Conway v. Yadon

1928 OK 465, 269 P. 309, 132 Okla. 36, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 677
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 17, 1928
Docket18170
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1928 OK 465 (Conway v. Yadon) 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
Conway v. Yadon, 1928 OK 465, 269 P. 309, 132 Okla. 36, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 677 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

This is an appeal from the district court of Tulsa county. United States Mortgage & Trust Company, as plaintiff, brought suit against A. L. Bowles and wife. Flora Btewles, Susie Conway, Charles P. Yadon, and others. Plaintiff sought judgment on a promissory note for $9,000 executed by Bowles and wife, and for foreclosure of a first mortgage covering lots 13, 14 and 15 in block 11, Morningside addition to Tulsa.

Susie Conway filed her answer and a cross-petition seeking judgment on a series of promissory notes and the foreclosure of a second mortgage on said property securing same. Said notes and mortgage were executed by A. L. Bowles and wife payable to Alice B. Grant, and same were, before maturity, assigned by payee to this cross-petitioning defendant, who is now the owner and holder of same. Said cross-petition further alleged that said notes were executed and delivered by the makers to payee on December 2, 1925, and that said notes are lor the following amounts and mature on the following dates: 1 note for $400- due in four months; 1 note for $1,600 due in lour months; I note, for $1,500 due in six months; 1 note for $1,000 due in eight months; 1 note for $2,000 due in twelve months; 1 note for $2,000 due in eighteen months; 1 note for $3,500 due in two years. Copies of said notes are attached to and made a part of the answer and cross-petition.

Charles P. Yadon, for his answer, adopts the answer of Susie Conway, and, for his cross-petition,. he adopts so much of said cross-petition of Susie Conway as sets • out the original execution and delivery of the series of promissory notes and real estate mortgage securing the same by said A. L. Bowles and wife, but in addition alleges that he became and i-s now the owner and holder of the first note of said series, to wit, the note for $400, by assignment from the payee, which assignment was made on the date of the execution and delivery of said notes and before maturity of either of same, and that said note is secured by the mortgage as -set out in the answer and cross-petition of Susie Conway. He also alleges that Susie Conway is the owner and holder of the other notes in the series also secured by the second mortgage above referred to.

Charles P. Yadon further alleges that the mortgage lien protecting him in the recovery of his $400 note is prior and superior to any claim, title, interest or lien of his co-defendant, Susie Conway, by virtue of the fact that said $400 note bore an earlier maturity date than the notes held by Susie Conway.

The answering and cross-petitioning defendants demanded judgment upon their respective notes and for the foreclosure of the second real estate mortgage securing same, for costs and attorney’s fees as against the makers thereof, and, as between themselves, that their priorities be determined.

During the pendency of the cause and be *37 fore judgment, the original plaintiff passed out of the case by dismissing his petition, leaving the cause to be determined only upon the pleadings filed, proof offered, and the liens and priorities asserted by and between Susie Conway and Charles P. Yadon, cross-petitioners.

A jury was waived and the cause was submitted to the court upon the allegations contained in the pleadings and upon the following stipulation:

“It is agreed that the facts in this case are as follows:
“It is agreed that the facts in this case are as set out in the pleadings, and in addition thereto that the Yadon note was assigned and delivered to Yadon on the same date as the execution of all the notes in this ease and was assigned to him for his commission as a real estate dealer for effecting the sale of the property covered by the mortgage involved in this action.
‘ That the remainder of the notes were retained by the payee, Alice B. Grant, for 30 days or more and then assigned and delivered by her to the defendant, Susie Conway, to wit, in January, 1926; that each of said defendants is now the owner and holder of the note or notes set out in their respective pleadings, and that the only question for the determination of the court is the priority of the liens created by the execution of said notes and by their respective assignments to safcl defendants Yadon and Conway.”

Upon consideration of the pleadings and stipulation a judgment was, by the court, rendered December 13, 1926, in favor of plaintiff in error, Susie Conway, upon the notes aforesaid held by her and for the foreclosure of the real- estate mortgage seeu-ing same and also in favor of defendant in error, Charles P. Yadon, upon the note aforesaid held by him, and for foreclosure of said mortgage; the court, however, at the time, reserved the question of priority as between the parties to this appeal, and later, to wit, on January 31, 1927, rendered a judgment upon the reserved question of priority to the effect that Charles P. Yadon is entitled to participate equally in time and priority on his demand for the note assigned to him in the sum of $400 with the defendant and cross-petitioner, Susie Conway, on the note for $1,600, and that the said demand on note of Charles P. Yadon, on account of its early maturity, is entitled to priority in payment over the remainder of the notes amounting to the principal sum of $10,000, now owned and held by plaintiff in error Susie Conway, for the reason that said $400 note matured by its terms on the same date that said $1,600 note matured, and both of which last notes matured by their terms before the maturity date of the remaining notes aggregating $10,000. That all of said notes were secured by one mortgage dated December 2, 1925, but the notes matured on different dates and that the same were entitled to priority in the order of their maturity.

There was a motion for new trial by Susie Conway, which was overruled with 'exceptions, and she prosecutes this appeal for review as plaintiff in error against Charles P. Yadon, defendant in error, since the other parties have either passed out of the case or have been content with the holding of the trial court.

The assignment of error contains six grounds, but they may be treated under one controlling proposition: Was the judgment of the court as to priority of the notes in question correct?

Perhaps a short statement of the material facts may help to clarify the question. All the notes under view bore the same date, were executed by the same parties, and the several notes, save only the first two notes ($400 note and $1,600'note), matured at different dates. All of said notes were secured by a real estate mortgage covering property in Tulsa. The $400 note was transferred by indorsement on the date of its execution by payee to Charles P. Yadon. Thereafter, in January, 1926, and before maturity of any note in the series, all the remaining notes were transferred by the indorsement of payee to Susie Conway, along with a written assignment of the mortgage. No contention is made that these assignments are irregular in any way or that they are without consideration.

Counsel for the respective parties to this appeal agree that the precise question to be determined is whether, as a matter of law, the two notes first maturing are entitled to priority in lien or payment over the remaining notes of the series.

This question of priority between assignees of separate notes secured by a single real estate mortgage has not.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 465, 269 P. 309, 132 Okla. 36, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-yadon-okla-1928.