Detroit Graphite Co. v. Carney

1935 OK 1151, 53 P.2d 584, 175 Okla. 583, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 932
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 26, 1935
DocketNo. 24004.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1151 (Detroit Graphite Co. v. Carney) 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
Detroit Graphite Co. v. Carney, 1935 OK 1151, 53 P.2d 584, 175 Okla. 583, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 932 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

This is an action by the Detroit Graphite Company, a corporation, against J. R. Carney, an individual doing business as the J; R. Carney Company, Charles M. Dunning Construction Company, a corporation, Waite Phillips, and the Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., of London. The questions involved arise under the materialman’s lien law of the state.

The trial resulted in a money judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant J. R. Carney, and in a judgment denying recovery in favor of plaintiff against any of the other defendants. The defendants, other than J. R. Carney, have presented a cross-appeal in which they urge that the trial court erroneously failed to allow them any attorney’s fee.

The facts material to a determination of the issues in this case are as follows:

The defendant Waite Phillips, as the owner of real estate situated in the city of Tulsa, made a contract with the defendant Charles M. Dunning Construction Company, as general contractor, for the construction and painting of a building on said property, the building to be known as the Phil-cade Building. The general contractor then made a subcontract with the defendant J. R. Carney to do the painting on the building. The defendant Carney then ordered from the plaintiff, Detroit Graifhite Company, certain materials and paints of the aggregate value of $4,166.39 to be used by Carney in carrying out his subcontract. This order was placed in Jtfiy, 1929. The materials were delivered from time to time by the plaintiff, the last of the deliveries being in the early part of the year 1930. However, long before the delivery had been completed, the defendant Carney became anxious to collect a part of the contract price provided by his subcontract, and in order to do so, he went to tlie Detroit Graphite ' Company and advised them that for the purpose of making collections it would be necessary for him to present to the principal contractor some evidence that the material bill had been paid. In order to assist Carney in making his collection the Detroit Graphite Company accepted from him a check with a secret agreement that the same would not be immediately cashed and delivered to Carney a receipted bill for the entire amount of materials ordered. The bill consisted of an itemized statement of the account showing the amount thereof to be $4,166.39 with a notation indorsed thereon in the following language: “9-1-29 Paid by check No. 343, Detroit Graphite Company, Ralph Bynum.” Carney then presented the receipted bill to the Charles M. Dunning Construction Company for the purpose of obtaining the payment of a part of the amount payable under his subcontract. However, before the construction company would make any payment on the bill, it called the plaintiff by telephone for confirmation and was advised that the bill had been paid. In connection with this telephone conversation the testimony of the agent of the Detroit Graphite Company is to the effect that he said, in substance, “Yes, the bill has been paid; I now have the chock before me.” In reliance upon the apparent fact that the bill had been paid, the principal contractor then made to Mr. Carney a substantial payment on the subcontract price, and subsequently, from time to time, made additional payments until Carney had been paid more than the amount of plaintiff’s account. These payments were all made during the time when the construction company believed that the plaintiff’s account had been paid in full.

On February 19, 1930, which was more than five months after the check had been delivered by Carney to the plaintiff, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant construction company advising it that the check had not in fact been paid. Thereafter the construction company made no further payments to the defendant Carney, but the remainder of the amount of the subcontract price was paid to laborers and materialmen who worked under the subcontractor and who would have had liens had they not been paid. It is important to notice in connection with the check that, although a secret *585 understanding existed between the plaintiff and Oarney that the check would not be immediately presented for payment, the construction company was never advised of this secret understanding until February of 1930, and until that time had no notice or knowledge that the check had not in fact been paid. Neither was the construction company ever advised that the plaintiff did not expect to present the check for payment in the regular course of business, or that the check had not in fact been presented for payment. The evidence discloses that at the time the plaintiff received the check from Oarney, it was expected that Carney would thereby be able to make collections from the principal contractor, and would use such collections for the purpose of meeting the check. He did not do so. Plaintiff then brought this action for the purpose of recovering from the principal contractor and owner under the provisions of the materialman’s lien law of the state.

The trial court properly held that the plaintiff was by reason of its conduct es-topped from recovering from either the contractor or the owner of the building. AH of the elements of equitable estoppel are present in this ease. The plaintiff concealed from the defendant construction company the fact that there existed between itself and Oarney a secret understanding that the check would not be immediately presented for payment; by its conduct it led the plaintiff to believe that the bill had in fact been paid. This for the ' purpose of assisting the defendant Oarney in making collections on the subcontract price from the principal contractor. The principal contractor made such payments, thereby altering its position to its detriment. The plaintiff cannot now assume a _ different position for the purpose of collecting its account.

Appellants urge that the delivery of a check does not, as a matter of law, constitute payment, but is only conditional, and, unless the check is paid when presented, there is, in fact, no payment. See Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Eakins et al., 143 Okla. 52, 287 P. 402. It is true that as between the parties the acceptance of Carney’s check by the plaintiff did not in fact pay the bill. While a check is only conditional payment as between the parties, it is to be expected that such an instrument will be presented for payment promptly in the regular course of business. If such- an instrument is not honored upon presentment, the fact that an account has not in truth been paid will be soon ascertained. Checks are customarily' and commercially used for the liquidation of current accounts. The defendant construction company cannot in this case be assumed to have known that the check of Carney was being used as a substitute for a promissory note.

Although the principal contractor in this case was aware of the fact • that payment had been made by check, he had the right to presume that the check would be promptly presented for payment and that the plaintiff in this case, knowing the purpose for which the receipted bill was to be used, would promptly advise it, the principal contractor, if the check was not honored when presented. The plaintiff did not advise the principal contractor that the check had been presented and dishonored for the simple reason that this had not been done owing to the secret understanding between the plaintiff and the subcontractor Carney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1151, 53 P.2d 584, 175 Okla. 583, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detroit-graphite-co-v-carney-okla-1935.