Edmond E. STITES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. DUIT CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Defendant-Appellee.
No. 79337.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
June 27, 1995.
Rehearing Denied Sept. 20, 1995.
While it is uncontroverted that the identity of the decedent‘s assailant remains unknown and that robbery may have been a motive for the murder, there is no evidence showing the homicide was occasioned by some employment-related risk, as distinguished from the ever present hazard of criminal activity which affects the traveling public in general. In short, under the facts shown by this record Burns’ demise was not proved to have arisen out of his employment.
VII
SUMMARY
Oklahoma‘s extant jurisprudence has long required that a compensable injury or death must both (a) occur in the course of and (b) arise out of a worker‘s employment. After the 1986 repeal of
The law‘s requirement that compensable injury or death be causally connected to an employment-related risk is clearly repugnant and antithetical to the continued viability of both the positional-risk theory25 and the unknown assailant rule26—the extra-statutory probative devices previously sanctioned by this court‘s compensation jurisprudence. These two evidentiary patterns of yore may no longer be relied upon to supply employment-related risks. A claimant must proffer evidence of a causal nexus to an identified employment-related hazard. Because the record is devoid of any competent evidence to support the notion that Burns’ murder was related to a compensable “source” factor, his death cannot be said to have arisen out of employment. On certiorari previously granted,
THE COURT OF APPEALS’ OPINION AND THE TRIAL JUDGE‘S AWARD ARE VACATED; THE PROCEEDING IS REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS TO DENY THE CLAIM.
KAUGER, V.C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS, HARGRAVE, SUMMERS and WATT, JJ., concur.
ALMA WILSON, C.J., concurs in result.
D. Stuart Basham, Oklahoma City, William K. Orendorff, Sallisaw, for appellee.
OPALA, Justice.
Three issues are dispositive of appellant‘s certiorari quest for corrective relief: (1) Did the trial court‘s jurisdiction end at either the satisfaction-of-judgment stage or at the point plaintiff dismissed the action? (2) Did the trial court in the exercise of its vacation power have ancillary cognizance to entertain defendant‘s restitutionary counterclaim? and (3) Should this appeal be dismissed as untimely?
We answer the first question in the negative and the second and third in the affirmative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
Edmond Stites [Stites] brought an action to recover damages for water claimed to have been taken from his property by DUIT Construction Company, Inc. [DUIT], for use in a highway project for the Oklahoma Department of Transportation [ODOT]. When his discovery quests had gone unanswered,1 Stites successfully pressed for summary adjudication. The following month (February 22, 1991) Stites sought to satisfy the judgment by garnishing ODOT. On April 23, 1991, ODOT paid into court $48,525.00. The next month Stites filed a second garnishment affidavit for the balance of his judgment, and on June 24, 1991 ODOT paid into court $3,027.55. Three weeks earlier (on June 5,
The trial court vacated the judgment on September 4, 1991 (its order was entered September 25, 1991), overruling Stites’ challenges to DUIT‘s vacation plea. The court then afforded DUIT a restitutionary remedy by directing that garnishment funds still remaining in the trust account of Stites’ lawyer be paid into court.3 No motion addressed to that order was filed below within ten days of the order‘s entry. After the judgment‘s vacation DUIT filed its responses to Stites’ discovery requests and applied, on September 16, 1991, for an order compelling Stites to pay into court all the funds received in satisfaction of the vacated judgment. On September 26, 1991 Stites voluntarily dismissed his water loss action against DUIT.4
On October 23, 1991 DUIT renewed its restitutionary plea for immediate return of the funds (into court). At a post-dismissal hearing (on February 26, 1992) the trial court overruled Stites’ multiple challenges to DUIT‘s restitutionary plea and reiterated its earlier directive that funds remaining in the trust account of Stites’ lawyer be paid into court.5 The order memorializing this ruling was entered March 26, 1992.
The Court of Appeals’ Pronouncement
Stites, who lodged an appeal from the March 26, 1992 order, argues on certiorari that when he dismissed his suit against DUIT the trial court lost jurisdiction of the entire case and over the (unvacated) garnishment proceeds that constituted at least pro tanto satisfaction of his claim against DUIT. According to Stites, the nisi prius court acted dehors its authority when considering the belated filing of DUIT‘s discovery responses. DUIT counters that the trial court had cognizance to enter its March 26, 1992 order directing Stites to pay the contested funds into court. Because, as DUIT argues, Stites failed timely to appeal from the earlier September 25, 1991 (restitution) order requiring him to pay the funds into court, he should not now be allowed to secure review of the trial court‘s March 26th reaffirmation of that earlier order.
