Court Opinion

ID: 3836789
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:05:43.624822+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:13.994336
License: Public Domain

As the parties hereto appear in the same relative position as they appeared in the trial court, they will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants.
It appears from the record that May Wheeler Miller, plaintiff, gave her promissory note in payment for stock in the Gray, Eagle Oil  Gas Company, one of the defendants; that the note was reduced to judgment, and that the judgment was assigned to G. H. White, another defendant. Execution was issued and placed in the hands of A. N. Jones, sheriff, whereupon plaintiff filed her separate action in the district court of Garfield county, alleging that the note was procured through fraud and that the judgment thereon was rendered by default on false and perjured testimony and concealment of the truth from the court, and praying that the judgment be declared void; that defendants be enjoined from selling her property under the execution and that said execution be recalled and quashed.
Upon the filing of her petition a "temporary injunction and restraining order" was issued, which, upon motion of defendants, was, after hearing, vacated and set aside, and from this order and judgment of the court so vacating and setting aside the "temporary injunction and restraining order," plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The judgment against plaintiff was rendered on December 26, 1919. The petition in the instant case was filed on August 20, 1926. In her petition plaintiff admits that she was duly served with summons, but alleges that she was preparing to leave for California, and that she lost the summons and made no defense to the action, and in her petition in the instant case she alleges nothing that could not have been pleaded as a defense in the original action.
Subdivisions 4 and 7 of section 810, C. O. S. 1921, and section 812, C. O. S. 1921, provide an adequate remedy for plaintiff's condition, as shown by her pleadings, subject only to the limitations provided in section 817, C. O. S. 1921, providing that:
"Proceedings to vacate or modify a judgment or order, for the causes mentioned in subdivisions four, five and seven, of section 810, must be commenced within two years after the judgment was rendered. * * *"
This contention finds support in the opinions of this court in Maston v. Chandler Building  Loan Ass'n, 61 Okla. 230,157 P. 366; Continental Gin Co. v. Arnold, 66 Okla. 132,167 P. 613; and Board of Commissioners v. Barber, 83 Okla. 54,200 P. 990.
We therefore conclude that, since plaintiff had an opportunity to present all the things of which she here complains to the court in the original trial, or upon a petition to vacate the judgment any time within two years after its rendition, and failed to avail herself of that remedy, she cannot be now heard to complain in a court of equity. El Reno Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Sutton, 41 Okla. 297,137 P. 700.
We further conclude that the dissolution of the restraining order or temporary injunction was largely within the discretion of the trial court, and this court will not interfere with such discretion unless it appears that the trial court has been guilty of manifest abuse of such discretion. Cunningham v. Ponca City, 27 Okla. 858, 113 P. 919, and Yale Theatre v. City of Lawton, 35 Okla. 444, 130 P. 135.
Finding no errors in the judgment of the district court, said judgment is affirmed.
BRANSON, C. J., MASON, V. C. J., and LESTER, HUNT, CLARK, RILEY, and HEFNER, JJ., concur.