132 P. 1108 | Okla. | 1913
This is an appeal by A. J. Bristow, George E. Jahn, and Paul Meyer from the district court of Coal county, where J. W. Carrigar and James Carrigar obtained judgment against plaintiffs in error on an injunction bond in the sum of $800 for damages done them by reason of the wrongful issuance of a temporary restraining order in a case pending in the United States District Court for the Central District of the Indian Territory, and after statehood transferred to the district court of Coal county, Okla. *737
The petition was filed on the 4th day of March, 1910. After a demurrer thereto had been overruled, the defendants, on the 5th day of April, 1910, filed their motion to dismiss the cause, for the reason that the action had been prematurely instituted. This motion was also overruled. On the 18th day of April, 1910, defendants filed their answer, and on the 28th day of April, 1910, plaintiffs in error filed their reply. On the 21st day of September, 1910, attorneys for plaintiffs below filed a motion requesting the court to enter a judgmentnunc pro tunc in the original case of Bristow v. Carrigar etal., which motion was by the court sustained, over the objections of the defendants. Thereafter the cause was tried to the jury, and a verdict in the sum of $800 was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, upon which judgment was entered, and to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.
The plaintiffs in error rely upon several assignments of error, which we will consider in their order: First. That the court below erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendants in error to the plaintiffs' petition. Plaintiffs in error first contend, under this assignment of error, that inasmuch as the mandate from the Supreme Court in the case of Bristow v.Carrigar et al.,
The next point urged under this assignment is that no decision had ever been rendered by the district court of Coal county, nor by the special master, upon the material issues *738
raised in the pleadings of the plaintiffs, and denied by the defendants in the original case, and refers especially to the so-called issues of "equitable ownership and legal possession" which they claim were raised and properly presented to the court, but which for some reason were not passed on by either the trial or the Supreme Court. Counsel make the same mistake in this case, as they do in the case of Bristow v. Carrigar etal. ante,
The next point urged is that the court erred in entering thenunc pro tunc order correcting its former judgment. This point was fully covered and decided adversely to plaintiffs in error in Bristow v. Carrigar et al., ante,
There is no merit in the fifth assignment of error. Even though it were admitted that Carrigar would have answered the question propounded in the affirmative, the result would not have been different; for the result of the case inquired about would not have been an adjudication of the issues herein.
It is lastly contended that the court erred in opening the case after the jury had been instructed in order to prove what the judgment of the Supreme Court was in the original case.
The record discloses that counsel for plaintiffs in error, in his opening statement to the jury (Case-made 29), said "that the injunction suit brought by him against plaintiffs in this action had been dissolved by the lower court and appealed to the Supreme Court, and that the judgment had been * * * affirmed." On account of this statement of counsel the plaintiffs failed to offer proof in support of that issue. When the case was closed defendants moved for a peremptory instruction and urged this lack of proof. It was then that the court reopened the case for additional evidence and permitted the records of the case, including the mandate of the Supreme Court, to be offered. There was no error in this, and counsel should be the last person to insist on this assignment, under the circumstances of the case. The act complained of was an exercise of a discretion, vested by law in the court, in which there was no error.
From a careful review of the entire case, we are unable *740 to find an error in the record that would warrant a reversal. The judgment should, therefore, he affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.