Full opinion text
KENYON, Circuit Judge. As it is necessary in the discussion of the various questions involved in these two appeals to set forth rather fully the part of the facts in their particular relationship to the specific matters under discussion, we refrain*, in order to minimize duplication, from any extended general statement of. facts. It is sufficient to say that this case is one brought in equity by the Osage Oil & Refining Company (hereinafter designated the Osage Company) in the' District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Oklahoma against Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, H. O. Dixon, J. R. Hoskins, Continental Oil Company (hereinafter designated the Continental Company), the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, and First National Bank in Bartles-ville, asking that said defendants be enjoined from claiming any rights in a certain leasehold of said Osage Company covering the southwest quarter of section 28, township 24 north, range 8 east, in Osage county, Oklahoma. The Continental Company filed a separate answer, claiming it had purchased a one-half interest in said lease from Mamie Axelrod for $50,000 in cash and $50,000 in oil to be produced, and had deposited the cash in the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, Okl., to be delivered to her upon delivery of assignment and approval thereof by the Secretary of the Interior. Separate answer and cross-complaint were filed by Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, and H. O. Dixon, denying the claim of the Osage Company, and alleging that Mamie Axelrod was the owner of the lease in question by virtue of a sheriff’s sale thereof in a mortgage foreclosure proceeding in the district court of Osage county, Oklahoma, in the case of Interstate Pipe Company against the Osage Company and one Whitehead. The Exchange National Bank of Tulsa filed separate answer, alleging that it was holding the $50,000 in escrow, and that it had nothing to do with the lease and had no claims thereon. Defendant H. O. Dixon filed answer and cross-complaint against the Exchange National Bank, claiming he had an assignment of an interest in the escrow deposit. The Continental Company filed reply to the answer of'the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, and a cross-complaint as to said bank, asking that the $50,000 be paid into court to await its action. The Exchange National Bank of Tulsa answered the cross-complaint of the Continental Company and asked that the First National Bank in Bartlesville, Okl., be made a defendant. This was done, and said bank filed answer to the cross-complaint of the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, Okl., claiming it was entitled to $5,000 out of the $50,-000 escrow deposit, and asked to have its rights protected. The Osage Company filed a reply to the answer and cross-petition of Mamie Axelrod et al., denying her claim to a lease, and alleging that the judgment of the district court of Osage county and the sale by the sheriff of the lease were void, and had been so declared by the Supreme Court of . Oklahoma, and that she and those claiming under her had no right, title, or interest of any kind in the lease. It also filed reply to the answer of the Continental Company and admitted certain equities in favor of said company. The trial court found generally in favor of the Osage Company and entered a general decree against Mamie Axelrod et al., and also decreed that the Continental Company should be compelled to accept an assignment of an interest in the lease upon the same terms as it had agreed to in its contract with Mamie Axelrod. Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, H. O. Dixon, and the First National Bank in Bartlesville appealed from the decree, which appeal is No. 7970, and the Continental Company appealed separately, which appeal is No. 7971. We deal with both appeals in this opinion. The question of the jurisdiction of this court to consider these appeals first challenges our attention. Appellee Osage Oil & Refining Company moves to dismiss the appeal of Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, H. O. Dixon, and the First National Bank in Bartlesville, on a number of grounds, the principal ones being that the decree was a joint one against appellants and against the Continental Oil Company, J. R. Hoskins, and the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa; that it was taken without notice to J. R. Hoskins and the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa; and that no effective order of severance was granted either as to them or the Continental Oil Company., In the petition for appeal it was set forth that the Continental Oil Company had been requested to join therein, had declined to do so, and a severance and allowance of a separate appeal was asked. This was granted, and hence the question upon this motion is narrowed to the relationship of Hoskins and the Exchange National Bank to the appeal. It is not clear whether the language of the court’s order covered a severance as to Hoskins and the Exchange National Bank. However, as no such claim is made in appellants’ brief,-we lay that matter aside. The general rule is settled by a long line of decisions in the federal courts that, where there is a joint judgment or decree, all judgment defendants must join in an appeal, unless the record shows there has been a severance or its equivalent. American Surety Co. of New York v. People of State of Colorado (C. C. A.) 22 F.(2d) 624, 625; Arkansas Anthracite Coal & Land Co. et al. v. Stokes, et al. (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 511; Priest v. Seaman (C. C. A.) 266 F. 844. A situation, however, as to the facts, may be presented, such as to take a ease out of the general rule. It seems to us that the main relief granted to complainant against Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, and H. O. Dixon is in no way joint with the relief granted as to Hos-kins and the Exchange National Bank, and the rule as to joinder applies only to joint judgments. Be that as it may, however, it is certainly the law, and is not in conflict with the general rule we have referred to, that a mere nominal party, who has no substantial interest in the controversy is not a necessary party to an appeal. Only those whose rights may be substantially affected by the action of the appellate court are necessary parties. In Dodson v. Fletcher (C. C. A.) 78 F. 214, 215, this court said: “All the parties to a suit or proceeding who appear from the record to have an interest in the order, judgment, or decree challenged in the appellate court must be given an opportunity to be heard there before that court will proceed to a decision upon the merits of the case.” In Johnson v. Trust Co. of America (C. C. A.) 104 F. 174, 175, 176, this court said: “A summons and severance are not indispensable to the maintenance of an appeal by one of the parties to a decree, if it fairly appears from the record that the parties who might have joined have been notified to do so and have refused. * * * The rule is that all parties who appear to have an interest in the decree must be given-an opportunity to be heard, before an appellate court will enter upon its consideration.” In Babcock v. Norton et al. (C. C. A.) 5 F. (2d) 153, 155, the principle is stated as follows: “As an appellate court has no power to hear and determine a ease unless all the parties substantially affected by the judgment or decree are brought before it, and inasmuch as in cases of a joint