The Court of Appeals reversed the nisi prius decision, reasoning that Stites’ judgment legally ceased to exist upon payment of garnishment proceeds, leaving absolutely nothing in the case for the trial court to act upon.6 We granted certiorari on DUIT‘s petition and now, for the reasons to be explained, vacate the Court of Appeals’ opinion and dismiss Stites’ appeal as untimely.7
II
DUIT‘S DISMISSAL QUEST
DUIT, who initially pressed for dismissal of Stites’ appeal when it was at the pre-briefing stage, later argued on appeal that the March 26, 1992 disposition is not appealable. Although this dismissal quest was denied on July 7, 1992,8 DUIT later repressed the motion in its answer brief. According to DUIT‘s brief, Stites is too late for corrective relief from the trial court‘s March 26 reaffirmation order; he should have perfected a timely appeal from the earlier September 25, 1991 ruling that initially gave DUIT its restitutionary relief.
Unless there is an express indication to the contrary—in the dismissal‘s denial followed by the time-honored phrase “with prejudice to its renewal“—this court‘s order that overrules a motion to dismiss is always subject to reconsideration.9 Jurisdictional inquiries into appellate or certiorari cognizance may be considered and re-examined, on motion or sua sponte, at any stage of the proceedings.10
This court‘s earlier denial of DUIT‘S dismissal motion clearly poses no barrier to today‘s re-examination of appellate cognizance in this certiorari proceeding. Our July 7 order is unburdened by the “with-prejudice-to-renewal” verbal bar. DUIT was hence free to retender its jurisdictional challenge in the appellate brief and there is absolutely no impediment to this court‘s revisit of the issue on certiorari.
III
STITES’ MISPERCEPTION THAT THE EARLIER SEPTEMBER 25, 1991 ORDER NEED NOT HAVE BEEN APPEALED BECAUSE IT IS FACIALLY VOID
In his post-dismissal challenges to DUIT‘s restitutionary plea,11 Stites asserts
For the reasons to be explained, we hold that (a) the first (September 25) order was at once appealable under the provisions of
Even if the earlier order had been utterly void on its face, the time for appealing against its binding force would have been the same. One cannot justify postponing an appeal by one‘s good-faith belief in the decision‘s invalidity.15 Mandatory appeal time applies to all orders, whether valid or infirm.16 Stites was led into an erroneous as-
In sum, Stites’ present quest for corrective relief by appeal against the reaffirmation of an earlier restitutionary order came too late.
IV
THE TRIAL COURT‘S COGNIZANCE DID NOT END WITH ENTRY OF JUDGMENT FOR STITES NOR WITH THAT JUDGMENT‘S LATER SATISFACTION
Stites argues that the trial court lost jurisdiction in this case for all purposes upon the satisfaction of judgment through the garnishment process and was hence without power to entertain DUIT‘s quest to vacate the money judgment.
Oklahoma‘s jurisprudence holds that a voluntarily satisfied judgment moots both an appeal that is lodged against it and all nisi prius vacation process.17 This is so because any errors in its entry become hypothetical or academic and hence no longer available for the exercise of judicial cognizance.18 Within the meaning of this rule, loss of jurisdiction takes place because nothing else remains to be done in the cause before the court. This is not to say that the trial court automatically loses cognizance after release and satisfaction is filed. Its jurisdiction continues over fraudulent releases of judgment or over post-satisfaction disputes about the legitimacy of satisfaction.19 In short, the ultimate power to determine (at the post-satisfaction stage) whether a judgment has been voluntarily satisfied rests in the trial court.20 Coerced satisfaction of judgment through garnishment process (as in this case) raises no bar to (a) a timely attack upon the judgment, (b) its vacation, on timely motion or petition upon tenable legal grounds, or (c) the restitution of funds paid towards its satisfaction.21
Neither does DUIT‘s failure to appeal from the pay orders in garnishment22 operate as a barrier to advancing a restitutionary remedy. By allowing the garnishment process to stand unassailed, DUIT
In sum, neither DUIT‘s coerced satisfaction of judgment nor the unappealed pay orders (in garnishment) pose an impediment to DUIT‘s quests for vacation relief and for a restitutionary remedy.
