Acme Oil & Gas Co. v. Cooper

Decision Date29 May 1934
Docket Number25039.
PartiesACME OIL & GAS CO., Limited, et al. v. COOPER, Judge.
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court.

1. Section 3917, O. S. 1931, in part provides: "In all counties in which a Superior Court is held at the county seat, and at no other place, the judges of said Superior Courts and the Judges of the District Courts shall, upon motion of either party to the action, transfer such cause or causes by order to the District or Superior Court, as the case may be, except where such cause is regularly set down for trial." Held, that this provision of the statute is mandatory and the order of transfer therein provided does not involve any judicial discretion.

2. Under section 3917, O. S. 1931, where a cause of action has been transferred from one court to another upon the motion of the plaintiff or defendant as provided therein, neither the plaintiff nor defendant is entitled to have the cause retransferred from one court to another as a matter of right but the courts named therein are still vested with the discretionary right to retransfer under the provisions of said statute.

3. As the general rule of construction where a statute is expressed in general terms and in words of present tense, it will be construed to apply not only to things and conditions existing at the time of its passage, but it will be given a prospective interpretation by which it will be applied to such things and conditions as come into existence thereafter.

Original mandamus proceeding by the Acme Oil & Gas Company, Limited and others, against Le Roy G. Cooper, Judge of the Superior Court of Pottawatomie County.

Writ granted.

Arrington & Evans, of Shawnee, George M. Green, R. B. Hummer, W. N Stokes, J. B. Dudley, and Miley, Hoffman, Williams, France & Johnson, all of Oklahoma City, Wm. O. Beall, of Tulsa, Darrough & Foster, of Oklahoma City, Wm. H. Zwick, of Ponca City, Pearson & Houston and McQueen & Kidd, all of Oklahoma City, J. C. Denton and I. L. Lockewitz, both of Tulsa, Reuben M. Roddie, of Oklahoma City, Horace B. Clay, of Tulsa, Freeling & Box, Stokes & Jarman, Twyford & Smith, McLaury & Hopps, Warren H. Edwards, Paul Brown, and Edwards & Robinson, all of Oklahoma City, Logan Stephenson, of Tulsa, Simons, McKnight, Simons, Mitchell & McKnight, of Enid, Everest, McKenzie, Halley & Gibbens, Bookstore & Reed, Chas. B. Selby, Clarence M. Mills, and Embry, Johnson, Crowe & Tolbert, all of Oklahoma City, John Wheeler, of Tulsa, Fred M. Carter, of Bartlesville, W. P. Z. German, of Tulsa, and Ames, Cochran, Ames & Monnet, of Oklahoma City, for relators.

Randall Pitman and Reily & Reily, all of Shawnee, for respondent.

BAYLESS Justice.

This is an original proceeding in this court to compel by mandamus the superior court of Pottawatomie county to transfer a certain suit now pending in that court wherein the city of Shawnee, a municipal corporation, is plaintiff, and relators are defendants, from that court to the district court of said county.

There is no controversy regarding the facts. It is conceded that the superior court of Pottawatomie county is held at the county seat of said county and no other place.

Numerous propositions are advanced and argued in the briefs of the respective parties, but a construction, or rather the proper construction, of section 3917, O. S. 1931, and the previous holdings of this court on like statutes, is in our opinion the decisive question presented.

The writ of mandamus is not a writ of right, but is an ancient prerogative writ, and will not issue unless the applicant therefor shows that he is clearly entitled thereto and that the act sought to be performed is purely ministerial in its nature.

Section 3917, O. S. 1931, was originally enacted in 1915 (Session Laws 1915, ch. 20, § 15), and was amended in 1919 (Session Laws 1919, ch. 104, § 1), and further amended in 1921 (Session Laws 1921, ch. 76, § 1), and reads as follows: "The District Court, or judge thereof, in any county wherein a Superior Court exists may, in his discretion, at any time transfer any cause pending and undetermined therein to the Superior Court of said county. The Superior Court or judge thereof may, at any time, in his discretion, transfer to the District Court of said county any cause pending and undetermined therein which may be within the jurisdiction of the District Court and at any time in his discretion may transfer to the County Court any cause pending therein except probate matters, of which the County Court might have had original jurisdiction. The County Court or judge thereof, may at any time, in his discretion, transfer any cause pending therein, except probate matters to the Superior Court. In all counties in which a Superior Court is held at the county seat, and at no other place, the judges of the said superior courts and the judges of the district courts shall, upon motion of either party to the action transfer such cause or causes by order to the District Court or Superior Court, as the case may be, except where such cause is regularly set down for trial. Upon such transfer being made, such cause shall stand for trial in the courts to which it has been so transferred as if it had been originally filed therein, and in such cases the court clerk shall transfer the original files to the court to which said cause has been so transferred."

If language is clear and amounts to but one meaning, there is no room for construction. See Patterson v. Wilson, 11 Okl. 75, 65 P. 921.

A reading of the above statute clearly shows that in the matter of transfer of cases in counties where there is a superior court, the district court, superior court, and county court or the judges thereof, may at any time transfer any cause pending in said courts from said court to another court in said county within jurisdictional limits, but the statute provides further...

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