Coates v. First Nat. Bank & Trust Co.

1936 OK 80, 55 P.2d 441, 176 Okla. 322, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1936
DocketNo. 26170.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1936 OK 80 (Coates v. First Nat. Bank & Trust 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
Coates v. First Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 1936 OK 80, 55 P.2d 441, 176 Okla. 322, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 181 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

W. J. Wallace and A. E. King commenced this action against plaintiff in error, J. S. Coates, in the district court of 'Oklahoma county to recover judgment upon two promissory notes of $10,000 each. Trial was had to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs for the full amount sued for. After the trial. W. J. Wallace died, and the cause was revived in the name of the First National Bank & Trust Company, a corporation, and Elouise B. Wallace, executor of the estate of W. J. Wallace. Herein the parties will he referred to as in the trial court.

The petition is in the usual form with copies of the notes attached.

Defendant answered alleging that the notes sued upon were executed without any valid, legal, or valuable consideration. Reply by general denial was filed. Defendant thereafter filed an amendment to the answer alleging, in substance, that the only consideration for said notes was an agreement entered into between the parties whereby plaintiffs agreed to secure the passage of an ordinance by the city council of Oklahoma City in which defendant was personally interested, and said notes were to be paid only in the event that plaintiffs were successful in securing the passage of said ordinance, and that said agreement was illegal, void, and against public policy.

Plaintiffs then filed a reply to the answer as amended in which they specifically denied that the consideration for said notes was as alleged by defendant, and .affirmatively alleged that the notes were executed for a good, valid, and legal consideration, to wit, a settlement and compromise of a claim for damages which plaintiffs had against defendant, and the forbearance of a. suit on said claim.

Thereupon defendant filed ran amended answer in which he admitted the execution and delivery of said notes, but alleged that said notes were given without any valuable consideration, and again alleged that the only consideration therefor was for alleged services in connection with an oral agreement on the part of plaintiff to assist in securing the passage of an ordinance by the city council of Oklahoma City extending the oil drilling zone in said city known as the U-7 drilling zone so as to include certain properties covered by an oil and gas lease in which defendant was interested; that said ordinance was passed and that plaintiffs demanded payment for said illegal services, and that the notes were executed and delivered in accordance with said agreement, and that the agreement was illegal and contrary to public policy, and alleging further:

“Defendant, further answering herein and especially in answer to the amended reply of plaintiffs filed herein, expressly denies *323 that the same were executed and delivered in settlement and compromise of any claim for damages held by plaintiffs against answering defendant or that the same were given as a consideration of a promise and agreement to forbear the prosecution of suit thereon. In this connection, and in ihe alternative. defendant further alleges that if said alleged settlement and compromise was orally agreed upon by defendant with the plaintiffs, the same is of no binding force and effect and formed no valid consideration for the notes sued on for the reason that the same was predicated or based upon mutual mistake of fact on the part of both plaintiffs and the defendant that such a claim for damages actually existed, and for the further reason that the same was procured through fraud and deceit in that plaintiffs concealed material facts which were well known to the plaintiffs, but unknown to the defendant, and that plaintiffs fraudulently misled defendant therein and said facts not being within the equal knowledge and equal means of knowledge of defendant, and that said mutual mistake and fraud, misrepresentation, and concealment of the true facts surrounding said alleged claim for damages were not discovered by the defendant until sometime after the execution and delivery of said notes.”

To this amended answer plaintiffs replied denying the allegations as to the alleged agreement concerning the passage' of the ordinance by Oklahoma Oity, and again affirmatively alleging that the true consideration for said notes was the settlement and compromise of a claim for damages which plaintiff had against defendant growing out of a mistake made in an abstract of title which defendant made dated August 2. 1928, covering certain land which was purchased by plaintiffs.

That plaintiffs had three years after August 2. .1928. to sue upon said claim for damages. but that defendant had admitted liability and had given said notes in settlement of said claim and held out the promise to plaintiffs that he would pay said notes until after the statute of limitations had run on said claim, and that defendant had falsely and fraudulently induced plaintiffs to believe that he would pay said notes, and induced plain'.iffs not to bring suit on said claim for damages until after the statute of limitations had run on the claim itself.

At the trial defendant assumed the burden and presented evidence tending to establish his claim that the only consideration for paid notes was the alleged agreement concerning the passage of said ordinance by the city council of Oklahoma Oity. Defendant testified in his own behalf and explained that for sometime before February, 1931, he was interested in oil and gas leases covering land in Oklahoma Oity north of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad and south of Third street in the east part of Oklahoma Oity, known as the Phillips and Mead East-Side addition, and intimated that he could have sold his interest therein for something like $1,000,000, if he could have had said land included within the drilling zone in the city. That in October, 1930. while said proposition was pending, Wallace and King represented that they or one of them had or could exercise influence over certain councilmen to induce them to favor said ordinance: that he agreed to reward them for such services as they might render in the matter, and that- they or one of them subsequently informed defendant that the two councilmen referred to were “all right” on the ordinance. That before the land was admitted into the zone they agreed upon a consideration of $20,000 to be paid to plaintiffs foa* services in said matter. That the ordinance was passed January 12, 1931, and thereafter plaintiffs made claim upon defendant for payment, and that finally on March '24, 1931, said notes were executed and delivered in payment for said alleged services.

He testified in part:

“Q. What, then, was the consideration for which you executed and delivered these-two notes to W. J. Wallace and Arthur E. King? A. Services rendered in getting that U Zone extended, that lease into the U Zone. Q. After the ordinance passed, January 12, 1931, and up to the date of the signing of these notes, between those dates, did Wallace or King either one make any further claim or demand upon you by reason of the alleged error in the abstract back in 1928? A. No, sir. Q. Were these notes executed and delivered for and in settlement of that claim in any way? A. No. sir. Q. Did W. J. Wallace or Arthur E. King execute and deliver to you for the Coates Abstract Company, or for yourself, any receipt or release by reason of the alleged error in the abstract at the time these notes were executed, or any time prior thereto? A. No, sir.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 80, 55 P.2d 441, 176 Okla. 322, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coates-v-first-nat-bank-trust-co-okla-1936.