Board of Education of Town of Ringling v. State Ex Rel. Benton

1935 OK 586, 46 P.2d 325, 172 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 28, 1935
DocketNo. 24843.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 586 (Board of Education of Town of Ringling v. State Ex Rel. Benton) 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 Education of Town of Ringling v. State Ex Rel. Benton, 1935 OK 586, 46 P.2d 325, 172 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 289 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

-This action was brought on behalf of Jefferson county against the *438 board of education of the town of Ringling on warrants issued by such school district during the years 1927 to 1930, aggregating, principal and interest, $31,846.85. It was alleged that the warrants had been transferred by the payees to the First State Bank of Ringling, which bank was the county depository and also the school district depository, and that the warrants were assigned from time to time by the bank to the county as security for county funds on deposit. It was alleged that the bank failed April 13, 1931, and that its deposit liability to the county was $29,954.32. In addition to other defensive matter, the school district pleaded the deposit liability of the bank to the school district, which was an amount exceeding the balance due upon .the warrants. as an offset to the county’s claim, attacked the validity of the bank’s assignment of the warrants to the county, alleged certain misappropriations of school district funds by the bank as. a set-off or counterclaim, and also pleaded negligence of the county treasurer in handling and remitting school district funds to the depository bank as a counterclaim against the county. These defenses were stricken from the answer by the trial court. The State Bank Commissioner intervened, also attacking the validity of the assignment of the warrants by the bank, and sought judgment on the warrants in his favor against the school district to be offset against the bank’s deposit liability to the school district.

The case was tried on a stipulation of facts, and the following matters were not in dispute: The validity of the warrants; the legality of the bank’s title thereto acquired from the payees; the fact of assignment thereof by the bank to the county as security for the county’s deposit; the amount due on' the warrants; the amount of the closed bank’s deposit liability to the county; and that the deposit liability of the closed bank to the school district exceeded the balance due on the warrants. The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff county, and both the school district and the Bank Commissioner have appealed. The parties will be referred to here as the county, school district, and Bank Commissioner.

The chief complaint of the school district is that it was deprived of proper and legal defenses stricken from its answer, and that the court erred in rendering judgment for the county for the amount of the warrants. The Bank Commissioner • complains only that the assignment to the county was invalid and that judgment should have been rendered in his favor on the warrants, and of the allowance of attorneys’ fees by the trial court.

The first contention of the school district is that the trial court erred in striking that portion of paragraph 10 of its answer which alleged in substance that at the time the respective warrants were assigned by the bank to the county, and up to the time the bank was closed, the school district had on deposit a sum in excess of such warrants which constituted a valid set-off against its liability on the warrants. There was no allegation that the deposit liability of the bank to fhe school district was due or matured at any time prior to the closing of the bank. In support of this position the school district contends that the warrants were nonnegotiable. Neither the record nor the brief contains a copy of these warrants, and we decline to pass upon their negotiability, but for the purpose of this decision we shall consider them nonnegotiable.

The action is one at law, and the propriety of the action of the trial court depends upon the law of assignment and set-off. The right of assignment, as well as the remedy of set-off, is governed by the Code of Civil Procedure adopted in 1893, sections 142, 143, and 206 to 212, Okla. Stats. 1931. Section 142 provides that all actions shall be prosecuted by the real party in interest; section 143 that any assignment shall be without prejudice to- any set-off or defense now allowed, except as to transfer of negotiable instruments for value in good faith pripr to maturity. Section 212 provides the conditions under which both may be asserted in the following language:

“When cross-demands have existed .between persons under such circumstances that, if one had brought an action against 1he other, a counterclaim or set-off could have been set up, neither can be deprived of the benefit thereof by the assignment or death of the other; but the two demands must be deemed compensated so far as they equal each other.”

Sections 206 to 211, inclusive, relate to practice and procedure. It is clear that there can be a set-off and compensation of opposing demands- only where there is mutuality between the parties debtor and creditor, and mutuality of demands in the sense that both be matured and capable of supporting a present action for their enforcement. This construction accords with that of similar statutes in other jurisdictions, as stated in 57 Corpus Juris 486:

“Under some statutes, as, for example, *439 those providing in effect that when cross-demands have existed under such circumstances, that if one had brought an action against the other, a counterclaim or set-off could have been set up, neither can be deprived of the benefit thereof by the assignment of the other, * * * it is held that a debtor, when sued by the assignee of the claim, cannot set off or counterclaim against such assignee demands which the debtor held against the assignor at the time of assignment but which matured after the assignment.”

The demand pleaded as a set-off arose from the deposit contract between the bank and the school district independent and unconnected with the warrant contracts between the school district and the payees sued upon by the bank. Section 212 was construed in accordance with the rule stated in Corpus Juris in McMann v. H. F. Wilcox Oil & Gas Co., 121 Okla. 167, 250 P. 780:

‘•The assignment of a demand or chose in action, which, when the conditions of the contract giving rise to the same are complied with, will sustain a cause of action in favor of the assignee, defeats and strikes down the right of the debtor to set off, as a cross-demand, a claim arising by virtue of a separate, independent, and distinct contract of the assignor, when the right of action had not accrued at the time of the assignment.”

See, also, Widdows v. Keaton (D. C. Okla.) 44 F. (2d) 839.

In that case the defendant contended that section 143 referring to set-off as “now' allowed” contemplated the law as it existed prior to the adoption of the- Code. Vice Chief Justice Branson answered that contention at page 169 of 121 Okla. Reports:

“The phraseology ‘now allowed’ is used in contradistinction to the character of claims that could be set off as against the plaintiff’s demand before the adoption of codes or such as ordinarily would confine solely to liquidated demands similar to those allowed by the English 'statute. The Code, by reason of sections analogous to those pointed out above, had extended or enlarged the character of demands which might be asserted by defendant as a set-off, and that is what the phraseology ‘now allowed’ refers to.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 586, 46 P.2d 325, 172 Okla. 437, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-of-town-of-ringling-v-state-ex-rel-benton-okla-1935.