Cooke v. Coronado Oil Co.

1925 OK 841, 240 P. 739, 112 Okla. 240, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1925
Docket15630
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1925 OK 841 (Cooke v. Coronado Oil 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
Cooke v. Coronado Oil Co., 1925 OK 841, 240 P. 739, 112 Okla. 240, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 594 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, C.

April 8, 1917, the Coronado Oil Company, a New Jersey corporation with its principal office in Newark, N. J., of which George G. Cooke, plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, was president and general manager, ;owned certain oil and gas leases in Nowata, Tulsa, and McIntosh counties in this state and, desiring to buy other oil lands, borrowed $150,000 from Wm. Allen Black, a Canadian citizen, and mortgaged the property to secure its payment. Later, Cooke executed mortgages upon 8,000 acres of land held by him in trust for the company as additional security for the.$150,000 so borrowed. The Coronado Oil Company also owned 5,000 additional acres bought . frjom the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, upon which full and final payments had not been .made. That land was also held in the name of George G. Cooke. In December, 1918, it became necessary for the Coronado Oil Company to raise the necessary money to pay the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations about $17,000 as final payment on the lands. To that end an agreement was entered into in New York City on the 28th day of December, 1918, wherein Black agreed to advance the $17,000 and Cooke and the Coronado Oil Company agreed to convey the land here involved to Black to secure its payment, with an agreement to be signed by Black to reconvey the land when the indebtedness due him was paid, the papers to be held by W. A. Howell, as escrow agent, until the final payments were made by Black. This agreement, the deed from Cooke to Black, and Black’s agreement to reconvey upon payment of the indebtedness due him, were deposited with Howell, as escrow agent. Black delivered to him the sum of $17,000. Upon the receipt of that money Howell went to Oklahoma, made final payment, and the deed was delivered to Mr. Black and placed of record. The deed was dated December 27, 1918. Soon thereafter Cooke was ousted from his position as president of the company, since which time he has had no control or management of that company’s business. Upon change of management the Coronado Oil Company attempted to operate its properties in' Oklahoma under some character of a trust agreement until July, 1921, when the trustees ceased to operate it, because of inability to meet the operating expenses, and turned the properties over to Black. On the 27th day of September, 3921, at a special meeting of the stockholders of the Coronado Oil Company, which was held for the purpose of devising some way of getting relief from its financial difficulties, a resolution was adopted authorizing the directors to take the necessary steps for that purpose.

Pursuant to that resolution assignments of all the oil and gas leases in Tulsa, No-wata, and McIntosh counties were executed *242 to Black, and lie took charge of all the properties of the company in the state. He thereafter operated the leases and paid taxes on the property, [keeping accounts thereof. At the time this loan was made to the company by Black, the company was indebted to George G. Cooke, its president. After he was relieved from the presidency of the company, a note was executed to him for the amount due, and in 1921 he commenced suit against the Coronado Oil Company in the district court of Tulsa county, and November 13, 1922, a judgment was rendered in his favor against the Coronado Oil Company for $29,294.66. A transcript of that judgment was filed in the Office of the' court clerk in Pittsburg county, and affidavits showing the pendency of the present action were also filed in Hughes and Coal counties.

This suit was commenced in the district court of Pittsburg county January 23, 1923, by George G. Cooke against the Coronado Oil Company and Wm. Allen Black to have the deeds executed by the plaintiff, George G. Cooke, to Wm. Allen Black adjudged to be mortgages, alleging that it had been fully paid, and to have his judgment against the Coronado Oil Company declared to be a prior and superior lien to that of the defendant Black.

The defendant Black, by his answer and cross-petition, denied generally each and every allegation of plaintiff’s petition and alleged that the warranty deed in question was in fact a mortgage and executed to secure the payment of the monies loaned to him by the Coronado Oil Company, and asked to have the mortgage foreclosed. The plaintiff, Cooke, by his reply, alleged that the warranty deed to the 5,000 acres of land in Cooke, Pittsburg, and Hughes counties, was given as a mortgage to secure the $17,000 advanced to make the final payments on the land only, and it had been fully repaid by extinguishing the mortgage lien, and by an amended reply alleged that the defendant Black had been fully repaid for all the money loaned by him to the Coronado Oil Company by transferring to him all of the property of the Coronado Oil Company situated in Nowata. Tulsa, and McIntosh counties.

The defendant Coronado Oil Company filed general denial to • plaintiff’s petition, and in a separate answer to the cross-petition of the defendant Wm. Allen Black, admitted that the deeds executed by that company and by George G. Cooke were in fact mortgages, and admitted that the sum claimed by him was just, due, correct, and unpaid.

Judgment was for the defendant Black, and George G. Cooke, plaintiff, has appealed.

Error in overruling plaintiff’s motion to suppress the deposition of the defendant Wm. Allen Black, taken before a notary public in Canada, and in admitting that deposition in evidence, is urged as grounds for reversal: (a) Because it was not affirmatively shown that the notary public-had authority to administer an oath or that he was in fact a notary public; (b) because Wm. Allen Black, being a party to the action, was not a witness within the meaning of the statute permitting the evidence of a v itness to be taken. by deposition ; and (c) because it was not affirmatively made to appear at the trial that the defendant Black was unable to attend! the trial as a witness, due to some legal cause.

(a) Section 615, C. S. 1921, provides that depositions may be taken out of this state by a notary public. The Supreme Court of Kansas in Re Huron, 48 Pac. 574, in construing a similar statute, held that the general power without any exception or limitation is given to notaries public to take depositions. In R. C. L., vol. 8, page 1143, it is said that an officer taking depositions is presumed to have authority to do so tuitil the contrary appears.

At the time the -deposition was taken, in response to questions asked by the attorney for plaintiff, the notary public answered, “I am a notary public for the Province of .Quebec.” When asked by whom he was appointed or commissioned, he answered, “By the body known as the Board of Notaries. It is constituted by the statutes of the provincial Legislature.” When asked if he knew the date and number of the statute, he answered, “I cannot tell you that at the moment, but I can supply the information if desired.” No further questions were asked him.

The only authority cited by plaintiff in error in support of this contention is IS Corpus Juris 619:

“The notary public has no such authority (to administer oaths) under the common law. I-Iis power in this regard is-purely statutory, and will not be .enlarged by implication.”

Conceding this to be a correct statement of the common law, we think it has no application here. The testimony of the no *243

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 841, 240 P. 739, 112 Okla. 240, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-coronado-oil-co-okla-1925.