216 P. 674 | Okla. | 1923
Defendants in error filed an action against plaintiffs in error in the district court of Garfield county, Okla., to cancel an oil and gas lease and for an accounting against the three defendants for the oil alleged to have been taken by each of said defendants during the time each owned and operated the same. Separate demurrers were filed by each of the defendants to the petition and the same were by the trial court overruled, to which exceptions were saved by each of the defendants and notice of appeal to the Supreme Court given. Thereupon the trial court required the defendants to elect whether they would stand upon the demurrers, and the defend ants thereupon announced their intention to appeal to the Supreme Court from the order overruling their demurrers, and protested against the action of the trial court in requiring them to elect whether they would stand on the demurrers or plead further. While still insisting upon their rights to appeal from such orders and to have the further proceedings stayed pending such appeal, they prayed the court for an extension of 30 days in which to file an answer in said cases, and the trial court made an order granting 30 days in which to file such answers. The defendants thereupon perfected their appeal to this court from the orders overruling the demurrers of the several defendants. The defendants in error have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal. The plaintiffs in error rely upon the second subdivision of section 780, Comp. Stats. 1921, which provides that the Supreme Court may reverse, vacate, or modify the following orders: *246
"An order that grants or refuses a continuance; discharges, vacates, or modifies a provisional remedy; or grants, refuses, vacates or modifies an injunction; that grants or refuses a new trial; or confirms or refuses to confirm the report of a referee; or sustains or overrules a demurrer."
This section of the statute has been construed a number of times by the Supreme Court of Kansas, and the holding of that court has been uniformly followed by this court. In Union Pacific R. Co. v. Estes (Kan.) 15 P. 157, the court said:
"A party who seeks to have the ruling of the district court on a demurrer to the petition reviewed in this court must elect to stand on the demurrer, and at once bring the case to this court, or an answer may be filed, and when the case is finally tried, if it is tried on the original petition, and then brought to this court by the party demurring, the ruling on the demurrer will be passed on here. If, after an adverse ruling on a demurrer to the petition, the defendant files an answer, he cannot be permitted to file a petition in error in this court to reverse the adverse ruling; he must await the result of the final trial."
Bartholomew v. Guthrie (Kan.) 81 P. 491, is not in any manner in conflict with the opinion in the Estes Case, supra, but holds that where the party does elect to stand on his demurrer, the appeal may be taken although final judgment is not entered in the case.
In Hale v. Broe,
"We find that in many cases from those states having statutes similar to ours, where a party wishes to have reviewed an order overruling a demurrer, it is the practice for him to refuse to plead over and announce that he will stand upon the demurrer, and judgment is thereupon rendered by the court as upon default, or the party may plead over and wait until the case is finally terminated. This is the rule laid down in the case of Farris v. Henderson,
In Simmons v. Chestnut-Gibbons Grocery Co., 70 Oklahoma,
"A party who seeks to have the ruling of the district court on a demurrer to the petition reviewed in this court must elect to stand on the demurrer and at once bring the case to this court; or an answer may be filed and when the case is tried, if it is tried on the original petition, and then brought here by the party demurring, the ruling on the demurrer will be passed on here."
In Hoffman v. Pettaway, 73 Oklahoma,
"If, after an adverse ruling on demurrer to the petition, the defendant files an answer he cannot be permitted to file a petition in error in this court to review the adverse ruling; he must await the result of a final trial."
The case of Ashley Silk Co. v. Oklahoma Fire Ins. Co.,
The fact that plaintiffs in error were required by the trial court to elect whether they would stand on the demurrers or plead further does not in any manner change the situation. Since the opinion by this court in Simmons v. Chestnut-Gibbons Grocery Co., supra, the filing of an answer does not waive the exception to the order overruling the demurrer, and the error can be assigned in a motion for a new trial and presented for review by this court in an appeal from final judgment. On the question of waiver, had the rule of this court remained as announced in Munson v. First Nat. Bank,
For the reasons stated, the appeals of the plaintiffs in error are dismissed.
JOHNSON, C. J., and McNEILL, NICHOLSON, and MASON, JJ., concur.