Commerce Trust Co. v. State

1916 OK 502, 157 P. 717, 59 Okla. 14, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1076
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 2, 1916
Docket6737
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1916 OK 502 (Commerce Trust Co. v. State) 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
Commerce Trust Co. v. State, 1916 OK 502, 157 P. 717, 59 Okla. 14, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1076 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BURFORD, C.

The state of

Oklahoma brought three actions in the district court of Caddo county against J. A. Dinkier, A. J. Morris, and Frank Carpenter, separately, upon promissory notes, of which the state of Oklahoma alleged it was the owner and holder. The defendants Dinkier and Morris paid the amount due on the notes into cotu-t, and alleged that the Commerce Trust Company claimed the notes, and prayed- that said Commerce Trust Company might be interpleaded. Frank Carpenter answered, admitting the execution of the notes, and likewise set up that the Commerce Trust Company claimed said notes and made a like request for interpleader. The Commerce Trust Company filed its interplea in each of said actions, in which it is denied that the plaintiff was the owner and holder of said respective notes, and alleged the execution of the note by the maker, and further alleged that, prior to the maturity of said note, the Commerce Trust Company, for a valuable consideration and in due course, became the owner of the same, and was at the time of the filing of said interplea such owner and holder, and prayed for judgment on said notes. The thre actions, involving *15 the samp questions. wer' consolida! ed and went to trial, the state upon the one hand claiming the proceeds of the notes, and the Commerce Trust Company on the other hand asserting the same claim. Judgment was • rendered for the state on a trial by a jury, and after motion for new trial was filed and overruled the interpleader, the Commerce. Trust Company, brings the case here for review.

It was admitted by all parties that on the 3d day of June, 1913, the bank commissioner of the state of Oklahoma took charge of the Anadarko State Bank, and proceeded to administer its assets; that the depositors of said bank were paid from the depositors’ guaranty fund, which was required to advance a large amount of money for said purpose, and that said funds had not been repaid from the assets of the bank.

The testimony on behalf of the trust company tended to show that some time prior to the failure of the bank, Boone Hite, the cashier thereof, and his two brothers had executed a certain note for $25,000 to the Commerce Trust Company for the- benefit of the Anadarko State Bank; that said funds had been placed to the credit of the Ana-darko State Bank and used by it; that as collateral security for the payment of said note there was deposited with the Commerce Trust Company out of the assets of the Anadarko State Bank certain notes made’by individuals to it; that among said notes was a note of one Topley; that this Topley note had been taken by the Anadarko State Bank, and that to secure said note, which was in the principal sum of $2,200, there had been taken as collateral the notes of various Indians, aggregating some $8,000 or $10,000; that these collateral notes were not transmitted to the Commerce Trust Company with the Topley note, but that it alone was sent and its collateral retained by the Anadarko State.Bank, hold, however as a pledge for the payment of the Topley note in the hands of the Commerce Trust Company; that on or about the 29th day of May, the Anadarko State Bank anticipated that the Topley note would be paid, by reason of the fact that an Indian payment was then in progress, and requested its return by the Commerce Trust Company, sending in lieu thereof the notes of Morris, Dinkier, and Carpenter, which were involved in the instant case, and that said three notes were received by the Commerce Trust Company and the exchange made. It further appeared from the evidence that the Morris, Dinkier, and Carpenter notes were forwarded by one Yates, assistant cashier of the Ana-darko State Bank, at the direction of Ortns-by Hite, who was neither officer, stockholder, nor director of the Anadarko State Bank, and who testified that in the absence of his brother, Boone Hite, the cashier, he directed the affairs of the bank. The testimony further tended to show that there was still due an indebtedness of about $5,000 on the original $25,000 note given by the Hite brothers. •- Upon this testimony the interpleader rested its case.

The testimony on behalf of the state tended to show that the letter of transmittal, by which the three notes in question were sent to the Commerce Trust Company for exchange, was not written on May 29th, as it purported, but at some later date, and it was alleged by the state in its reply, and insisted at the trial, that the Commerce Trust Company obtained possession of these notes by fraud, and that there was no indebtedness on the Hite note. It was further shown that about the time the notes were sent to the Commerce Trust Company, Boone Hite, the cashier of the Anadarko State Bank, was in Kansas City at the Commerce Trust Company endeavoring to arrange for further credit, and that such credit was refused, and that thereupon it became apparent that the bank must fail. It was further shown that the Topley notes were returned by the Commerce Trust Company and received by the bank commissioner, and by him returned to the Commerce Trust Company, and the delivery of the Dinkier, Morris, and Carpenter notes demanded. It was not definitely shown whether or not the Topley note had been collected, and', if so, by whom, although the assistant bank commissioner testified that lie thought it had not been collected. It was shown, however, that the collateral which had been originally given as security for the Topley note was taken by the bank commissioner, and by him, at least, partially collected, and that a portion of it had been delivered to a Mr. Hammert, who was a joint maker with Topley upon one note of $1,000 in the Anadarko State Bank, for which the officers of the bank insisted there was no collateral. The trust company took the position at the trial, in contradiction of its interplea, that the three' notes in question were held as collateral to the note of Hite brothers, but on the other hand Boone Hite, who testified as a witness for the trust company, insisted in his testimony that the notes put up with the trust company were in all instances sold by the bank, and should have been indorsed without recourse, ánd that the fact that these three notes were not so indorsed was a mistake. Upon these issues the trial court instructed the jury as follows:

*16 “You are further instructed that if you find and believe from the evidence by a preponderance thereof that in each of said causes the Anadarko State Bank, before its failure, as the owner of the notes sued on in said cause in due course of business sold each of said notes to the intervener, the Commerce Trust Company would be entitled to recover herein against the plaintiff, and it would be your duty to so find your verdict; but, on the other hand, if you find and believe from the evidence, by a preponderance thereof, that the Anadarko State Bank as the owner of said notes sued upon and in due course of business before its failure sent the said notes to the intervener, the Commerce Trust Company of Kansas City, and deposited the same as collateral security for any indebtedness owed by the Anadarko State Bank or the Hite brothers to the said trust company, and you so find from the evidence, then you are instructed that the plaintiff the state of Oklahoma would be entitled to recover against the intervener, the Commerce Trust Company, and you should so find.”

To this instruction the Commerce Trust Company excepted, and alleges in this court that the giving thereof was error.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Strain v. Wells
1923 OK 1054 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 502, 157 P. 717, 59 Okla. 14, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commerce-trust-co-v-state-okla-1916.