judgment or decree, summons and severance, or service of notification of appeal on necessary parties is essential to confer jurisdiction,” etc. From Simpkins Federal Practice (Rev. Ed. 1923) p. 978, we quote: “It may be stated, as a general rule, that all parties having an interest in the cause, and affected by the decree should join in the appeal, * * * but parties not affected by the decree need not join. * * * That parties having an interest in the decree must join in the appeal has been held to be jurisdictional, unless there has been a summons and severance, * * * but not when interest nominal, or not substantial.” Higbee v. Chadwick (C. C. A.) 220 F. 873; Kidder v. Fidelity Ins. Trust & S. D. Co. (C. C. A.) 105 F. 821; Farmers-Loan & Trust Co. v. Waterman, 106 U. S. 265, 269, 1 S. Ct. 131, 27 L. Ed. 115; Gilfilian v. McKee, 159 U. S. 303, 312, 16 S. Ct. 6, 40 L. Ed. 161; Winters v. United States, 207 U. S. 564, 28 S. Ct. 207, 52 L. Ed. 340. The petition for appeal alleged that the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa had no substantial interest in the appeal. Said bank so stated in acceptance of service of copy thereof. The order granting the same stated: “The court finds that the defendants, J. R. Hoskins and Exchange National Bank have no substantial interest in the appeal,' and that the petitioners are entitled to and are hereby granted a severance and separate appeal herein.” In its answer in the ease it pleaded that it was merely an escrow agent, and “has never at any time attempted to interfere with any person in the possession or operation of said leased premises, and claims no right, title or interest therein except as such escrow holder or agent.” And in its answer to the cross-complaint of the Continental Oil Company is this prayer: “And that at such time as this court may direct, this answering defendant be authorized and permitted to deliver to this court, or into the hands of the clerk thereof, the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) and that upon such delivery of said sum into this court, or into the hands of the clerk thereof, this answering defendant be relieved and freed from all responsibility, liability, claim or demand of and to any and all of the parties to this suit. * * * ” Further, the parties entered into the following stipulation of record: “By stipulation of parties to the suit, it was agreed that there were no issues of fact affecting the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, Okl., which admitted that it had on deposit the sum of $50,000, deposited with it by the Continental Oil Company, pursuant to a contract dated February 18,1926, with Mamie Axelrod, and that such sum of money was still in possession of said bank, subject to the orders of the court.” Nothing could be clearer than that the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa had no substantial interest in the controversy. As to Hoskins the situation is but slightly different. While he was named as a defendant in the complaint, which asked that defendants be enjoined by final decree from further entering upon the leasehold estate, from attempting to take possession thereof, etc., scant reference is therein made to him. He filed no pleading of any kind to the bill of complaint; he made no claim to any interest in the property in suit; he offered no evidence, although he testified on behalf of complainant; he asked for no relief. He was not included in the injunction as to asserting right, title, equity or interest in the leased premises. The only adjudgment in the decree as to him was that he had no interest in the $50,000.00 deposited with the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa in escrow under the agreement between Mamie Axelrod and the Continental Oil Company. He entered no exception to the decree of the court. No judgment was entered against him as to costs. Further, the petition for appeal alleged that Hoskins had no interest in the controversy, and the court so found. As far as this record shows he never claimed any interest in the Osage lease up to the time of filing the affidavit attached to appellee’s motion to dismiss, in which he states he had an understanding or contract with the Axelrods that he was to have some interest in the lease. The motion to dismiss must rest upon the record, and his affidavit now filed in this court is not a part of the original record and cannot be considered in support thereof. It conclusively appears from the record that he has no interest whatever in the controversy between the Axelrods and the Osage Oil & Refining Company. Therefore he was not a necessary party to the appeal. The motion to dismiss the appeal of the Continental Company is based on somewhat similar grounds to the one to dismiss the Axelrod appeal. The first is as follows: “(1) That no citation was sued out and served upon Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axel-rod, H. O. Dixon, J. R. Hoskins, The First National Bank in Bartlesville, or Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, all of whom had a substantial interest in the controversy, and against whom a joint decree was entered, together with appellant.” This is not sustained by the record, which shows that citation was served on all of these parties, except the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa and Hoskins, whose relationship to the situation we have already discussed. Neither had any substantial interest in the appeal. The second ground of the motion to dismiss was: “II. That the decree entered in this case was a joint deeree against appellant and against Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod, H. O. Dixon, J. R. Hoskins, the First National Bank in Bartlesville, and the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa. That each and all of said parties appear from the record to have, and do have, a substantial interest in this controversy, yet the appeal herein is taken by the Continental Oil Company alone, without notice to the others, and without any order of severance.” We have referred to the petition for appeal filed hy Mamie Axelrod et al., stating that the Continental Oil Company had declined to join in the appeal, and that a severance and separate appeal was granted by the court. The Continental Oil Company, through its attorneys, acknowledged service of said petition. In the petition for appeal on the part of the Continental Company reference is made to the order of severance entered in favor of Mamie Axelrod et al., and it is stated “that, a severance having already been allowed, this defendant is now entitled to its separate appeal.” The court made a finding concerning this as follows: “The court further finds that on July 19,1927, a severance on appeal was granted Mamie Axelrod et al., and pursuant thereto a separate appeal is hereby granted and allowed to the Continental Oil Company.” Hence it is apparent that as a practical matter a separate appeal was allowed to the Continental Oil Company. All these matters arose in the same trial, and the severance of July 19th to Mamie Axelrod et al. cannot be ignored in its relationship to the severance claimed to be granted to the Continental Company. Evidently the intention of the court was to grant a severance as to both Mamie Axelrod and the Continental Company. Removing all the chaff of technicality from this matter, it is evident that there is only one question involved in the appeal of the Continental Company, and that is its liability to purchase the lease in controversy from appellee. The decree of the court barred the