Edmundson v. State Ex Rel. Johnson

1937 OK 624, 73 P.2d 150, 181 Okla. 150, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 2, 1937
DocketNo. 27385.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1937 OK 624 (Edmundson v. State Ex Rel. Johnson) 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
Edmundson v. State Ex Rel. Johnson, 1937 OK 624, 73 P.2d 150, 181 Okla. 150, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 77 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This is an appeal from 'a judgment of the district court of Kiowa county.

The State Bank Commissioner filed suit against Harvey T. Edmundson, Walter H. Edmundson, and Alpharetta M. Edmundson, stockholders in the insolvent First Bank of Roosevelt, praying for a judgment for spe *151 cific performance of a contract entered into between the plaintiff and defendants, and for an order requiring the defendants to execute and deliver to the plaintiff a valid conveyance of certain real estate and all personal property and collateral, referred to and made a part of the contract entered into, relative to the liquidation of the insolvent First Bank of Roosevelt, referred to hereinafter as the First Bank. The issue being joined by the answer of defendants, the cause was tried to the court and 'a judgment rendered for plaintiff, canceling mortgage to secure $25,000 note and clearing title to real estate securing same and requiring the conveyance of all the property as prayed for, from which judgment defendants have appealed. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The record discloses that the First Bank of Roosevelt" was declared insolvent on the 19th day of September, 1931, and taken over by the State Bank Commissioner for the purpose of liquidation. The defendants were sole owners of the bank, which had a capital stock of $25,000, and for which sum defendants became liable to the Bank Commissioner for the use and benefit of the depositors and creditors.

It is shown that the insolvent bank had borrowed from the First National B'ank & Trust Company of Oklahoma City, hereinafter referred to as the First National, the sum of $50,000, and for which the defendants had given their personal note and a mortgage upon a portion of the free assets of the bank, and the defendants executed a mortgage upon a portion of their personal property as additional security.

The defendants had become personally liable to other banks and to individuals for the benefit of the First Bank by reason of having given their personal notes in the approximate amount of $25,000. These amounts, added to the $25,000 stockholder’s liability, made defendants personally liable on account of the failed bank in the sum approximately $100,000.

The total liability of the insolvent bank was approximately $407,000. The liability to individual depositors was approximately $160,000.

On December 22, 1931, the Bank Commissioner and the defendants entered into the contract in question relative to the liquidation of the bank 'and were joined therein by the First National in so far as it applied to that bank, and by a majority of the depositors of the bank.

The contract is so lengthy as to prevent us from doing more than giving casual provisions of same.

The contract recites the ownership of the shares of the bank in the defendants, the indebtedness for which the defendants became personally liable by reason of their having executed notes and having placed their personal endorsement upon other and additional notes. The indebtedness of the First B'ank and of the defendants to the First National is fully outlined and agreement made concerning same accordingly.

It was further agreed that the “Bank Commissioner accept as agent and/or as trustee for the First Nation'al Bank and Trust Company of Oklahoma City and for other creditors of the First Bank of Roosevelt, a pledge of all the collateral, real and personal, described on Exhibit F. attached hereto, said collateral to be held, m'anaged, liquidated and disposed of * * * subject to the conditions hereinafter set forth.* * *” It was further provided that if all the creditors and depositors were paid within three years, the balance of the collateral pledged with the Bank Commissioner whs to be redelivered to the defendants, the second parties; that if not paid in full by January 1, 1935, “all of the second parties’ control of the security pledged hereunder * * * shall cease and the B'ank Commissioner and the First National Bank and Trust Company of Oklahoma City may thereafter deal with all collateral pledged to them * * * exactly 'as though this contract had never been entered into.”

The contract further provides that the life insurance policies of W. H. 'and H. T. Edmundson pledged shall be resorted to by the Bank Commissioner and/or the other parties for payment of creditors of the bank and defendants, “only after the exhaustion of all other ’assets and collateral, to the end that such life insurance policies, if in any way possible, will be preserved and redelivered to said second parties.” Under the general provisions of the contract, it again stated that if the bank is not liquidated and depositors and creditors paid in full by January 1, 1935, “then all right, title and interest of the second parties in and to any of the property assigned, transferred, conveyed or pledged under the provisions of this agreement, shall terminate as to the *152 second parties, and tiie first party, subject to the right of the. third party, shall have the absolute right and authority to sell, mortgage or transfer any and all of said property then remaining in his possession or in possession of third party for payment of creditors of the First Bank of Roosevelt.”

Th@ question, then, presented is: Did the giving of the right to mortgage, sell and convey, give the right to sell without advertisement or foreclosure? Were the deeds of trust indefeasible instruments and unconditional conveyances, or were they mortgages?

Let us review the nature of the instruments executed in futherance of the agreement in the contract “to mortgage and/or convey to the first party” the real estate described in Exhibit E and the real estate, stocks, and chattels described in Exhibit F.

The defendants on the 5'th day of January, 1932, executed six instruments styled “Deed of Trust.” The granting clause stated that said parties of the first part (the defendants), in consideration of the covenants and agreements contained in a certain contract dated December 22, 1931, “do by these presents, grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said party of the second part * * * for the purposes of carrying- into effect and satisfying the contract herein referred to .* * *”

The real estate named in the mortgage by defendants to secure the $25,000 note for bank stock obligation was on the same day included in one of the deeds of trust. The mortgage to secure the $25,000 note mentioned had a regular defeasible clause in it and providing for regular mortgage foreclosure upon default.

We think the principal question presented for our consideration here is whether or not these instruments were in fact mortgages, intended to be defeasible in their nature or conditional guaranty conveyed for payment of creditors and depositors of the bank under conditions stated, or were they intended as unqualified conveyances or sales in fee-simple title to the property, real and personal, described therein for purpose of liquidation.

Tiie rule has frequently b«en stated by this court, that:

“Whether a transaction evidenced by an absolute conveyance will be held to be 'a sale or only a mortgage must be determined by a consideration of the peculiar circumstances of each case. The form of the conveyance is not conclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 624, 73 P.2d 150, 181 Okla. 150, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmundson-v-state-ex-rel-johnson-okla-1937.