Court Opinion

ID: 3806646
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:47:00.518242+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:46:26.312510
License: Public Domain

Defendant in error, who was plaintiff in the trial court, commenced this suit on the 21st day of July, 1911, against plaintiff in error, as defendant, on a promissory note that had then been past due since December 11, 1905, which was almost two years before the admission of the state into the Union, and which had been subjected to the running of the limitation prescribed *Page 186 
by section 4483, Mansfield's Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas. The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, under instructions that notwithstanding plaintiff's cause of action had accrued more than five years before action was commenced, the same was not barred upon the theory that the Oklahoma statute of limitations was applicable thereto and was not retrospective in its operation, and that the period prescribed by section 5550, Comp. Laws 1909 (section 4657, Rev. Laws 1910), should be computed from the date plaintiff's cause of action was first subjected to the operation of said statute.
The preamble to the Schedule of the Constitution is as follows:
"In order that no inconvenience may arise by reason of a change from the forms of government now existing in the Indian Territory and in the Territory of Oklahoma, it is hereby declared as follows:
"Section 1. No existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims shall be affected by the change in the forms of government, but all shall continue as if no change in the forms of government had taken place. * * *
"Sec. 2. All laws in force in the Territory of Oklahoma at the time of the admission of the state into the Union, which are not repugnant to this Constitution and which are not locally inapplicable, shall be extended to and remain in force in the State of Oklahoma, until they expire by their own limitation or are altered or repealed by law."
The functions of the Schedule were considered by this court in Arie v. State, 23 Okla. 166, 100 P. 23, and it was there said:
"To determine the meaning of this provision of the Schedule and the intention of the framers it would not be *Page 187 
amiss to consider what the office of a schedule is. It is a temporary provision for the preparatory machinery necessary to put the principles of government under the Constitution in motion without disorder or collision, not to control the principles of the organic law or to limit the same where it may be in conflict therewith, but to carry the whole into effect without break or interval; to shift the machinery gradually into another track, and having done its office, it is stowed away in the lumber room of the government."
This seems to be a clear statement of the purpose and intention of the framers of the Constitution in inserting same therein: That is, to avoid the confusion and collision that would be occasioned by a sudden transition from one form of government to another and by a substitution of a full set of laws for those in existence. So the Schedule provided that existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims should not be affected, but should continue as if no change in the form of government had taken place. The effect of the Schedule was not to enact or re-adopt the laws of Oklahoma Territory for the state in the sense that a law is enacted when passed by the Legislature, or adopted from another jurisdiction, but, on the contrary, said laws, being already in force in Oklahoma Territory, were to remain in force in that portion of the state as if no change in the form of government had taken place, without in any way affecting existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims by reason of the change, and were to be extended to that portion of the state formerly known as the Indian Territory, with a like provision that rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, and claims on that side of the state should not be affected thereby, but should likewise continue as if no change in the form of government theretofore *Page 188 
existing in that part of the state had taken place.
In Frick Co. v. Oats et al., 20 Okla. 437, 94 P. 682, in construing section 2 of the Schedule and section 21 of the Enabling Act considered together, it was held that on the admission of the state into the Union the laws in force in the Territory of Oklahoma at that time "remained in force," and were not adopted from anywhere, and after citing the case ofState v. Ellis et al., 22 Wash. 129, 60 P. 136, construing a similar provision in the Schedule of the Constitution of the State of Washington, the court said:
"If, then, article 27, sec. 2, of the Constitution of Washington, which provides as follows: 'That all laws which are now in force in the Territory of Washington which are not repugnant to the Constitution, shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitation, or are repealed by the Legislature'  — could not be construed as re-enacting a statute, as all the force it had was to continue in force all valid laws which were then in existence, we must conclude that the part of our schedule which is practically the same in substance and reads: 'Section 2. All laws in force in the Territory of Oklahoma at the time of the admission of the state into the Union which are not repugnant to this Constitution, and which are not locally inapplicable, shall be extended to and remain in force in the State of Oklahoma until they expire by their own limitations, or are altered or repealed by law'  — is entitled to a like construction, that 'All laws in force in the Territory of Oklahoma, on the admission of the state into the Union, * * * shall be extended to and remain in force,' upon the admission of the state into the Union. Clearly these laws cannot be said to be adopted or, re-enacted from anywhere, but were already 'in force.' "
It cannot be doubted, in view of these decisions, that all rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, and claims were intended to be preserved and to continue the same as *Page 189 
if no change in the form of government in either portion of the state had taken place. The plaintiff's right, contract, and claim in the present case existed prior to statehood, when Mansfield's Digest was in force and it was intended that it should remain in effect by the change in the form of government.