Continental Company from any interest in the Osage lease, and quieted title as against Mamie Axelrod et al. None of the other defendants has any interest in the question as to whether the Continental Company must buy a half interest in the lease from the Osage Company. The decree in the controversy between the Continental Company and the Osage Company is not, in our judgment, joint as to the other defendants. The motions to dismiss the appeals are denied. We consider first the questions arising in the appeal of Mamie Axelrod et al. (No. 7970): Appellee, claiming to be the owner of a valid oil lease on certain land in Osage county, Oklahoma, brought this action against Mamie Axelrod and others, asking an injunction to prevent -them from interfering with said leasehold estate. The answer of Mamie Axelrod and those claiming under her to this was that the Interstate ■ Pipe Company, a corporation, held a promissory note of the Osage Oil & Refining Company, and a mortgage on the leasehold here in question to secure the same, J. E. Whitehead being surety on said note; that said Interstate Pipe Company commenced suit in the district court of Osage county, Oklahoma, asking a personal money judgment upon said promissory note, and seeking to foreclose the mortgage upon the oil lease; that in said proceedings judgment and decree was entered and said lease was offered for sale by the sheriff of Osage county upon an execution under order of the court, and was purchased by Mamie Axelrod; that the sheriff made to her an assignment of the lease, which was in due course approved by the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to regulations in force affecting the Osage Indian leases; that she took possession of the property and conducted drilling operations thereon, subsequently making a contract with the Continental Company to sell it a one-half interest therein, which was also approved by the Secretary of the Interior. The reply to this on the part of the Osage Company is that the action in the district court of Osage county by the Interstate Pipe Company, a corporation foreign to Oklahoma, was a special proceeding under certain sections of the Oklahoma statutes authorizing suits against foreign corporations and providing the method of serving process; that proceedings under these special statutes constituted the court one of limited jurisdiction, which jurisdiction must appear affirmatively of record; that the service of process was made upon the secretary of state of Oklahoma, and no summons was ever served personally upon the Osage Company, also a foreign corporation, or Whitehead; that special appearance motion was filed by the Osage Company to quash the summons and service on various grounds, to wit, that it was not in legal form, was not served according to the command of the state statute, and that the service upon the secretary of state was in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that it did not amount to due process of law; that this motion to quash was overruled by the state district court November 5, 1923, and exceptions to such ruling preserved; that a demurrer was filed by the Osage Company, raising the same question (we do not find this in the record, although it was in the record in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma); that, after the motion to quash was overruled answer was filed by the Osage Company and its eodefendant, which again protested the jurisdiction of the district court of Osage county; that-personal judgment and decree of foreclosure was entered July 8,1924, without the knowledge of the Osage Company, and it did not discover the same until after the term of. court had adjourned and the property covered by the mortgage was about to be sold upon execution; that the Osage Company, then filed a petition in said cause, asking that the judgment rendered in its absence be vacated; that this petition was heard by the court and denied; that the Osage Company also filed written protest against the confirmation of the sale to Mamie Axelrod, which protest was heard by said state district court and denied, and the sale was approved and the sheriff directed to execute proper assignment to Mamie Axelrod; that from these orders the Osage Company appealed to the Supreme' Court of Oklahoma, the notice of appeal being given in open court as provided by the Oklahoma statutes; that Mamie Axelrod paid the money under the sale by the sheriff, and accepted assignment from him thereof after the notice of appeal was given; that on November 9,1926, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma reversed the decree of the trial court, and held that said .court had committed reversible. error “in .denying the petition of defendants to vacate said void judgment, and. in entering its order, over the objections of defendants, confirming the sale made thereunder, and in rendering its judgment of March 4, 1925, based upon such erroneous-orders” (Osage Oil & Refining Co. v. Interstate Pipe Co., 124 Okl. 7, 12, 253 P. 71); that it directed the district court to enter the proper orders vacating these judgments of March 4, 1925, and July 8, 1924, and said orders were duly entered by said court, and the sheriff’s deed made to Mamie Axelrod recalled and canceled; that by this action of the. district court in canceling the assignment of the lease to. her she is forever precluded and judicially barred from claiming anything thereunder. The position of Mamie Axelrod et al. as to this contention is that she was not a party to the appeal from the judgment and deeree of the district court of Osage county, and further that the appeal was ineffective because no ease-made was served upon her and there was no motion for a new trial, and that it is the duty of this court to passon the question of the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court o-f Oklahoma in the matter. The following important admission appears in the brief of appellant: “Perhaps it may shorten this discussion if we now admit that the questions which we are to present to the Circuit Court of Appeals were urged and presented to the Oklahoma Supreme Court, not on behalf of Mamie Axelrod, but on behalf of Interstate Pipe Company.” To this we hereafter advert. The trial court held that Mamie Axelrod was a party to the appellate proceedings in the Supreme Court in the case referred to, and that she was bound and precluded by the judgment therein rendered, and also by the subsequent judgment of the district court rendered February 24, 1927, recalling and canceling the sale of said lease, and that these judgments are res adjudicata upon all questions presented in this action as to Mamie Axelrod, Herman Axelrod and H. O. Dixon. It is unquestionably the law that Mamie Axelrod by her purchase at foreclosure sale became a party to the district court proceeding. Smith v. Noble Bros, et al., 54 Okl. 505, 153 P. 1150; American Glass Casket Co. v. Sledge, 114 Okl. 125, 244 P. 413; Taylor et al. v. Logan Trust Co. et al. (C. C. A.) 289 F. 51; Kneeland v. American Loan Co., 136 U. S. 89, 95, 10 S. Ct. 950, 34 L. Ed. 379; Davis v. Mercantile Trust Co., 152 U. S. 590; 14 S. Ct. 693, 38 L. Ed. 563. Section 782 of the Compiled Laws of Oklahoma of 1921 provides how appeals may be taken, and, referring to the giving in open court of notice at the time judgment is rendered or within 10 days thereafter by the party desiring to appeal, states: “Upon the giving of such notice and entering the same on trial docket, all parties of record in the court from which such appeal is to be taken shall become parties