V
THE TRIAL COURT IS VESTED WITH POST-VACATION COGNIZANCE TO ENTERTAIN AN ANCILLARY RESTITUTIONARY CLAIM
Stites asserts that by his September 26, 1992 voluntary dismissal of the water loss claim the trial court came to be divested of jurisdiction. It was hence without cognizance to compel Stites’ repayment of money.
The provisions of
The vacation of an involuntarily satisfied judgment generally leaves in its wake questions about restitution28 of satisfaction.29
A restitutionary remedy, which avails to one upon a judgment‘s vacation, may be prosecuted in the same case or by a separate action. At the time of the judgment‘s vacation in this case no separate action stood commenced in another case.30 There was hence no hindrance to the trial court‘s exercise of power over DUIT‘s plea for post-vacation restitutionary relief.
The Effect of Stites’ Voluntary Dismissal on DUIT‘s Restitutionary Claim
Some of this court‘s extant jurisprudence appears to treat a voluntary dismissal of a case as the district court‘s jurisdictional cut-off.31 According to this line of authority, when a claimant‘s dismissal is filed the case stands as if no judgment had ever been entered.32 These precedents are clearly inapposite in the procedural posture of this case.
When by plaintiff‘s dismissal the district court cognizance was sought to be terminated, the court was amidst administering an ancillary post-vacation remedy of restitution. Its September 25, 1991 order for the return of money that remained in the lawyer‘s trust account had already been issued in response to DUIT‘s pre-dismissal restitutionary plea (for repayment of all funds Stites had received through garnishment process).33 Because DUIT‘s quest for affirmative relief came to be invoked before Stites’ dismissal of his claim, there was no impediment to the post-dismissal proceeding.34 In short, Stites’ dismissal divested the trial court neither of its jurisdiction over DUIT‘s affirmative plea for ancillary restitutionary relief nor of its power to enforce the September 25 order.
We hence hold that plaintiff‘s post-vacation dismissal was ineffective to terminate nisi prius cognizance in the face of the then-pending post-vacation counterclaim for restitutionary relief. The court was clearly authorized to consider that claim as a dispute ancillary to the exercise and administration of its §§ 1031 et seq. vacation power.
VI
TODAY‘S DISMISSAL OF THE STITES’ APPEAL AS UNTIMELY AND AN EXPLANATORY COMMENT UPON THE EXTENT OF ITS BAR
Appellate review is commenced by bringing a petition in error within thirty days of the date the trial court‘s judgment or its final order is filed at nisi prius.35 Timely
The First Order.
The trial court‘s vacation order, entered September 25, 1991, directed that “any and all money” received on the judgment which remained in the trust account of Stites’ lawyer be deposited in court. At that time the garnishee (ODOT) had paid into court two checks, both of which had been remitted to Stites’ lawyer. The September 25 order is an effective exercise of the trial court‘s vacation power and of its ancillary cognizance over DUIT‘s restitutionary counterclaim then before the court. It was appealable at once under
The Second Order.
