Beesley v. Wm. A. Nicholson Co., Inc.

1931 OK 173, 298 P. 607, 148 Okla. 270, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 886
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 28, 1931
Docket19684
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1931 OK 173 (Beesley v. Wm. A. Nicholson Co., Inc.) 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
Beesley v. Wm. A. Nicholson Co., Inc., 1931 OK 173, 298 P. 607, 148 Okla. 270, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 886 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an action upon a negotiable promissory note, and to foreclose a mortgage on real estate given to secure the same.

The plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, sues as a purchaser in due course for value before maturity. The note was for $3,000, and signed by Wm. A. Nicholson Company, with Lawrence W. Nicholson as payee. It was indorsed by William A. Nicholson, Aliie E. Nicholson, and Lawrence W. Nicholson, with the further indorsement thereon, signed by Lawrence W. Nicholson showing the interest paid to date of maturity, which was two years after date.

The defense of William A. Nicholson Company, W. A. Nicholson, and Aliie E. Nicholson is a defect in the title of the person from whom plaintiff purchased the note, namely, E. W. Hardin Company, a corporation, or W. C. Beesley, a brother of the plaintiff; and a further defense of payment to Lawrence W. Nicholson before maturity and while the note was in his hands.

Lawrence W. Nicholson, by separate answer, pleaded, in substance, that he executed a note in the sum of $2,500 to E. W. Hardin Company, at the request of B. W. Hardin and W. C. Beesley, the president and secretary, respectively, of a corporation known as E. W. Hardin Company. That said officers of said company requested him to execute said note and put the same, together with the $3,000 note sued upon, up with the State Insurance Commissioner in order that the E. W. Hardin Company could make a sufficient showing before said official of assets necessary for it to engage in business in Oklahoma. That the note *271 sued upon was not to be transferred or assigned, but was to be used only for tbe specific purpose above stated, and that the same was to be re-assigned or returned to him as soon as they could arrange to substitute other sufficient security; that said note was thereafter transferred by said company to W. C. Beesley, who was its secretary, and was by him transferred to plaintiff, who is W. C. Beesley’s brother, without consideration, and in connivance with plaintiff and said company, and for the purpose of defrauding said defendant; that there was no consideration for the $2,500 note, and no consideration for the transfer of the $3,000 note sued upon, and he was the ouner of said $3,000 note, and was entitled to judgment thereon, for which he prayed.

Plaintiff replied by general denial.

Upon the issues thus joined the cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for defendants,, from which plaintiff appeals.

There are six assignments of error presented under four propositions.

It is first contended that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff; in overruling plaintiff’s demurrer to defendants’ evidence; and in denying plaintiff’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

We first consider the question of the correctness of the ruling on the demurrer to defendants’ evidence. This depends, of course, upon the state of the evidence at the close of defendants’ case in chief.

In the class of cases here under consideration the plaintiff is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course. But if defendant shows that the title of any person who negotiated a note is defective, the burden is then upon the plaintiff to prove that he, or some person under whom he claims, acquired the title in due course. Section 7729, C. O. S. 1921.

This does not mean that the defendant must prove to a certainty that some person who negotiated the note held the same by defective title, but when he introduces evidence reasonably tending to show such state of facts, then the onus or burden is shifted to the plaintiff to show that the note had been acquired by him in good faith, for value, in the usual course of business and before maturity. Moore v. First Nat. Bk. of Iowa City, 30 Okla. 623, 121 Pac. 626.

The record, as we view it, contains abundant evidence tending to show, and from which it might reasonably be inferred, that the title of the E. W. Harden Company, the United Eire Insurance Exchange, and W. C. Beesley, and each of them, to the note in question was defective. To set out such evidence at length would require too much space. Briefly and in substance, the record shows that at the time the note was obtained from Lawrence W. Nicholson, he was a young man just past 21 years of age. Apparently he was an Indian, and had owned some land near Caddo, which he had sold upon obtaining his majority. He had thereby secured $3,000, which he had loaned to the Wm. A. Nicholson Company, a corporation, owned or controlled by his uncle, William A. Nicholson. The $3,000 note in question and the mortgage securing the same was obtained by him in this way. Shortly thereafter he went to Oklahoma City, and there met E. W. Hardin and W. C. Beesley, who were organizing and endeavoring to finance an insurance company known as the United Eire Insurance Exchange. They learned of his ownership of the note and mortgage and very promptly and generously offered him employment under terms which w ould require him, or by which he at least agreed, to buy some stock in the insurance company. They were to put him to work soliciting business for the company and appointing agents in such territory as he might select in Oklahoma, receiving as his compensation certain commissions on the business brought to the company by him, and through the agents appointed hy him. The insurance company, however, was to be of such magnitude, or for some other undis-' closed reasons, that it was necessary to have another corporation organized to act as attorney in fact for it. This was the E. W. Hardin Company, which was described by Hardin as a reciprocal company and had no assets, but whatever assets that came into its hands, by reason of the reciprocal relation between the two companies, automatically became the property of the insurance exchange. Young Lawrence agreed to purchase the stock and gave his demand note payable to the E. W. Hardin Company'in the sum of $2,500. This note, he testified, was to be paid by commissions earned by him and the agents appointed, by him. The company was to advance him not to exceed $150 per month expenses, which was to be deducted from the commissions earned by him. But when the stock certificate was issued it was for stock in the Hardin Company, which, as stated, was not supposed to have any assets, and not stock in the insurance company. It was explained to him that before the company could start soliciting insurance it would be necessary to put up *272 certain securities with the State Insurance Commissioner, and they requested him to put up the $3,000 note and mortgage for this purpose, temporarily, the same to be returned to him as soon as other suitable securities could be substituted therefor. He testified that it was agreed that this note and mortgage should not be used for any other purpose; was not to be sold, assigned, nor hypothecated. It was accordingly indorsed by him and turned over to Harden and Beesley, or one of them. Two days after it was delivered it was deposited with a bank in Oklahoma City as collateral security for money borrowed by the E. W. Hardin Company. Thereafter young Nicholson went to work for the company and secured applications for some $60,000 in fire insurance for the company.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 173, 298 P. 607, 148 Okla. 270, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beesley-v-wm-a-nicholson-co-inc-okla-1931.