to the appeal in the Supreme Court, and no further notice shall be required to be served upon them of such appeal, and no appeal shall be dismissed by .the appellate courts of this state because any party in the court below is n’ot made a party to the appeal but such notice above provided and showing intention to appeal shall automatically make all parties of record in lower court parties in the appellate court.” By this statute, if Mamie Axelrod was a party of record in the district court, automatically, by the notice of appeal given in open court, she became a party to the appeal in the Supreme Court, although not specifically mentioned in the petition in error. Strawn v. Brady, 84 Okl. 66, 202 P. 505; Oklahoma H. M. P. Ry. Co. v. H. M. S. Drilling Co., 100 Okl. 260, 229 P. 420 ; In re Wah-Shah-She-Me-Tsa-He’s- Estate, 111 Okl. 177, 239 P. 177; American Glass Casket Co. v. Sledge, 114 Okl. 125, 244 P. 413. Counsel for appellants contend in their reply brief that while Mamie Axelrod became a party to the proceedings in the trial court by purchasing the lease at sheriff’s sale, she was not a party of record, and therefore the notice of appeal did not automatically make her a party in the Supreme Court to the appeal. This distinction is too refined and hyperteehnical to be accepted. In American Glass Casket Co. v. Sledge, supra, a case cited by both parties, the Supreme Court of OHahoma says, referring to purchasers at a sheriff’s sale: “The purchasers became parties to the record and proceedings upon their purchase of the property, and section 782, C. O. S. 1921, automatically makes them parties to the appeal.” (Italics ours.) It is clear that Mamie Axelrod was a party of record in the trial court in the proceedings to vacate the judgment against the Osage Company.' She was therefore a party to the appeal. It is urged that the appeal was ineffective for the reasons (1) that no case-made was served on Mamie Axelrod; (2) that no motion for new trial was filed by appellee in the state district court. These exact questions were presented in behalf of the Interstate Pipe Company, by the same counsel who are now counsel for Mamie Axelrod, to the Supreme Court of OHahoma, not only by the motion to dismiss the appeal, but also on a petition for rehearing, which was overruled by the said court, and again it was attempted to present them the third time by a second petition for rehearing, which was denied by the Supreme Court, so there are practically three holdings of that court relative to these questions. There inheres in these decisions of the Supreme Court a holding that Mamie Axelrod was a party to the appeal, and either that a case-made was served on her by service on her attorneys, it being admitted of record that no case-made was servéd personally on her, or that the circumstances were such 'as not to require the service of a case-made. The grounds upon which the Supreme Court overruled the motion to dismiss and refused to grant a rehearing do not appear. Its reasons can only be surmised. The attorneys for Mamie Axelrod in the present controversy were attorneys of record for the Interstate Pipe Company in the Supreme Court proceedings. Case-made was served upon them August 27, 1925. The petition in error was filed in the OHahoma Supreme Court September 4, 1925. The sheriff’s sale was confirmed March 4, 1925. The Secretary of the Interior’s approval of assignment was given March 19’, 1925. One of the counsel for Mamie Axelrod testified that after the assignment was made by the sheriff to her his firm was employed by her to present the assignment to the Osage Indian Agency and the Secretary of the Interior for approval; that they represented her in the proceeding filed by the Osage Company in the federal court seeMng to prevent the approval of the assignment, and that after the appeal from the Osage county district court was concluded in the Supreme Court their firm again represented her, but that they did not represent her in the appellate proceedings in the Supreme Court. The ease-made was served upon them five months after they had been employed by Mamie Axelrod to secure the approval by the Secretary of the Interior of the assignment of the lease to her by the sheriff of Osage eounty. The Supreme Court may have concluded that the present attorneys were in fact attorneys for Mamie Axelrod at the time of serving the ease-made, and that the service upon them was a legal and sufficient service thereof. Tyler v. Roberts, 56 OH. 610, 156 P. 201, is not exactly in point, as there was no question there as to the attorneys being of record for both parties, yet it hears somewhat upon the situation here presented. The Supreme Court could have held, on the other hand, that Mamie Axelrod not being present in person at the hearing on the confirmation of the sale, and not participating in the proceedings, and not in faet personally appearing at the trial, no ease-made as to her was necessary. Section 782, Comp. Laws of OH. 1921,<* provides: “It shall not be necessary for the party appealing, to serve the case-made for such appeal on any party to the action who did not appear at the trial and take part in the proceedings from which the appeal is taken, or who shall have filed a disclaimer in the trial court; nor shall it be necessary to make any such person a party to the petition in error: Provided, that any party so omitted from the proceedings in error, who was a party to the action in the trial court, may be made a party plaintiff or defendant in the action in the supreme court upon such terms as the court may direct, upon its appearing that he might be affeeted by the reversal of the judgment or order from which the appeal was taken, with the right to be heard therein the same as other parties.” See Cameron v. Cameron et al., 90 Okl. 293, 217 P. 1033; American Glass Casket Co. v. Sledge, 114 Okl. 125, 244 P. 413. As to the appeal being ineffective because no motion for new trial was filed, tbe decisions of the OHaboma Supreme Court are not entirely clear on that question. One view of tbe matter is presented in Ingram v. Ingram, 122 Okl. 59, 60, 250 P. 795, 796: “On tbe authority of the case of Smith v. Smith, in an opinion filed in this court May 20, 1924 (102 Okl. 70, 226 P. 368), wherein it is held that where a petition is filed seeking to vacate a judgment on account of fraud practiced by tbe successful party in obtaining a judgment, and an answer is filed denying tbe allegations of tbe petition and issues joined and the same is tried to the court on .evidence introduced, this is in the nature of an independent action, and in order that this court may obtain jurisdiction to review the, judgment of tbe trial court a motion for new trial is necessary and the same must be incorporated, together with tbe action of the trial court thereon, in the case-made attached to tbe petition in error, and where no motion for a new trial is filed, as in tbe instant case, a motion to dismiss the appeal should be sustained.” In Harper et al. v. Rutland Sav. Bank, 79 Okl. 274, 276, 192 P. 1101, 1102: “The trial is conducted, as any other action of an equitable nature, and, in order to have tbe errors occurring during tbe progress of tbe trial or tbe evidence reviewed by this court, a motion for a new trial must be filed and such motion and tbe ruling of the trial court thereon preserved by being incorporated in the case-made.” See, also, In re Foley, 78 Okl. 58, 188 P. 885; Smith v. Smith, 102 Okl. 70, 226 P. 368, 369. We think the reference in Ingram v. Ingram, supra, to a review of the evidence strikes