Amazon Fire Ins. Co. v. Bond

1917 OK 96, 165 P. 414, 65 Okla. 224, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1917
Docket6508
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1917 OK 96 (Amazon Fire Ins. Co. v. Bond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amazon Fire Ins. Co. v. Bond, 1917 OK 96, 165 P. 414, 65 Okla. 224, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 63 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

HOOKER, C.

The defendant in error sued to rescind a contract, and for damages for fraud and deceit alleged to have been caused him by reason of false and fraudulent representations and statements having been made to him by the agents of the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company, as the result • of which he purchased from the company through its agents 100 shares of stock in said company at $25 per share, in payment of which he executed two notes, for $1,500 and $1,000, respectively, due in one year, with 5 per cent, interest, payable to himself and indorsed by himself. The defendant company denied the authority of the parties making the sale to act for it in any capacity, and denied that it had sold to plaintiff any stock or had any transaction with him. Upon this issue, under proper instructions of the court, this cause was presented to the jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, to reverse which the company has appealed, assigning the following errors:

(1) That the court erred when it refused to require the plaintiff to submit his cause upon one theory.

(2) That it was error to permit plaintiff below to amend his petition in the progress of the trial, so as to state a cause of action.

(3) The refusal of the court to give requested instructions, and likewise error in giving certain instructions.

(4) No evidence to support the verdict of the jury.

05) The (admission of incompetent evidence over its objection.

The evidence here discloses: That in the summer of 1909 one Edmund Dwyer and one *225 Blanchard, representing themselves to be agents of the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company, solicited plaintiff to purchase stock in said company, but he was not at the time interested. That about December -1, 1909, they again visited him for said purpose, but were unsuccessful. About January 27, 1910, they again visited Dr. Bond and sold to him 100 shares at $25 per share, in payment of which he executed and delivered his two notes as stated above. Thar said notes, at the instance of Dwyer, were drawn payable to Dr. Bond, and indorsed by him, and delivered'to Dwyer. At this time Dwyer gave to Dr. Bond the following receipt :

“Receipt for Stock Settlement.
“Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company, Shawnee, Oklahoma.”
“Book No. 130.
“Application and Receipt No. 12.
“Received of Dr. Robert Bond ($2,500.00) twenty-five hundred dollars, in payment for 100 shares of the capital stock of the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company of Shawnee, Oklahoma. This receipt is issued subject to the contract of purchase of duplicate number. Only salesman No. 9, whose signature anpears on the inside front cover of this book, has authority to countersign this receipt.
“Signed this 27th of January, 1910.
“Western & Southern Fire Insurance Co.,
“By Edmund Dwyer.”

And indorsed upon the back of said receipt was the following:

“Should the purchaser of the stock indicated on this application, and for which he has given his notes for $2,500.00 and due in 12 months from date, desire to renew all or part of his notes, he has the right to do so at 5 per cent, per annum.
“Edmund Dwyer, Agt.
“Jany. 27, 1910.”

Dwyer and Blanchard took the $1,500 note and discounted the same to the McAleste?: Trust Company, along with other notes, and they stated to the president of the bank at the time they were agents of the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company, and the president of the bank in payment of said notes caused some certificates of deposit in the name of the company to be given to Dwyer and Blanchard. These certificates of deposit were all later indorsed by the Western 6 Southern Fire Insurance Company and paid by the McAlester Trust Company. The $1,000 note, a short time after its execution, was in the possession of and owned by the company, and was so owned by it at the time of the institution of this suit, and also its property when renewed in' January, 1911, and interest paid thereon. The evidence further shows that Dwyer and Blanchard held in their possession at the time of the sale to plaintiff—

“various forms of contract of the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company and various reports and other literature of the company, such as any agent engaged in the sale of stock would have.”

Plaintiff paid the larger note at maturity, and procured in January, 1911, a renewal of the $1,000 note, and paid the interest thereon, and when this note was about due he wrote the company, and requested it to send same to the bank at Hartshorne and he would pay it, but changed his mind and instituted this suit to recover the sums paid out by him, and to cancel the outstanding note, claiming he had just ascertained the fraud; that is, that in 1912 he first ascertained that the statement made in 1909 by Dwyer and Blanchard as to the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company having purchased or acquired the interest of the Shawnee Mutual Fire Insurance Company was false, and that as soon as he discovered the same he brought this suit. It is asserted that said parties stated that the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company had acquired the business of the 'Shawnee Mutual Fire Insurance Company, which was then a going concern, and there is some evidence supporting the theory, had this been true, the stock in the Western & Southern Fire Insurance Company would have been more valuable.

The evidence also discloses that, while these negotiations were being made by Dwyer and Blanchard with Dr. Bond for the sale of said stock, they conversed with other parties in Hartshorne, and stated to them that they were agents of the company for the purpose of selling the stock, and that they sold some of the stock to other parties and took notes in part payment, and that these notes later were in the possession of the company and claimed by it. The company asserted that one J. C. Chrisney had subscribed for a large number of its shares and had not paid therefor,. nor had said stock been issued to him, and that he employed Dwyer and Blanchard, as his agents, to sell stock, and that when the stock was sold by him, and notes taken therefor and delivered to Ohris-ney, he would transfer said notes to it, and it would credit his account therefor, and that in this way it acquired the ownership of the various .notes, etc., involved here.

Upon this evidence this cause was presented to the jury, and it, after hearing the evidence, found that Dwyer and Blanchard- *226 were the agents of the company, and that they had made the statements claimed, and same were false.

The -petition alleges that the company is liable for two reasons: First, because Dwyer and Blanchard were specifically authorized to act for it; second, if not specifically 'authorized, the company ratified the acts of Dwyer and Blanchard by accepting the' benefits of the transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 96, 165 P. 414, 65 Okla. 224, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amazon-fire-ins-co-v-bond-okla-1917.