In Blanchard   Co. v. Ezell, 25 Okla. 434, 106 P. 960, the plaintiff was a copartnership which existed prior to statehood, and was engaged in the mercantile business in the Indian Territory, and continued in said business after the admission of the state. Prior to statehood the defendant became indebted to plaintiff on a promissory note. After statehood action was brought thereon, and the defendant contended that section 3901, Wilson Rev.   Ann. Stat. 1903, requiring partnerships engaged in business under a fictitious name or designation, not showing the names of the partners, to file with the clerk of the district court a certificate showing the names in full of all members of such partnership and their places of residence, and to publish the same for four succcessive weeks in a newspaper published in the county, was applicable, and it was contended that, because plaintiff had failed to comply with the statute, it was not entitled to recover. The court denied this contention, placing its decision upon the ground that the Schedule preserved the existing right to maintain an action thereon, and that the right was not affected by the change in the form of government. After quoting section I of the Schedule the opinion proceeds:
"The purpose of this section of the Schedule is to preserve all rights already accrued and either in action or capable of being enforced by the ordinary remedies provided for this purpose, as effectively as if the Constitution had not been adopted. The language is broad enough to include all rights and claims whatever their nature. No *Page 190 
distinction is made between statutory rights and those existing at common law, nor between those arising out of torts and those founded upon contract. As the firm under the laws of the Indian Territory prior to statehood had a right to recover on its promissory note, either in the courts of the Indian Territory or Oklahoma Territory, this right continued after statehood and was not affected by the foregoing sections of the Oklahoma statutes."
In M., K.   T. Ry. Co. v. Hancock   Goodbar, 26. Okla. 265,109 P. 223, action was brought to recover certain damages caused by negligence of the company in transporting certain shipments of beef steers from Welch, Indian Territory, to Kansas City, Mo., about November 7, 1909. The company urged in defense of the action a contract containing a stipulation that as a condition precedent to the right of recovery, the shipper should, within 60 days after the happening of the injuries complained of, file his claim for damages, and a further stipulation that no suit should be brought against the carrier after the lapse of 90 days from the happening of the injury. Claim was not filed within 60 days nor suit commenced within 90 days. It was contended that as the action was not commenced until after statehood, said provisions were void as being in contravention of section 9, art. 23, of the Constitution, providing that any provision of any contract or agreement stipulating for notice or demand other than such as may be provided by law shall be null and void. This provision of the Constitution was held not applicable thereto, and, further, that said stipulation was valid and operated as a limitation of the time in which action should be brought, though brought after statehood.
In Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Hollis, 28 Okla. 613,115 P. 774, action was commenced after statehood to recover damages for delay in the transmission of a telegram. *Page 191 
The company pleaded in defense of the action a stipulation on its printed forms that the company should not be liable for damages or statutory penalties growing out of said contract where the claim was not presented within 60 days after the message was filed for transmission, and it was held that said provision was valid and the company was entitled to urge same in bar of the suit notwithstanding the action was begun after statehood.
In Summers v. Alexander, 30 Okla. 198, 120 P. 601, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 787, action was commenced in the justice court after statehood upon two promissory notes. The defense was that the notes were obtained by misrepresentation. It was held that as the transaction occurred prior to statehood, the rights of the parties were to be determined by the law then in force, and those rights were continued by section 1 of the Schedule.
