Burke Grain Co v. Stinchcomb

1918 OK 307, 173 P. 204, 70 Okla. 89, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1918
Docket8701
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1918 OK 307 (Burke Grain Co v. Stinchcomb) 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
Burke Grain Co v. Stinchcomb, 1918 OK 307, 173 P. 204, 70 Okla. 89, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 745 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

COLLIER, 0.

This action was commenced in the county court of Oklahoma county by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error to recover the sum of $234.36, on account of overdrafts upon the sale of six ears of corn, and averred that the said matter had been adjusted by arbitration by and between the parties to this action, and that the board of arbitration had awarded the plaintiff herein the sum of $234.-36, and that said defendant in error refused to abide by said arbitration decision, although he had previously agreed to do so, in writing.

The defendant filed an unverified answer, denying the allegations of the petition, and set up in said answer a cross-action, in which he prayed for costs. A supplemental answer was filed by defendant, which is in the following words:

‘‘Comes now the defendant in above entitled and numbered cause, leave of the court first having been had and obtained, and files this supplemental answer, and by v ay of additional defense alleges that said plaintiff in this action is not the real party in interest, in that any recovery that may be had will become the property of the heirs at law of William Burke, and of other persons whose names are unknown, and who are not stockholders of the plaintiff, and to Whom there has been an assignment of the cause of action herein sued upon.
“Said defendant prays that this supplemental answer be considered as part of, and in connection with his original answer filed herein, and that by reason of the facts as herein stated the plaintiff take nothing by this action, and that the defendant recover his costs.”

To said answer of the defendant the plaintiff filed a reply denying each and every material allegation contained in said answer and supplemental answer. By agreement the case was tried to the court, a judgment rendered by the court in favor of the defendant upon the ground that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, to which judgment the plaintiff in error duly executed. Timely motion was made for a new trial, which was overruled, and excepted to, and an appeal perfected to this court. Hereinafter the parties will be designated as they were in the trial court.

The answer in this case is not verified, and therefore it is admitted that the plaintiff is ai corporation, and it was entirely unnecessary on the part of the plaintiff to offer evidence to prove that plaintiff was a corporation, and it is therefore unnecessary to recite the evidence as to the fact that plaintiff was a corporation.

The matei-ial uncontradicted evidence was that the corporation was winding up its business preparatory to a final winding up or dissolution of the company; that Mrs. Burke owns practically all of the stock of the Burke.Grain Company; that prior to Mr. Burke’s death one Mr. Harroun, or Mr. W. H. Harroun’s family, owned a block of this stock, and sold their stock to Mr. Burke; that the company did not transfer any of its assets to Mr. Burke, or Mrs. Burke, or any of its stockholders; that the Burke Grain Company owns the assets; that Mr. Burke did not own the entire assets of the company, never owned any of the assets, but that he owned stock of the company, in the sense that ownership of the stock would amount to ownership of the assets; he owned all of the assets of the company represented by his stock, but he never owned any of the assets of the company; the assets of the company always belonged to and still belongs to the company; that at the time Burke’ bought the Harroun stock there were certain doubtful claims, including the claim here sued on, and that it was agreed between Harroun and Burke that when the assets of the company represented by these doubtful claims were distributed by the company a certain part of them should go to Harroun’s family and a certain part to Burke, but this was an arrangement simply between Burke and Harroun, to which the corporation was not a party whatever; that the claim in this suit was never assigned or transferred by the corporation to either Burke or Harroun or any other stockholder or any other person; that the corporation was still intact and annually making its reports to the United States Internal Revenue Department, and that the company had nothing whatever to do with the arrangement between Harroun’s family and Burke, by which it was agreed that, when the affairs of the company were finally wound up and the assets divided, the proceeds of certain assets, instead of going to Burke, who had bought the Harroun stock, should be divided between Burke and Harroun’s family; that that was simply a private arrangement between them, and the company had nothing to do with it; that in the sense in which the transaction between Harroun and Burke was, it may be said that he was interested, but he was not interested in the sense that he or his family own the claim sued on or any part of it.

Prior to the instiution of the suit, the plaintiff and defendant, the defendant do *91 Ing business under the name and style of tbe Stincbeomb Grain Company, entered into an agreement, which was offered in evidence, and is in the following words and figures, to wit:

“We, the parties interested, mutually agree to abide by the decision of the arbitration committee of the Oklahoma Grain Dealers’ Association with the right to appeal to the Tri-State appeal committee. It is further understood and agreed between the parties to this arbitration that the findings of the board shall be final determination of the matter in controversy between the parties of this arbitration, and shall be binding and have the same force and effect as a judgment of a court of record”

—and also offered in evidence a copy of the decision of the arbitration board of the Oklahoma Grain Dealers’ Association at Oklahoma City, which award is in the following words and figures:

“Decision of the Arbitration Board of the Oklahoma Grain Dealers’ Ass’n. In Session at Oklahoma City May 17, 1013. Burke Grain Co., St. Joseph, Mo. v. Stinchcomb Grain Co., Oklahoma City.
“In the consideration of the above-entitled case, we find that the contention of the defendant that the plaintiff violated his contract by refusing to honor the defendant’s drafts is not well taken. We hold that it is no violation of contract when it appears as it did in this case that the shipper had overdrawn on the shipments, for two reasons : First, the contract specifically provided that there should be sufficient margin left to make sure that there would be no overdraft arising from shortage in weights or differences in grades; second, this defendant knew when he was making these drafts, even after the agreement was entered into to leave a 1-cent margin, that he was overdrawing unless he got a much more liberal inspection at destination than was placed on the grain by the chief grain inspector of the Omaha Grain Exchange, where the shipments were made from.
“It is a well-established fact that any purchaser is clearly within his rights to refuse the payment of or ask for the reduction of a draft for cause, and thereby does not violate his contract or release the shipper from his.
“It is therefore ordered that this defendant, the Stinchcomb Grain Company, pay the plaintiff the full amount of their claim. $234.-36, and we assess the costs of this arbitration to the said defendant.
“Ü. T. Clemmons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 307, 173 P. 204, 70 Okla. 89, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-grain-co-v-stinchcomb-okla-1918.