Miller v. Noble Drilling Co.
| Decision Date | 12 June 1928 |
| Docket Number | Case Number: 18154 |
| Citation | Miller v. Noble Drilling Co., 1928 OK 398, 271 P. 666, 133 Okla. 125 (Okla. 1928) |
| Parties | MILLER v. NOBLE DRILLING CO. |
| Court | Oklahoma Supreme Court |
¶0 1. Appeal and Error--Injunction--Discretion of Court in Granting Temporary Injunction.
The granting of a temporary injunction, where injunctive relief is ancillary to the principal cause of action, is within the sound and reasonable discretion of the trial court, and its action will not be disturbed on appeal where it does not appear that the court abused its discretion to the injury of the party enjoined.
2. Same.
Record examined, and held, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the temporary injunction.
Commissioners' Opinion, Division No. 1.
Error from District Court, Carter County; Asa E. Walden, Judge.
Action by the Noble Drilling Company against J. M. Miller et al. on contract. From an order granting a temporary injunction ancillary to the principal action, defendant Carrie H. Miller appeals. Order and judgment affirmed.
R. A. Howard and Sigler & Jackson, for plaintiff in error.
Laurence E. Beattie, for defendant in error.
¶1 The Noble Drilling Company, plaintiff below, on January 10, 1927, under a verified petition in two counts, brought suit against J. M. Miller, Carrie H. Miller, and D. W. Witherow, defendants below, on a promissory note for $ 3,500 signed by J. M. Miller and Witherow, and representing a balance due the drilling company under a drilling contract.
¶2 In the first count plaintiff in substance alleged the ownership of certain lands by the defendant J. M. Miller in which the defendant Carrie H. Miller, his wife, and Witherow were also interested, whereon on a particular tract the plaintiff as contractor on August 15, 1925, agreed with the defendants J. M. Miller and Witherow as contractees, operating under the title of Witherow & Miller Oil Association, to drill a test well for oil and gas purposes at a stipulated consideration of $ 13,500; that plaintiff completed performance of the contract at noon on September 21, 1925, whereupon the contractees' obligation to pay the consideration matured; that on September 22nd, a cash payment of $ 5,000 was made, with like payment on September 29th, and on said date of September 29, 1925, the contractees, to secure the payment of the balance of the consideration, gave to plaintiff their promissory note of $ 3,500, due and payable January 27, 1926, at which maturity date the note was renewed in like amount and due and payable on May 27, 1926; that contractees defaulted in payment thereof, and that they have failed, neglected and refused to pay the same in accordance with the terms thereof; whereupon plaintiff prayed judgment therefor against the defendants J. M. Miller and Witherow.
¶3 In the second count plaintiff in substance alleged that it was induced to enter into the contract upon the representations and promises of the defendant Witherow that certain sums of money would be forthcoming, and on the assurance of the ownership of certain other real property by the defendant J. M. Miller in his own name sufficient in value to secure plaintiff from any loss in the performance of the contract, which representation of ownership of such property by the contractee Miller, plaintiff verified by examination of the land records; that plaintiff thereupon in reliance upon the good faith of the contractees entered into said contract and performed the same, and that by reason of the failure of the test well to be productive of either of the minerals sought, the contractees failed to satisfy the full consideration of the contract, there remaining unpaid the amount for which judgment was prayed upon the first count; that the defendant J. M. Miller on September 21, 1925, at 4:50 o'clock had filed and recorded deeds of conveyance of all his said property to the defendant Carrie H. Miller, his wife, and that they subsequently encumbered certain of said property, the income from which encumbrances they failed and refused to apply in satisfaction of J. M. Miller's obligation to plaintiff; that the transfer of said property in the manner aforesaid was with the intent to place the same beyond the reach of plaintiff as a creditor of the said defendant J. M. Miller, and to render ineffectual any judgment against him in said action, and that such conveyances, by reason of the defendant Carrie H. Miller's knowledge of plaintiff's contract with her codefendants and her interest therein, were in fraud of plaintiff's rights as a creditor as aforesaid; and that plaintiff has no adequate remedy to prevent injury to itself and loss of its claim, and that it is unable to locate or discover any assets of the defendants other than the real property conveyed by said defendant J. M. Miller to defendant Carrie H. Miller, his wife, to which plaintiff may resort in protection of its claim; whereupon plaintiff prayed judgment of cancellation of said transfers and conveyances as to it, and that during the pendency of the action for judgment in the principal action the defendants J. M. Miller and Carrie H. Miller be enjoined from any disposition of said property, and that pending a hearing for a temporary injunction the said defendants be restrained by proper order from disposing and further encumbering of said property, which restraining order was by the court granted and a hearing for a temporary injunction fixed for January 24, 1927.
¶4 At the hearing the defendants filed and presented their demurrer to the principal action set out in the petition on the ground of a misjoinder of causes of action, which demurrer was by the court overruled with exceptions allowed to the defendants, and at their request with 20 days to answer. Thereupon, at their request, for the purpose of the hearing for a temporary injunction, the defendants filed the following verified answer:
"For the purpose of this hearing and no other reason we file an answer and deny each and every material allegation in the petition."
¶5 Upon announcement by the court that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff, counsel for defendants made the following admission:
"We admit we made the transfer as he alleges as far as that is concerned."
¶6 At the conclusion of the hearing judgment went for the plaintiff against the defendants J. M. Miller and Carrie H. Miller, with exclusion of the homestead of the Millers from the operation of the temporary injunction, and with the same to issue and be effective upon the giving and filing of an injunction bond by plaintiff in the sum of $ 7,500, compliance wherewith by plaintiff was made on January 26, 1927. The journal entry of the order and judgment of the court was as follows:
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