111 P. 942 | Okla. | 1910
Ten assignments of error are set out in the brief for reversal, but in the argument only four propositions are urged against the correctness of the judgment; and we shall notice only those propositions presented in the argument in the brief.
One of the actions of the court complained of was a refusal to grant the plaintiff a change of venue. After the filing of the original petition on the 22d day of August, 1903, plaintiff filed in the court below on the 21st day of October of the same year, before any other pleadings had been filed, his petition for a change of venue. On the next day, defendants in error filed a demurrer to the petition *223 and a plea of misjoinder. Whereupon plaintiff obtained leave to file, and did file, an amended petition, to which the defendants in error demurred, and also filed a motion to make more definite and certain and a plea of misjoinder. After the plea of misjoinder had been sustained, and while the amended petition was pending upon defendants' motion to make the same more definite and certain, which was later sustained, plaintiff presented his motion for a change of venue, which was by the court then overruled. Subsequently defendants answered, and the cause was referred to the master. It does not appear from the record upon what ground the trial court denied the change of venue, but there appears at least one sufficient reason why such action is not reversible error. The change of venue sought by plaintiff was upon the ground that, on account of the undue influence of defendants, he would not be able to obtain a fair and impartial trial in the southern district of the Indian Territory, where the action was pending. The statutory provisions authorizing a change of venue upon such ground in the Indian Territory are to be found in chapter 57, Ind. T. Ann. St. §§ 3556-3561 (Mansf. Dig. Ark. c. 153), and section 51, Ind. T. Ann. St. Section 3556 provides that:
"Any party to a civil action, trial by jury, may obtain an order for a change of venue therein by motion upon a petition stating that he verily believes that he cannot obtain a fair and impartial trial in said action in the county in which the same is pending on account of undue influence of his adversary or the undue prejudice against the petitioner, or his cause of action or defense in such county."
Subsequent sections authorize the order to be granted by the judge of the court in open court, or in vacation after notice in certain cases, and require that when the petition has been presented in conformity to the statutes, the judge shall make the order. This statute was designed to insure a party to a civil action, where there is a trial by a jury, a fair and impartial jury to try his cause, and it has application only to those civil actions wherein there is a trial by a jury.Wise v. Martin,
It cannot be ascertained in any civil action, before the issues are joined, whether there will be any trial by a jury. If the petition does not state a cause of action, there can be no trial anywhere. If defendant fails to answer, plaintiff is entitled to judgment by default; or if, after defendant answers, it be determined that he has no valid defense, a change of venue affords no relief, and it was not intended that plaintiff should be permitted to incur costs for no purpose. Nor can it be said of a defendant who has never answered that he is entitled to a change of venue in order to have an impartial trial, for his answer may disclose that he has no valid defense, and in that event there should be a judgment against him on the pleadings. We have been unable to find any decision from the Supreme Court of Arkansas construing the statute upon this question. The statute does not fix the time for filing the petition; but, consistent with the purpose of the statute and upon sound reason, we think that when the application is made before the issues are joined, it is premature. The reasoning of the court in Hudley v. State,
"It has been said to be a safe and judicious practice to require the plea of not guilty to be given in before the change of venue is awarded (citing authorities). Doubtless it is the better practice to arraign the defendant, and require him to plead to the indictment, before the order changing the venue is made, because it might turn out, in the court to which the venue is changed, that the indictment might be quashed on plea in abatement, motion or demurrer, and the public would be at the expense and delay of remanding the defendant to the county where the offense was committed for a new indictment."
The court in that case, however, held that the irregularity of *225 the court was not prejudicial to defendant, because the change of venue was obtained upon his petition, and he had the benefit of an arraignment and plea of not guilty in the court in which the action was transferred.
"Where the convenience of the witnesses, or the impossibility of obtaining an impartial trial, is the ground of the motion, it should not be made till after issue joined." (2 Wait's Prac. p 630, and authorities there cited; State v. Swepson,
A second motion could have been made by plaintiff after the issues were joined. Merrill v. Grinnell et al., 10 How. Prac. (N.Y.) 31. But none was made.