In Turk v. Mayberry, 32 Okla. 66, 121 P. 665, judgment was rendered in mayor's court of Purcell prior to statehood and appeal prosecuted to the United States. Court for the Southern District of Indian Territory. The case was thereafter transferred to the district court of McLain county, which latter court dismissed the appeal. On April 18, 1908, the judgment of the mayor's court was placed on the judgment rolls of the district court and execution issued and levied upon certain real estate in the city of Purcell, which was advertised and sold, and one of the questions presented was whether on a judgment rendered prior to statehood a judgment debtor had a right to redeem property sold under execution after statehood. Execution was not issued nor the property sold until after statehood, and thus was presented squarely the question whether the right to redeem was an existing right preserved by the Schedule. The court said. *Page 192 
"We therefore conclude that the right of redemption under execution sale of land, upon process issued since statehood on judgments rendered prior to statehood, remains in the judgment debtor, and that the change of law at the time of the adoption of the Constitution did not affect this right, and that the confirmation of the sale in this case prior to the expiration of the time allowed by the law, in force at the time of judgment, for the exercise of the right of redemption, was prejudicial to that right."
A comparison of the statutes in force in the Indian Territory and those extended over the state is not amiss. The period of limitation prescribed by Mansfield's Digest on promissory notes was five years, being the same as that prescribed by the Oklahoma statutes. Actions upon judgments were required to be brought within ten years, while by the Oklahoma statutes the period in which actions could be brought upon foreign judgments was limited to one year, so in actions upon writings under seal the time was placed at ten years, while by the Oklahoma law the time was reduced to five years. In actions upon the bonds of executors and administrators, the time was fixed at eight years, and same was placed by the Oklahoma statute at five years. Actions on penal statutes were required to be commenced within two years, while the period under the Oklahoma law was one year. In actions for trespass upon real estate, the former period was three years, while it was changed to two years; and for taking or injuring personal property actions formerly had to be commenced within three years, while the time limit was changed to two years; and actions of forcible entry and detainer might be begun within three years, while the time is now limited to two years.
Under Mansfield's Digest persons to whom a right of action accrued while under disability, such as minority, *Page 193 
covertune, etc., had the same period of time after the disability was removed as was fixed by the statute, in which to commence actions, which might in some cases be ten years, while under the Oklahoma statutes the time was limited to one year after the removal of disability.
In the instance given where the time is materially shortened the right has been affected. The fact that defendant is urging this question does not bring about a different situation. If plaintiff had lost in the trial and was here urging error, the question would be squarely presented. Having won, the defendant is entitled to present the question whether section 4483, Mansfield's Digest, applies, and, if so, whether the time fixed thereby had run, and plaintiff's right of action was barred. If we are right in construing the provisions of the Schedule to mean that existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, and claims shall continue to exist, free from the defense of limitation, for the same length of time prescribed by the statutes in force prior to the adoption of the Constitution, it would follow that upon the expiration of that time, an action based upon any such right, contract, or claim would be subject to such defense, and this being true, the defendant would be in position to urge that defense when the time prescribed by the law then in force had run; that is, if the statutes in force in the Indian Territory be the governing statutes, then the period prescribed thereby had run at the time this action was instituted, and defendant would be entitled to plead such statute in bar of plaintiff's action.
If the statutes of limitation of Oklahoma Territory be held applicable to existing rights, contracts, and claims on the date of statehood, and be given a retrospective operation, the time thereby prescribed in many instances would *Page 194 
already have expired, and thus the right of action thereon be destroyed. Such a construction would render the statutes inoperative and unconstitutional as to such rights, contracts, or claims. Murray v. Gibson, 15 How. 426, 14 L. Ed. 757; Sohn v.Waterson et al., 17 Wall. 596, 21 L. Ed. 737.
If such statutes be held to apply and to fix a new period from which the time fixed thereby should begin to run as to existing rights, contracts, or claims, the time in many instances would be so materially shortened as to be unreasonable, and thus would be presented a difficulty almost insurmountable in requiring the court to determine what was or was not a reasonable time in which to begin suit, in each particular case. Koshkonong v. Burton, 104 U.S. 668, 26 L. Ed. 886.
