Board of Ed. v. American National Co.

1928 OK 258, 275 P. 285, 135 Okla. 253, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 907
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 17, 1928
Docket17393
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1928 OK 258 (Board of Ed. v. American National Co.) 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
Board of Ed. v. American National Co., 1928 OK 258, 275 P. 285, 135 Okla. 253, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 907 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

The defendant in error, American National Company, brought this action against the board of education to recover a sum certain purporting to be due as interest on coupons on certain bonds purporting to have been issued by the school district comprised of the city of Shawnee and territory annexed thereto for school purposes.

The action involves directly the interest coupons accrued on $100,000 worth of bonds. The plaintiff alleged that it was the owner and holder in due course of the coupons and that payment thereon had been refused. The defendant denied that plaintiff was the owner or holder in due course of the bonds or coupons and pleaded knowledge on the part of plaintiff, and pleaded a conspiracy between the plaintiff and. the National Bank of Commerce to illegally and unlawfully secure said bonds; and pleaded further, a void transaction in failure to pay par for the bonds. The plaintiff replied, alleging it purchased the bonds from and paid to the National Bank of Commerce a reasonable market value for said bonds, and that it had no agreement, contract, or understanding with defendant school board concerning the bonds; otherwise denying.

The facts disclosed by the record are:

Ninety thousand dollars worth of the bonds in question were authorized by a vote of the people of the school district and dated May 21, 1917, and $10,000 worth of the bonds were authorized by the same municipal subdivision in 1920. The 1917 bonds were purchased in 1917, by the then treasurer of the school district, Mr. Keller, and indorsed by him in red ink on the face of the bonds, “Purchased with Sinking Fund, School District No. 93.” The sinking fund used in this purchase was not that fund levied and collected to pay this particular bond issue, but funds derived to pay a previous issue.

C. C. Roberts, the vice president of the plaintiff American National Company, negotiated the transaction for plaintiff in securing the bonds in controversy. He testified that he knew the bonds represented by the coupons had been purchased and held by the school district’s sinking fund investment therein, prior to his company’s purchase of the same and at the time of purchase.

C. E. Manny, assistant cashier of the National Bank of Commerce, testified that the bonds in question were sold by his bank to plaintiff for 98% c on the dollar par value; that his bank handled the salé of the bonds to plaintiff. That the bonds were never assets of his bank and his bank never purchased them. That he delivered the bonds to plaintiff in Oklahoma City on March 9, 1924, and received a telegram from plaintiff on March 11, 1924, saying the money had been placed to his bank’s credit for the benefit of the school district of Shawnee, and that he thereupon, and on March 11th, placed to the credit of the defendant school district in his bank the amount secured at 98%c plus $1,500, a sufiicient amount to bring the credit to par; that the additional amount was made up by his bank.

It appears that Wallace Estill, president of the National Bank of Commerce, and Mr. Manny, assistant cashier of the bank, wherein the school funds were deposited, went before the school board1 and informed the board that there were not sufficient funds on deposit to carry the warrants issued by the board pursuant to the budget for the fiscal year, whereupon the school board, by resolution adopted' March 6, 1924, authorized the treasurer to sell and dispose to the highest bidder for not less than par value, $110,-000 worth of these bonds held by the sinking fund investment.

Whereupon Mr. Manny, assistant cashier of the bank, communicated with bondsmen, of which plaintiff was one, talked to Mr. Roberts, and sold the bonds to him for his company, the plaintiff, at a price of 98%c on the dollar. He testified (C.-M. 99) that he got the bonds from the sinking fund investment box of school district No. 93, and delivered them to the American National Bank of Oklahoma City with instructions to turn them over to the plaintiff. The witness further testified that neither he nor his bank ever owned the bonds; that he was not treasurer nor assistant treasurer of the defendant school district, but that Nancy May Hunt was such treasurer (C.-M. 104) : *256 that his act was just a labor of love to the treasurer (O.-M. 105).

Mr. Estill testified that after he got the school board to pass the resolution of March 6th, he sold the bonds to Mr. Roberts, of the plaintiff company, for 98% c on the dollar; that neither he nor his bank purchased or owned the bonds in question.

Mr. Hunter, member of defendant school board, testified that two or three days prior to March 15th, Mr. Roberts, of plaintiff company, called him by telephone from Oklahoma City anil stated the bond proceedings were not satisfactory, and that he was preparing a resolution to correct the proceedings ; that a resolution was delivered to him by Mr. Roberts, and on March 15th, he took the same to the individual meipbers of the school board, who signed it, and while there was no meeting of the school 'board of that date, the resolution purporting to be of March 15th was spread in purported minutes of the school board as of that date, and as previous minutes the same was approved on May 5th thereafter.

These documentary minutes appear as follows :

“March 15th, 1924.
• “The board of education of the city of Shawnee of the state of Oklahoma, met at the superintendent’s office at the call of the president, on the 15th day of March, 1924, with the following members present: G. L. Baxter, J. B. Orabb, J. JG. Baker, J. S. McIntyre. E. F. Oampbeíl, J. F. Harris, absent. E. J. Strawn, Mr. Campbell offered the following resolution and moved its adoption: (A resolution authorizing the treasurer of said board of education to sell and deliver to the National Bank of Commerce of Shawnee, at par and accrued interest, all of the described bonds held by said treasurer as an investment for sinking fund).
“All present voting aye, whereon the president declared the resolution adopted, whereupon Crafob moved and Harris seconded it, that the board adjourn and the motion carried.
“Approved May 5th, 1924.”

Upon the conclusion of the testimony the trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence of defendant and rendered judgment for plaintiff and against defendant for. the amount of judgment sought and represented by the coupons declared upon. From this final judgment, the defendant school board appeals.

Appellee says in its brief:

“There was no conflict in the testimony and no controversy as to the facts.”

When objection of plaintiff was sustained by the trial court, the defendant school board offered to prove by witness Estill that when he appeared before the school board in urging the resolution of March 6th, and represented to the school board that they were without funds to run the school and pay the expenses the balance of the fiscal year, such as salaries and other current expenses, that there was on deposit in Mr. Es-till’s bank about $18,000 to the credit! of the school district for that purpose. The court refused the offered testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 258, 275 P. 285, 135 Okla. 253, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-ed-v-american-national-co-okla-1928.