the true differential note in the OHaboma eases. If a review of facts is sought in tbe appellate court there must be a motion for new trial, but not if review of law questions only is involved. In Tribal Development Co. et al. v. White Bros, et al., 28 Okl. 525, 114 P. 736 (syllabus) it is said: “Under tbe uniform i.oiling in this jurisdiction, tbe record proper is made up of tbe petition, tbe process, return, pleadings subsequent thereto, reports, verdicts, orders, and judgments, and an error appearing upon tbe face thereof may be raised for the first time in this court on a transcript thereof accompanied by a petition in error duly presenting tbe same.” From tbe opinion we quote: “A party may, however, be aggrieved by both tbe findings of fact and also the conclusions of law drawn therefrom. Therefore, to avail himself of the error which be claims exists in tbe first, be must within due time file his motion for a new trial. If he neglects to do this, or, which is the same thing so far as the appeal in this court is concerned, neglects to have the same preserved, he does not thereby waive his right to challenge the correctness of the legal conclusion to which tbe court arrives on its consideration of the unchallenged facts found, and this may be done without a motion for a new trial, and.even without an exception; for, when the ease is duly brought to this court on a transcript of the record, tbe error is then one appearing on the face of the record proper, and this court may review' the same upon a proper assignment contained in the petition in error. Baker v. Hammett et al., 23 Okl. 480, 100 Pac. 1114, and eases therein cited.” In Ritchie v. Kansas, N. & D. Ry. Co., 55 Kan. 36, 48, 39 P. 718, 721, the court said: “When an issue of law has been tried and determined by the court, a motion for a new trial is not required as a condition precedent to the right of the party to have the decision of the court reviewed on petition in error.” Territory v. Caffrey, 8 Okl. 193, 57 P. 204; Tacha v. Railway Co., 97 Kan. 571, 155 P. 922. By tbe failure to file motion for new trial tbe Osage Company did not waive its right to have the Supreme Court consider the correctness of the legal conclusions arrived at by the trial court upon the facts, the ease being taken to the Supreme Court upon transcript of tbe record, as well as upon a ease-made. Upon suggestion of diminution of the record the fact as to tbe transcript was supplied. Section 783, Comp. Laws 1921, OHa-boma Statutes, provides: “In all actions hereafter instituted by petition in error in the supreme or other appellate court the plaintiff in error shall attach to and file with tbe petition in error tbe original case-made, filed in the court below, or a certified transcript of the record of said court. * * * ” The questions presented to the Supreme Court were triable upon transcript or ease-made. In passing on tbe motion to dismiss tbe appeal and tbe petitions for rehearing tbe Supreme Court of OHaboma must have construed the various statutes of that state relating to the appeal, the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, and tbe method of invoHng that jurisdiction, including the necessity of. a ease-made or motion for new trial. It would seem unquestioned that we are bound by the construction of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma of its laws relative to its own appellate jurisdiction. As said in John v. Paullin, 231 U. S. 583, 585, 34 S. Ct. 178, 58 L. Ed. 381: “Without any doubt it rests with each state to prescribe the jurisdiction of its appellate courts, the mode and time of invoking that jurisdiction, and the rules of practice to be applied in its exercise; and the state law and practice in this regard are no less applicable when Federal rights are in controversy than when the ease turns entirely upon questions of local or general law. * * * The mode of subjecting the judgments of the state’s subordinate courts to review in its Supreme Court was a matter of local concern only and not within the control of Congress.” State of Missouri ex rel. Hurwitz v. Emmitt P. North et al., 271 U. S. 40, 46 S. Ct. 384, 70 L. Ed. 818; West v. Louisiana, 194 U. S. 258, 24 S. Ct. 650, 48 L. Ed. 965. The decision of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma must, we think, be held to be an adjudication of the regularity of the proceedings and the observance of the statutory requirements, and that Mamie Axelrod was legally a party to the appeal and bound thereby. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma was conclusive and is not open to the collateral attack now made upon it. Neither the trial court nor this court is a court of review of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. However, if she was not a party to that appeal, what is to be said as to the order of the district court of Osage county od the mandate entered February 24, 1927, setting aside and vacating the sheriff’s sale of the lease and estate in controversy and directing Mamie Axelrod, a party to the proceed^ ing, to return the sheriff’s deed to that court and deliver the same for cancellation, and of the judgment of that court that she acquired no right, title or interest in and to said lease or said leasehold estate by reason of her purchase at said sheriff’s sale. She was a party to the district court action, even if she was not a party to the appeal. When the cause' was returned to the state court, that court proceeded as directed by the mandate. Whether right or wrong, it entered a sweeping decree, vacating all judgments and orders to which we have referred. This was a final and appealable order. It must be assumed that the court did not act without giving the parties to the proceedings an opportunity to present their theories of the situation. No exception was.taken to the entry of the order of the Osage county district court and no appeal was prosecuted therefrom. We see no reason why she was not precluded by this order and judgment, and therefore it makes little difference whether or not she was a party to the appellate proceeding. Being satisfied that Mamie Axelrod is bound by the judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and the order of the district court of Osage county in setting aside the sale to her under the foreclosure proceedings we should probably pause here in considering this branch of the case. The very interesting field of whether as an independent proposition she acquired title to the leasehold is inviting, but we enter it only slightly. Were we to undertake a discussion of that question the same situation would confront us as before presented, viz. that the state statutes necessary to he considered in its determination have been construed by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. In Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. Anna F. C. Martin et al., 268 U. S. 458, 462, and 463, 45 S. Ct. 543, 545 (69 L. Ed. 1050), the court said: “Both the meaning of statutes of a state and the rules of the unwritten law of a state affecting property within the state are peculiarly questions of local law to be ascertained and established by the state courts. For that reason federal- courts ordinarily hold themselves bound by the interpretation of state statutes by the state courts.” Every question now presented to this court was before the Supreme Court of Oklahoma (stipulation, supra). That court construed sections 5433, 5436, 5441, 5442, and 5443, Compiled Laws Oklahoma 1921, which are the special statutes under which it is claimed jurisdiction was secured