That the right of action continues after statehood is not controverted, but it is contended that the laws of Oklahoma apply and the period of limitation begins to run from the date of statehood, and that plaintiff was entitled thereafter to the period prescribed by said statute to commence his action. To determine the correctness of this proposition it is necessary to ascertain the meaning of the preamble and the provisions of the Schedule heretofore quoted. Oklahoma Territory was an organized form of government with a highly developed citizenship and a system of laws of its own materially different from those in existence on the East Side. On the Indian Territory side there existed five separate and distinct semidependent political communities known as the Five Civilized Tribes, with separate and distinct forms of government and customs and laws widely divergent from each other and from those in existence on the West Side, and there was also a large element of the population composed of non-citizens *Page 195 
who had been permitted to settle in the Indian Territory and for the regulation of whose conduct certain laws of Arkansas as contained in Mansfield's Digest had been extended over and put in force in that territory. In addition thereto certain general statutes of the United States had operation therein. The people on each side of the state were familiar with the laws in force and had regulated their conduct in accordance therewith, and it was recognized that a sudden change of the law, if permitted to affect existing rights, actions, proceedings, contracts, and claims, would bring about confusion and uncertainty. The people on that side of the state formerly known as Oklahoma Territory knew their rights under the contracts they had entered into in conformity with existing laws, and under those laws the payee of a note knew he would have a right to institute an action thereon at any time within five years from the date of its maturity, and it was expressly enacted that this right should continue as if no change had taken place in that portion of the state; and in Frick Co. v. Oats et el., supra, it was held that the laws of Oklahoma Territory remained in force and were not re-enacted or re-adopted, and it follows did not renew existing rights or fix a new period from which the statute commenced to run, and thus the right to institute suit on a cause of action of this character on the Oklahoma Territory side of the state continued as if no change had taken place in the form of government. The same provision was applicable to the Indian Territory, and is expressly made so by its language. The plaintiff knew when this note matured that his right to institute suit thereon would continue for a period of five years, had no change occurred, and he knew when the Constitution was adopted that under the provision of the Schedule *Page 196 
his right to institute suit thereon would remain as if no change in the form of government had taken place; that is, it was continued for the length of time it would have continued without such change, to wit, five years from the date it first accrued. This was true on the Oklahoma Territory side, and no good reason can exist and none does exist why a different rule should apply on the Indian Territory side of the state.
Webster defines the word "continue" to mean:
"(2) To protract or extend in duration; to preserve or persist in; to cease not; (3) to carry onward or extend; to prolong or produce; to add to, or draw out in length, duration, or development; (4) to retain, suffer, or cause to remain."
Giving the word "continue" the meaning ascribed thereto by Webster, it means that the right to institute an action upon an existing right, contract, or claim shall remain or extend or be prolonged the same length of time as if no change had taken place. Had no change taken place the plaintiff's right to institute suit upon the note would have been extended, continued, or prolonged for a period of five years from the date it matured, and this construction gives harmony and symmetry to the Constitution, effects the change without confusion, and brings about a result that is just, equal, and right. We are not without legal definition of the word "continue" to support us in this view. In Williams, Adm'r, v.United States, 154 U.S. 648, 14 Sup. Ct. 1188, 25 L. Ed. 309, a surgeon in the Continental Army who accepted an appointment in the new regiment of guards authorized by the resolution of January 9, 1799, was held "not to continue in service until the end of the war," within the meaning of the resolution of Congress under which the claim in that case was made, *Page 197 
for the reason that the service was not continuous but was interrupted and broken by his re-enlistment in another branch of the service.
In Bridges v. Koppleman, 117 N.Y. Supp. 306 (63 Misc. Rep. 27) the sixth paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:
"The word 'continue,' as used in Civil Code. Procedure, sec. 26, providing that a special proceeding pending way be continued from time to time before one or more of the judges of the court, means to keep up, to protract or extend in duration, to extend, or prolong."
