An admission in an adversary's pleadings, to be available, must be taken with all the qualifying clauses and limitations which the pleader has included in it. In other words, it must be taken as a whole; and, where facts are alleged in connection with an admission which nullify it, its effect as an admission is destroyed. (Johnson et al. v. Bement et al., 109 Okla. 260, 235 P. 535.) 3. Same — Mechanics' Liens — Admission of Owner in Answer to Petition to Foreclose Subcontractor's Lien Held Insufficient to Prove Service of Statutory Notice Upon Owner.
In other words, it must be taken as a whole; and, where facts are alleged in connection with an admission which nullify it, its effect as an admission is destroyed." Coleman v. Missouri Valley Electric Co. (1934) 169 Okla. 264, 36 P.2d 730; Johnson v. Bement (1925) 109 Okla. 260, 235 P. 535; Oklahoma Moline Plow Co. v. Smith (1914) 41 Okla. 498, 139 P. 285. We do not think that the pleading under discussion reaches the dignity of a judicial admission.