Under the statutes in force in the Indian Territory, the holder of a mechanic's lien had his remedy to enforce same either by an action at law or by a proceeding in equity for foreclosure. Murray v. Rapley,
Plaintiff, in his petition, in addition to alleging facts showing him entitled to recover personal judgment on his account against the contractors, Balsley Rogers, and to a lien upon the buildings of the other defendants in the construction of which the material furnished to Balsley
Rogers had been used, alleges in separate paragraphs that the defendants, Bledsoe, Muldrow and Colbert, agreed with plaintiff that they would pay him for the material furnished to Balsley Rogers to be used in said buildings, and seeks a personal judgment against the three last named defendants. To these paragraphs of the petition defendants in error objected by demurrer and by a plea of misjoinder in the nature of a motion to strike, upon the ground that the same was a misjoinder of causes of action. The latter procedure was the correct one.Dyer v. Jacoway,
A contractor may, by following the procedure prescribed in section 2870, Ind. T. Ann. St. (Mansf. Dig. § 4403), obtain a lien on any building or improvement for the construction of which he has furnished material or labor to secure the payment in full of his account therefor; but, in order to avail himself of the benefits of this section, he must, first, before or at the time he furnishes the material or performs the labor, give to the owner or proprietor of the building notice of his intention to furnish or perform same, and the probable value thereof; second, after the material is furnished or labor done, he must have settlement with the contractor therefor in writing, signed and certified to by the contractor as just; third, said settlement must be served upon and left with the owner or proprietor of the building; fourth, and within sixty days from the time the things shall have been furnished or labor performed a copy of said settlement, together with a description of the property to be charged with the lien, the correctness of which shall be verified by affidavit, shall be *228
filed with the clerk of the court of the district in which the property is located. If the notice is given as required by this section, subsequent payment by the owner of the building to the contractor will not defeat the lien of the sub-contractor.Buckley v. Taylor,
By virtue of the provisions of section 2888, where no notice has been given by the subcontractor, as required by section 2870, but all the other things prescribed by the statute have been done, the subcontractor has the benefit of a lien, the same as if he had given notice, to the extent, but only to the extent, that the owner can safely, with his engagement and liabilities on the account of the building, erection, or other improvements, withhold any amount by him owing to his contractor. Whether plaintiff has any lien under this section, depends upon, first, whether his settlement with the contractor and claim of lien was filed within sixty days after the last material was furnished; and, second, whether defendants in error, as owners of the buildings, were, at the time of service of said settlement and filing of the lien, in a position to withhold any amount from the contractor. The lien was filed on the 29th day of April, 1903. The claim of lien filed does not show that any material was furnished within the sixty days next preceding that date, except there is a charge made on March 4, 1903, for "4 Lights Glass, 20x33"; but the master found that this item of material was furnished to take the place of broken glass, and that no extra charge was made therefor. Plaintiff urges that this finding of the master is not supported by the evidence. We have carefully reviewed the record, and find that there is abundant *229
evidence to show that no charge was to be made for said item of material. In support thereof is a letter from plaintiff to the contractors, written at or about the time the material was shipped, in which he states that no charge is to be made for it. Whether no charge was made for this item because it was to take the place of broken glass, as found by the master, does not appear so clear from the evidence; but there is evidence in the record tending reasonably to support this conclusion, and, since the cause was referred upon an agreement of the parties, his report should not be set aside, unless clearly in conflict with the evidence upon which it is made. Locust et al. v.Caruthers et al.,
There is another reason why plaintiff's claim cannot prevail. Where a lien is perfected under section 2888, supra, without the notice required by section 2869, supra, it is a charge against the buildings and improvements only to the extent of the indebtedness of the owner to the contractor that may be safely withheld by him from the contractor for the subcontractors. The evidence supports the finding of the master that the contract between defendants in error and Balsley Rogers was entered into in the month of September, 1902, and that the contractors agreed to construct the four brick buildings for the sum of $5,123. They entered upon the construction of the buildings, and continued their work until some time in November or December, when dissatisfaction arose between them and defendants in error, and defendants *230 in error took charge of the construction and completed the buildings at a total cost to them of $5,863.88, which was about $700 in excess of the contract price. There is no finding of the master, nor is there any evidence showing that defendants in error, at the time plaintiff served the settlement between him and the contractors upon them, owed the contractors any sum whatever, or that they have been due any sum upon the contract since said date.
Finding no error in the record requiring reversal, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
DUNN, C. J., and KANE and WILLIAMS, JJ., concur, TURNER, J., not participating.