 73 Pac. 100; and 24 Cyc. 641, 643, 645, and 720-1), we cannot assume that the judgment in the justice court was adverse to plaintiff in respect to the attachment nor that the property had been discharged therefrom prior to such judgment; and, as the attachment proceedings would certainly go with plaintiff's appeal to the county court if not discharged in the justice court, the contention in this respect does not appear to rest upon any solid foundation.
However, it may be stated incidentally, that in 24 Cyc. 643, cited supra, it is said:
“The better view seems to be that, where the appellate court lias original as well as appellate jurisdiction of the cause, the jurisdiction of both the subject-matter and the person may be conferred upon it by waiver or consent.”
And the cases of Groenmiller et al. v. Kaub, supra, State National Bank of Oklahoma v. C. B. Wood, 43 Okla. -, 142 Pac. 1002, and School Dist. v. Gautier, supra, would also appear to justify the statement that the county court had jurisdiction by reason of the tacit consent of the parties and consequent waiver of right to object to same; the county court at that time having both original and appellate jurisdiction of the cause brought to it by appeal and original jurisdiction of the cause injected by the interplea.
It is further urged in effect by plaintiff in error that the interpleader’s action against plaintiff was for the conversion of said property and not to recover its possession; and that the measure of damage or detriment is the value of the property at the time of its conversion with interest thereon, etc. (First Nat. Bank of Lawton v. Thompson, 41 Okla. 88, 137 Pac. 668; section 2642, St. Okla. 1890; section 2875, Rev. Laws 1910), instead of its value with damages for its detention if a delivery cannot be had (section 4063, St. Okla. 1893; section 4807, Rev. Laws 1910).
The verdict of the jury was for the return of the property, valuing it at $156, and for damages for its detention $180. The only language used in the petition that would tend to characterize *714the interplea as in the nature of an action for wrongful conversion is the allegation in the pleading, as hereinbefore quoted, to the effect that an unspecified portion of the property had been lost or destroyed; but, as recourse cannot be had to the evidence for information in this regard, for aught we can say, the lost and destroyed portion may have been inconsiderable, if there was airy such, or the verdict and judgment may have been for the usable value of only such portion of the property as was properly the subject of an action for its possession. On the whole, it appears from the interplea and the verdict that the action was in the nature of one in replevin or detinue or, at least, was for the possession of specific property, with damages for detention; and in such case a verdict and judgment for the leturn of the property or, if a .delivery cannot be had, for the value thereof, with damages for the detention, which was given in the present case, shows no error. Roberts v. Wilkins et al., 40 Okla. 138, 137 Pac. 111.
Without a consideration of the evidence, from which we are precluded, we are unable to discover in the record proper any error in any respect for which the plaintiff in error contends; and, in our opinion, the judgment should be affirmed.