of the foreign corporation, and held there was no jurisdiction conferred by them on the district court to render the judgment it did; that the judgment was void on the face of the record. As special reliance as a basis of jurisdiction now seems to be placed by appellant upon section 5442, which is as follows: “Corporations N oncomplia/nce with Law —Venue—Process. Any foreign corporation, doing business in the State of Oklahoma, having failed either to appoint an agent upon whom service of summons or other process may he had, or failed to file in the office of the Secretary of State a duly authenticated copy of its articles' of incorporation or charter, or having failed to pay the license fee as required by law, then in the event of said foreign corporation having failed to comply with any of the provisions of the law as above referred to, any person now or hereafter having any cause of action against any foreign corporation may file suit against said foreign corporation in any county in the state and service of summons or any process upon the Secretary of State shall be sufficient to give jurisdiction of the person to any eourt in this state having jurisdiction of the subject-matter,” —reference might well be made to a recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States filed February 20, 1928, James W. Wuchter v. Michael Pizzutti, 276 U. S. 13, 48 S. Ct. 259, 72 L. Ed. 446, in which, referring to a somewhat similar statute that eourt said: “But the enforced acceptance of the service of process on a state officer by the defendant would not be fair or due process unless such officer or the plaintiff is required to mail the notice to the defendant, or to advise him, by some written communication, so as to make it reasonably probable that he will receive actual notice. Otherwise, where the service of summons is limited to a service of the secretary of state or some officer of the state, without more, it will be entirely possible for a person injured to sue any nonresident he chooses, and through service upon the state official obtain a default judgment against a non-resident who has never been in the state, who had nothing to do with the accident, or whose automobile having been in the state has never injured anybody. A provision of law for service that leaves open such a clear opportunity for the commission of fraud (Heinemamn v. Pier, 110 Wis. 185, 85 N. W. 646), or injustice is not a reasonable provision, and in the case supposed would certainly be depriving a defendant of his property without due process of law.” And referring to other decisions said : “These eases and others indicate a general trend of authority toward sustaining the validity of service of process, if the statutory provisions in themselves indicate that there is reasonable probability that if the statutes are complied with, the defendant will receive actual notice, and that is the principle that we think should apply here.” The Supreme Court held that inasmuch as the statute of New Jersey under consideration did not make provision for communication to the proposed defendant “such as to create reasonable probability that he would be made aware of the bringing of the suit,” it does not constitute due process. It would seem difficult to harmonize the constitutionality of section 5442 with this decision. However, it is unnecessary for us to pass on that question. Much is said in the briefs of appellant as to the filing of answer by the Osage Company and of petition to set aside the order and judgment in the district court of Osage county amounting to a general appearance of said Osage Company "in that suit. This question seems to have received little attention from the Oklahoma Supreme Court in its decision in the Interstate Pipe Company Case. It is the settled law of Oklahoma that a party seeking to vacate a judgment upon nonjurisdietianal as well as jurisdictional grounds enters a general appearance. In Webster v. Crump, 117 Okl. 244, 245, 246 P. 423, 424, the court said: “It is the settled rule in this state that, where a defendant denies the jurisdiction of the court over his person, he may, by special appearance, first present that single question; but, where he joins with the jurisdictional question other questions involving the merits of the action, and asks for affirmative relief, he thereby waives all defects in the summons and the service of the summons, and enters a general appearance.” Ziska v. Avey, 36 Okl. 405, 122 P. 722. Section 810, Oklahoma Statutes, sets forth a number of grounds upon which a petition to vacate a judgment may be based. The third division is irregularity in obtaining the same. The fourth refers to fraud. The Oklahoma courts have held that a party cannot seek a vacation of judgment for causes enumerated in subdivision 4 of section 810 without subjecting himself to the jurisdiction of the court. Myers v. Chamness, 102 Okl. 131, 228 P. 990. We have referred to Webster v. Crump, supra, where it is indicated that a party can by special appearance present a challenge to the jurisdiction of the eourt without waiving defects in the summons. In the leading ease of Harkness v. Hyde, 98 U. S. 476, 479 (25 L. Ed. 237), it is said: “Illegality in a proceeding by which jurisdiction is to be obtained is in no ease waived by the appearance of the defendant for the purpose of calling the attention of the eourt to such irregularity; nor is the objection waived when being urged it is overruled, and the defendant is thereby compelled to answer. He is not considered as abandoning his objection because he does not submit to further proceedings without contestation. It is only where he pleads to. the merits in the first instance, without'’insisting upon the illegality, that the objection is deemed to be waived.” The Oklahoma decisions are not out of line with this decision, as they hold that an appearance in the first instance upon both jurisdictional and nonjurisdietional grounds is a general appearance and waives defects in the service. In the district court of Osage county the appearance of the Osage Company in the first instance was a motion to quash the summons, and in filing the answer, which asked no affirmative relief, except as to Whitehead, the challenge to the jurisdiction was insisted upon. This question was recently considered by the Supreme Court in the ease of Richardson Machinery Co. v. Scott, Administratrix, filed February 20, 1928, 276 U. S. 128, 48 S. Ct. 264, 72 L. Ed. 497. The court there considers the Oklahoma decisions. There was a motion to quash summons and set aside judgment under section 810 of the Compiled Statutes of 1921, and a pleading entitled “Petition to Vacate Judgment” was filed. That petition did not contain an allegation that the corporation’s appearance was special and solely to contest the jurisdiction of the court; nor did it seek to quash the summons issued and served, and it asked affirmative relief. It is undoubtedly, as referred to in that case, the settled law of Oklahoma “that, where a person against whom a judgment is rendered files a petition to vacate the judgment upon the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the defendant, and the petition is based also on non-jurisdictional grounds, such as those mentioned in subparagraphs fourth and seventh of section 810, the filing of the petition operates as a voluntary general appearance, with the same effect as if such appearance had been made at the trial.” The situation here is quite different. Appearance is largely a question of intention, although there may be a legal appearance in