Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1950

Tankersley Inv. Co. ex rel. Tankersley v. R. H. Siegfried Co.

Tankersley Inv. Co. ex rel. Tankersley v. R. H. Siegfried Co.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma · Decided January 24, 1950 · Luttrell
202 Okla. 376; 214 P.2d 232; 1950 OK 20; 1950 Okla. LEXIS 355

Tankersley Inv. Co. ex rel. Tankersley v. R. H. Siegfried Co.

Opinion of the Court

LUTTRELL, J.

R. H. Siegfried Company brought an action in the district court of Tulsa county against Tankers-ley Investment Company, to collect a debt which it alleged was due and unpaid. In that action a receiver was appointed for Tankersley Investment Company. Thereafter Earl Tankersley, claiming to be the owner of one-half of the corporate stock of Tankersley Investment Company, by leave of court, intervened and defended on behalf of the company. After a hearing on the question the trial court found and adjudged that Earl Tankersley was the owner of one-half of the stock of Tank-ersley Investment Company.

Thereafter Earl Tankersley, pending a hearing on an application made by him to discharge the receiver, filed in the district court of Tulsa county an application, as such stockholder, for leave to intervene on behalf of Tankers-ley Investment Company in an action pending in the district court of Oklahoma county, styled Dan Tankersley et al. v. M. E. Trapp, alleging in said motion the refusal of the receiver to intervene in said action, and that intervention by him was necessary to protect the interest of Tankersley Investment Company in said action. This motion for leave to intervene was by the district court of Tulsa county denied, and Tankersley Investment Company, by Earl Tankersley, and Earl Tankersley, individually, appeal.

In Tankersley Investment Co. v. Tankersley Investment Co., 202 Okla. 51, 210 P. 2d 167, we held that the judgment of the trial court that Earl Tankersley was the owner of one-half of the corporate stock of Tankersley Investment Company was erroneous, and that Dan Tankersley was the sole owner of the stock of that corporation, and reversed the judgment of the lower court as to the stock ownership. Under *377the holding in that case Earl Tankers-ley had no interest in Tankersley Investment Company, and therefore had no right to intervene on behalf of said company in the action or proceeding in Oklahoma county. It follows that the trial court did not err in denying his motion for leave to intervene.

Affirmed.

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