In Engmann v. Estate of John Immel, Deceased, 59 Wis. 249, 18 N.W. 182, in defining the word "continue" under a statute providing that payment upon an existing claim shall be sufficient evidence upon a new or continuing contract, it was said:
"The word 'continuing,' as here used, has the natural meaning of perpetuating, protracting, or prolonging from one time to another."
It appears that the purpose of adopting the provisions of the Schedule is, as expressed therein, to declare that existing rights, contracts, and claims shall continue as if no change in the form of government had taken place; that is, they shall continue to exist and be capable of enforcement without being liable to be defeated by the plea of limitation for the same period of time they would have thus continued under the laws in force at the time the cause of action accrued.
The statutes of limitation of Oklahoma Territory extended over the state have been construed in former opinions of the territorial Supreme Court to be prospective In their operation, and to embrace within their term existing rights of action, and were said to have the effect *Page 198 
of renewing such rights so that the full period of time in which to institute suit thereon would run from the time the cause of action was first subjected to their operation. This was true because when the Statutes of 1893 were adopted they were held to effect a repeal of the statutes theretofore in force. Southgate v. Frier, 8 Okla. 435, 57 P. 841; Huber v.Zimmerman, 8 Okla. 573, 58 P. 737; Fuller v. Johnson,8 Okla. 601, 58 P. 745.
The statutes having been construed as prospective in their operation, they must still be given that effect and cannot be construed as retrospective. This is so because the laws were not re-enacted or re-adopted, but merely remained in force as if no change had taken place, and therefore did not renew existing rights of action nor fix a new period from which the statute should begin to run in the west part of the state. They must be given a like construction on the east side of the state and held not to fix a new period from which the statute begins to run, because any other construction would render them obnoxious to the uniformity clause of the Constitution. Not being retrospective on the West Side, they cannot be retrospective on the East Side. Anderson v. Ritterbusch,22 Okla. 761, 98 P. 1002.
This construction is in harmony with well-established rules and violates no precedent. Indeed no precedent exists upon a similar state of facts, for to our knowledge there has not heretofore been presented to the courts a similar situation to that we are considering, and therefore precedents can only be persuasive so far as by analogy they are like the present situation, and so far as their reasoning may be applicable and convincing. A standard rule of construction applied to statutes of limitation is *Page 199 
stated by Mr. Wood in his work on Limitations, sec. 11, p. 38, as follows:
"Another rule in reference to all statutes is that they are to be so construed as to have a prospective effect merely and will not be permitted to affect past transactions, unless such intention is clearly and unequivocally expressed."
And in support of this rule he cites many authorities. The Supreme Court of the United States in Murray v. Gibson, 15 How, 421, 14 L. Ed. 755, stated the same rule in the following language:
"As a general rule for the interpretation of statutes, it may be laid down that they never should be allowed a retroactive operation where this is not required by express command or by necessary and unavoidable implication. Without such command or implication they speak and operate upon the future only. Especially should this rule of interpretation prevail where the effect and operation of a law are designed, apart from the intrinsic merits of the rights of parties, to restrict the assertion of these rights."
In the face of the previous decisions of the territorial court and of the general rule for construction above stated, this court cannot give said statutes a retrospective operation so as to make them relate back and operate upon causes of action existing prior to statehood on the east side of the state. Neither is the court justified in holding that the statutes in one portion of the state have the effect of supplanting other statutes then in existence and fixing a new period from which the time limit shall begin to run.
Section 2 of the Schedule declares that the laws of Oklahoma Territory are extended over and shall remain in force in the state which are not repugnant to the Constitution *Page 200 
or locally inapplicable. The preamble and section 1 declare that such laws shall not affect existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims, and this operates as a modification of the statutes of limitations so extended to the extent that they are not permitted to bring within their terms existing rights of actions, contracts, or claims, but permits them to continue as if such laws had not been extended to that portion of the state.
Section 59, art. 5, of the Constitution (section 148, Vm. Ann.) declares:
"Laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state, and where a general law can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted."