The March 26, 1992 nisi prius decision from which Stites lodged his appeal (1) overruled Stites’ motions to quash DUIT‘s application to pay funds into court and to strike DUIT‘s response to the motion to quash and (2) ordered Stites to deposit the same funds as those he was already under a duty to remit. At first glance the March 27, 1992 appeal from the March 26 order would appear timely. The issue we decide today is whether that disposition is merely a reaffirmation of the earlier September 25, 1991 order (and hence no longer within this court‘s reviewing cognizance) or whether it constitutes a new (appealable) determination reached under circumstances materially changed from those in September.41 If the first order in this case is
We hold that the nisi prius order of March 26 represents but a reaffirmation or reiteration of the court‘s earlier September 25 disposition. It merely declares that the earlier order has survived the disposition of the motions that challenged its validity. The original September 25 ruling giving DUIT restitutionary relief is now beyond the reach of our reviewing cognizance. This is so because this appeal was not brought here within thirty days of that order‘s filing.44 Once an appealable event has occurred, a trial judge is utterly without authority to extend appeal time by any means or in any manner, direct or oblique. Any attempt by the court‘s March 26, 1992 order to breathe new life into the unappealed September 25 ruling must hence fail. The appeal‘s time trigger is a law-driven mechanism which is beyond the reach of human tinkering by judge or counsel.45
CONCLUSION
Neither the coerced satisfaction of summary judgment nor DUIT‘s failure to appeal from the orders in garnishment barred DUIT from pressing at nisi prius its plea for the judgment‘s vacation. The post-vacation restitutionary remedy lay well within the trial court‘s ancillary cognizance to administer the statutory vacation process. Stites’ quest for corrective relief from the post-dismissal restitutionary order came too late. That post-dismissal order, for whose review this appeal was lodged, is but a nisi prius reaffirmation of the earlier restitutionary relief. Stites’ appeal from the later disposition (March 26, 1992) must hence be dismissed as untimely.
ON CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED, THE COURT OF APPEALS’ OPINION IS VACATED AND THE APPEAL IS DISMISSED AS UNTIMELY.
KAUGER, V.C.J., and HARGRAVE and WATT, JJ., concur.
WILSON, C.J., and SIMMS, J., concur specially.
LAVENDER, J., concurs in result.
SUMMERS, J., concurs in Parts I, II, III and VI and in the dismissal of appeal.
HODGES, J., dissents.
SIMMS, Justice, concurring specially:
It may appear inconsistent that this Court denied appellee‘s motion to dismiss this ap-
Because of the dismissal, that portion of the opinion dealing with the actions of the trial court in post-judgment proceedings could be considered dicta. I view this part of the opinion as a correct exposition of Oklahoma law, however, and informative to our trial judges. Therefore, I concur specially in today‘s opinion.
I am authorized to state that WILSON, C.J., joins in the views expressed herein.
OPALA
JUSTICE
Notes
“A new trial is a reexamination in the same court, of an issue of fact, or of law, either or both, after a verdict by a jury, the approval of the report of a referee, or a decision by the court. The former verdict, report or decision shall be vacated, and a new trial granted, on the application of the party aggrieved, for any of the following causes, affecting materially the substantial rights of such party:
First. Irregularity in the proceedings of the court, jury, referee, or prevailing party, or any order of the court or referee, or abuse of discretion, by which the party was prevented from having a fair trial. ***” (Emphasis added.)
Stites’ post-dismissal challenges, supra note 11, were pressed more than two months after the September 25, 1991 order.
“(b) The Supreme Court may reverse, vacate or modify any of the following orders of the district court, or a judge thereof:
*
2. An order that ... vacates or refuses to vacate a final judgment; ***”
“The district court shall have power to vacate or modify its own judgments or orders within the times prescribed hereafter:
***
Third. For mistake, neglect or omission of the clerk or irregularity in obtaining a judgment or order. ***” (Emphasis added.)
See also §§ 1035, 1036, and 1037, discussed infra at notes 25, 26 and 27.
“If a judgment is modified, all liens and securities obtained under it shall be preserved to the modified judgment.” (Emphasis added.)
“When the judgment was rendered before the action stood for trial, the suspension may be granted, as provided in the last section [§ 1036], although no valid defense to the action is shown; and the court shall make such orders, concerning the executions to be issued on the judgment as shall give to the defendant the same rights of delay he would have had if the judgment had been rendered at the proper time.” (Emphasis added.)
“The party seeking to vacate or modify a judgment or order, may obtain an order suspending the proceedings on the whole or part thereof. ... On the granting of any such order, the court, or judge, may require the party obtaining any such order to enter into an undertaking to the adverse party to pay all damages that may be caused by granting of the same.” (Emphasis added.)
Halliburton v. Illinois Life Ins. Co., 170 Okl. 360, 40 P.2d 1086, 1089-1090 (1935); Hart v. Pharaoh, Okl., 359 P.2d 1074, 1080 (1961).
“A. An appeal to the Supreme Court may be commenced by filing a petition in error with the Clerk of the Supreme Court within thirty (30) days from the date the final order or judgment is filed....”
The 1993 and 1994 amendments of § 990A have no legal effect on this appeal.