a case without the intention so to do existing. In the action in the state court the Osage Company filed a special appearance motion to quash summons and service, which was overruled. It filed an amended motion to quash summons and service, which was overruled. A rehearing was requested upon the same, which was granted, and the motions were again denied. It is claimed that general and special demurrers were then filed, stating that the facts alleged in the petition did not entitle plaintiff to recover in that court a personal judgment against it, which demurrers also seem to have been overruled, although the record is not complete on this question. The Osage Company then filed answer, and the first paragraph of that answer is as follows: “That this court has no jurisdiction over the persons of these defendants, and this answer is filed under protest and without submitting to the jurisdiction of this court.” It would seem as clear as anything 'could be that the pleader was standing upon the jurisdictional question, and that there was no intention to waive it; that the Osage Company was appearing, if at all, to question the jurisdiction; and that all its allegations were of a defensive nature. The only affirmative relief asked in the answer was in section 5 thereof, which is as follows: “V. That the defendant J. E. Whitehead joined in this answer with the defendant the Osage Oil & Refining Company, but further pleads that he is a surety only, upon the said note and that in the event judgment is rendered against him in this action that he have judgment over and against his codefendant, the Osage Oil & Refining Company, for a like amount, and that he be subrogated to all the security held by his codefendant, the Osage Oil & Refining Company.” On the part of Whitehead this paragraph asks certain relief as against the Osage Company. It is no part of the answer of that company, and certainly cannot be construed as a plea of the Osage Company for relief. This is a very different situation from that presented in the Richardson-Seott Case, supra. The Osage Company challenged the jurisdiction of the court in the first instance by the motion to quash summons. It continued challenging jurisdiction at every step in the proceedings. This court said in Grable et al. v. Killits (C. C. A.) 282 F. 185, 195: “If our conclusion as to the effect of the first motion is correct, clearly the subsequent motions to dismiss and the answer upon the merits did not amount to a general appearance. After defendants had done all they could to avoid personal jurisdiction, they were at liberty to present meritorious defenses, and without losing the benefit of the formal motions, so long as they persisted in their protests against personal jurisdiction.” This doctrine seems to fit this case. In view of our conclusion as to the effect of the judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, and also the subsequent judgment of the district court of Osage county, upon the alleged rights of Mamie Axelrod, we have extended this discussion further than necessary, until it bids fair to rival in prolixity some of the briefs filed. The interesting nature of the questions and the earnestness and ability with which they have been presented is our excuse for so doing. Other points are suggested and argued at length, which we see no need of considering. We are satisfied the conclusions of the trial court as to appellant, Mamie Axelrod, and those claiming under her, were not erroneous. The controversy between the Continental Company and the Osage Company, presented in appeal No. 7971, is distinct from the one between the Osage Company and Mamie Ax-elrod et al. From the decree of the court we quote: “And the plaintiff, the Osage Oil & Refining Company now demands that the defendant, the Continental Oil Company, be held to its agreements and to its offer made in the pleadings in this action, and the court finds that the defendant the Continental Oil Company is entitled to receive the assignment of plaintiff’s said lease upon the terms, stipulations, and conditions set forth in its contract made with the defendant Mamie Axel-rod, and that, by reason of the agreements and understandings had between the plaintiff and the said defendant the Continental Oil Company, and by reason of the pleadings of the said defendant the Continental Oil Company, filed in this action, that it should be compelled to accept the said assignment from the plaintiff. The court further finds that plaintiff’s said property has been drained by offset wells upon the property of the Continental Oil Company for more than 12 months, and that by reason of this litigation and by reason of the Continental Oil Company contracting to purchase.the said lease from the plaintiff, Mamie Axelrod, that it should not now be permitted to decline to accept the said lease from the plaintiff upon the same identical terms after draining the property for more than 12 months by the three offset wells.” The court finds, therefore, as a question of fact, that certain agreements and understandings existed between the Osage Company and the Continental Company, and decrees that by virtue thereof and the pleadings the latter should be compelled to accept an assignment of a one-half interest in the Osage Company’s lease similar to the assignment made by Mamie Axelrod when she was supposed to own the same. The findings of the trial court on questions of fact are presumptively correct, and will generally be accepted by the appellate court, unless clearly against the weight of the evidence. Benedict et al. v. Setters et al. (C. C. A.) 261 F. 492; Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. et al. v. May et al. (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 680; United States v. Mammoth Oil Co. (C. C. A.) 14 F.(2d) 705; Lion Oil Refining Co. v. Albritton (C. C. A.) 21 F.(2d) 280; Majestic Co. v. Orpheum Circuit (C. C. A.) 21 F.(2d) 720. The Continental Company contends that there is no evidence in the record to show any contract oral or written entered into between it and the Osage Company relative to its acquisition of any interest in the Osage lease; that there is no basis therefore for compelling it to purchase from the Osage Company an interest in said lease according to the terms of the Axelrod contract; that while it offered to purchase from either party in April, 1926, such offer should not now be enforced, as the lease has diminished in value, due to the drainage thereof and to the .lessened price of oil. Appellee’s position is that the Continental Company offered to extend the provisions of the Axelrod contract to it when its answer was filed in the Western district of Oklahoma in the case there brought by the Osage Company in April, 1926; that it accepted said offer, but that Mamie Axelrod refused to accept it; that the Continental Company should then have taken possession of and operated the property; that it did not attempt so to do, but never withdrew the offer; that after the judgment of the Supreme Court holding that Mamie Axelrod had no interest in this property the Continental made no attempt to end the matter, but entered into negotiations with the Osage Company whereby the present suit should be brought for the benefit of both companies, and that ways and means were agreed upon so to do; that the Continental Company wanted the lease from anybody who could deliver valid title; that after the complaint was filed in this action the Continental Company filed its answer, stating that it had gone to great expense in developing the field; that the property