This constitutional provision operates upon all laws extended over and put in force in that portion of the state formerly known as the Indian Territory, and for such laws to have such uniform operation, it is necessary that they shall affect alike all persons and localities of the state brought within their terms; that is to say, the period of limitation provided by the act in question must be the same upon like rights, contracts, and claims in each portion of the state, and in all other ways the operation of said laws must be uniform; to be more specific: If the period of limitation upon a contract or claim were five years from the date it first accrued on the Oklahoma Territory side of the state, five years must be the period of limitation on the Indian territory side.
It is true in the present case the time prescribed in the Indian Territory was five years, and a like period was prescribed by the statute in Oklahoma Territory, and it may be said the distinction is of no importance. If the Oklahoma statute be held to apply and to fix a new period *Page 201 
from which the statute would commence to run, it would have the effect of prescribing a longer period in which action might be brought in the present case than would accrue to the payee of a note maturing on the same date in what was formerly Oklahoma Territory, and thereby said laws would not be uniform in their operation. To further illustrate: If a debtor on the east side had executed his note maturing four years before the date of statehood and a debtor on the west side had executed his note maturing on the same date, had no change in the form of government taken place, the right of the respective payees to institute suit would have continued, and expired on the same date in each instance; but if the other view be taken, the period of limitation in Oklahoma Territory would have been five years, as provided by statute, while on the Indian Territory side it would have been nine years, which would clearly make the statute with this construction obnoxious to the uniformity clause of the Constitution.
Another complication may be illustrated thus: Had the debtor living on the Oklahoma Territory side continued to reside there until the bar of the statute had fallen and then moved to the Indian Territory side, the cause of action would not have been renewed, but the bar having once attached could be availed of at any point within the state. On the other hand, had the debtor living on the east side continued to live there until the period of five years had run, and then moved to the west side, he would not be entitled to plead the bar of the statute. The statute of limitations for certain classes of actions concerning real estate in the Indian Territory was seven years, while in Oklahoma Territory it was fifteen years. Should the statute applicable thereto be construed as the trial court did in this case, it would result in this situation: *Page 202 
Where plaintiff's cause of action had accrued six years and 11 months prior to statehood in the Indian Territory, should the right continue as if no change in the form of government had taken place, it would be barred within seven years from the date it first accrued; while taking the other view, it would be extended for a period of 15 years, thus making the period of limitation in effect 23 years, while a like cause of action accruing on the same date in Oklahoma Territory would be barred in 15 years. It was to avoid such conditions as these and those heretofore pointed out that the Schedule declared that existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, and claims should continue as if no change had taken place.
The question here is not like that presented in cases involving matters of procedure merely. The right of action had accrued and was in existence and was to be protected and continued the same as if no change had taken place. In actions commenced before statehood the rights of the parties to existing procedure was preserved by the same provision of the Schedule. No right had attached or vested to any specific mode of procedure prior to the time action was commenced, and therefore authorities of that nature are not controlling here.
The decision in Theis v. Board of County Com'rs,22 Okla. 333, 97 P. 973, simply determined that section 3, art. 7, c. 28, p. 328, Sess. Laws 1905, providing that, "Such set-off or counterclaim shall not be barred by the statute of limitations until the claim of the plaintiff is so barred," only affected set-offs or counterclaims existing at the time of its passage, and did not revive a set-off already barred by a former statute.
The question in Re Mosher, 24 Okla. 61, 102 P. 705, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 530, 20 Ann. Cas. 209, was *Page 203 
whether the statute of limitations had run against certain acts alleged against an attorney in a disbarment proceeding, and it was held that the statute did not apply in cases of that kind.
In Anderson et al. v. Kennedy et al. (not officially reported), 152 P. 123, the question here presented was submitted, and in an opinion by the commission it was held that the statutes of limitation theretofore in force in Oklahoma Territory, which were by the Schedule extended to that part of the state formerly known as Indian Territory, applied to causes of action then existing and had the effect of renewing such existing rights. This statement of the law, in our opinion, is incorrect.
The judgment should be reversed.
KANE, C. J., and TURNER, J., concur. THACKER, J., concurs in the conclusion.