was being drained, and asking in the prayer of its answer the very , relief that the court allowed; that it is bound by its pleading; that at the trial the Osage Company tendered to the Continental Company assignments of an interest in the leasehold substantially the same as were provided in the Mamie Axelrod contract; that the Continental’Company is estopped by its contractual relations, by its offer made in the Western district injunction case, by its answer filed in that ease, by its conduct in participating in a mutual equity suit from which it has received benefits, and by its answer in the present ease electing to pursue the lease and adopting that theory of .the controversy; that it is bound by its election and cannot now question its own pleadings and take an inconsistent position from the prayer of its answer confessed by the reply of the Osage Company. The decree of the trial court subrogated the Osage Company to the rights of Mamie Axelrod in her contract assigning an interest in the lease to the Continental Company. There is no question that the Continental Company greatly desired to purchase an interest in the lease here involved. It had title to an adjoining lease and had drilled an offset well to the west line of the Osage lease, which was brought in in April, 1926, and had an initial production of some 1,500 barrels of oil per day. Having ascertained from the records that Mamie Axelrod had purchased the lease at sheriff’s sale, it entered into a written contract with her February 18, 1926, by which she agreed to sell to it a one-half interest in the same for $50,000, which was to be deposited in the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa pending the approval of the sheriff’s assignment by the Secretary of the Interior; and a further sum of $50,000 was to be paid out of oil as produced from the Continental Company’s one-half of the property; also a test well was to be sunk by the Continental Company. It was not long after this contract that notice was served by the Osage Company on the Continental Company that it owned the lease; that it had appealed to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma from the decree of the district court of Osage county, Oklahoma, in the suit of Interstate Pipe Company v. Osage Company. The Continental Company thereupon directed the Exchange National Bank not to pay the $50,000 deposited there to Mamie Axelrod, and the same was held by that bank at the time of the trial. There were three wells on. the adjoining Continental Company lease, partly developed before the time of the Axelrod contract, and at the time of the trial the evidence shows they were producing about one-eighth of the amount one of them was producing at the date of said contract, and the price of oil was reduced nearly one-half. The Osage Company also filed protest with the Secretary of the Interior against the approval of the assignment made by Mamie Axelrod to the Continental Company. In April, 1926, the Osage Company filed a bill in equity in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, seeking to enjoin Mamie Axelrod and the Continental Company from recording transfers of the lease. The Continental Company filed an answer in that case, in which it set forth that the lands covered by the lease were being drained by offset wells; that it was ready, willing, and able to enter upon the lands and drill a well as soon as it could receive valid title; and this provision is contained in that answer: “This defendant now offers at any time to enter upon the above lands and to commence said well, subject to delivery to it of the approved assignments aforesaid, and subject with consent of the parties to this suit to proper order of this court and to proper order being given and entered in the case now pending in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, representing the appeal of the complainant herein from the district court of Osage county, Oklahoma, as aforesaid, and to drill and complete said well upon the terms and in the manner and upon the conditions as set forth in said contract, and subject to proper order of this court and of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in the case above referred to, and subject to proper agreement between the parties hereto. This defendant agrees that the Exchange Trust Company might be directed to pay the escrow sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) into this court, or that other order may be given to the Exchange Trust Company by this court regarding the disposal of said deposit either to Mamie Axelrod or to the complainant herein, whichever should be decreed by this court or by'the Supreme Court of Oklahoma to be the valid owner of said lease, and hereby further offers to do and-perform all other obligations imposed on this defendant by said contract — in order to immediately develop said lands for oil — provided that proper orders may be entered by this court and by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma protecting this defendant so that regardless of whether the complainant herein or the defendant, Mamie Axelrod, may finally be adjudged to be the owner of said lease, this defendant will in the meantime have proceeded in accordance with its contract in the development of said lands for oil and will thereby have protected the interests of either the complainant or the defendant, Mamie Axelrod, from loss by reason of drainage of oil from said lands.” This proposition was accepted by the Osage Company, but refused by counsel for Mamie Axelrod. It is to be observed that in the offer there made the Continental Company was willing to take the lease and perform the obligations of the Axelrod contract, but that it desired to immediately develop the lands for oil, and it was provided that its offer was subject to orders to be .entered by that court and by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma protecting it from loss regardless of who was successful in the suit. Such orders were never secured, nor was any effort made to secure them, and as only one of the parties as to whom the offer applied accepted the same, the offer was ended. In any event the offer would not have endured beyond a reasonable time. We see no feature of es-toppel in this, but it does throw some light on what the Continental Company was willing to do. While there were some negotiations subsequent to this, the record does not disclose just what they were. The matter rather drifted awaiting the decision of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in the appeal from the decree of the district court of Osage county. In February, 1927, the decision of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma was rendered, reversing the action of the district court of Osage county, and holding that said court was without jurisdiction in the case of Interstate Pipe Company v. Osage Company, and Mamie Axelrod’s claim to the lease was in effect canceled and wiped out. Mr. Whitehead, counsel for the Osage Company, then took up with Mr. Fellows, counsel for the Continental Company, the question of a new agreement. In the meantime Mr. Whitehead had discovered in conference with Mr. Tal-bott, one of the counsel for the Axelrods, that the Axelrods would not agree to release the money held by the Exchange Bank of Tulsa, for the reason that they claimed Mamie Axel-rod was not a party to the appeal from the district court of Osage county, that she had merely sold to the Continental Company a one-half interest in a lawsuit, and that she became entitled to the money deposi