Enid Bank & Trust Co. v. Yandell

1936 OK 203, 56 P.2d 835, 176 Okla. 550, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 3, 1936
DocketNo. 25097.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1936 OK 203 (Enid Bank & Trust Co. v. Yandell) 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
Enid Bank & Trust Co. v. Yandell, 1936 OK 203, 56 P.2d 835, 176 Okla. 550, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 261 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Eor convenience, the parties will be referred to here as they appeared below.

The petition in this ease was filed January 9, 1932. Plaintiffs were depositors in the Enid Bank & Trust Company, one of the defendants in this ease. Joseph H. Yandell acted for himself and wife in all the transactions involved in this action. Upon November 21, 1930, O. J. Fleming, president of the Enid Bank & Trust Company, offered to sell plaintiffs 6y2 per cent, preferred stock of the Oklahoma Natural Gas Corporation for $95 per share.. As a part of the offer, it was stated that the bank would be back of said stock, as the hank would agree to repurchase said stock at any interest-paying date.

Plaintiffs accepted said offer and agreed to buy five shares. On November 25, 1930, delivery of stock was' made, the stock was paid for, and the agreement to repurchase was executed. The agreement covering the sale and repurchase was in the following words and figures:

“Ed Fleming, President, Vice.
“J. A. Murphy, Trust Officer.
“C. R. Story, Cashier.
“W. T. Haury, Asst. Cashier.
“Martin H. Miller, Asst. Cashier.
“Winifred Major, Asst. Cashier.
“O. J. Fleming, President.
“The Enid Bank & Trust Company
“Capital and Surplus $250,000.00
“Enid, Oklahoma
“November 25th, 1930.
“Agreement.
“This Agreement is to this Effect:
“The Enid Bank and Trust Company, Enid, Oklahoma, have sold to Joseph H. Yandell and Olive F. Yandell, Five (5) Shares of Oklahoma Natural Gas Corporation Stock, Certificate No. SP-012679, at the price of Ninety-five ($95) Dollars per share.
“It is hereby agreed that the Enid Bank and Trust Company, will repurchase the above-described stock at any interest-paying date, should Joseph H. and Olive F. Yandell desire to sell such stock.
“Enid Bank and Trust Company,
“By O. J. Fleming, President.”
“OJF/Mss

On September 22, 1931, plaintiffs, through Joseph H. Yandell, personally notified the Enid Bank & Trust Company that they desired to resell to said bank the Oklahoma Natural Gas Corporation stock theretofore purchased from the bank on the next interest-paying date, which was November 1, 1931. The bank failed to repurchase at the next interest-paying date, although tender of the stock was made at that time.

At the time of suit, the other .defendants in this case had purchased all the assets of the Enid Bank & Trust Company and assumed all its liabilities, and for that reason they were also made defendants in this ease.

In plaintiffs’ petition they make a tender back to said bank of said stock and ask for judgment for the amount paid therefor with interest from November' 1, 1931.

A joint answer for all defendants was filed. In substance, the answer is a general denial; a special denial that the transaction was had in the ordinary and general course of business; special denial that the transaction was within the scope of the banking and trust powers of the Enid Bank & Trust Company; an admission that the defendants other than the Enid Bank & Trust Company had purchased the assets of said bank; an admission of the execution of the agreement above to repurchase, but a special denial that O. J. Fleming, as president of the Enid Bank & Trust Company, had any authority, express or implied, to make such a contract on behalf of the bank; a special denial that the Enid Bank & Trust Company knew that such a contract had been made; a special denial that the contract to repurchase was a contract of the Enid Bank & Trust Company, and a denial that any. liability was created against the Enid Bank & Trust Company by virtue of such agreement. Plaintiffs replied by way of a general denial.

On April 8, 1933, a jury was waived and the case was tried to the court. At the conclusion of all the evidence offered by plaintiffs, defendants demurred. The demurrer was overruled. The defendants elected to stand on their demurrer and judgment was rendered for plaintiffs against defendants for $475, the original purchase price of the stock, with interest at 6 per cent, from November 1, 1931. A motion for a new trial was filed within the statutory time, was overruled on April 17, 1933, and the ease was then lodged in this court within the time required by law for review.

Plaintiffs in error present several grounds for reversal, but they all can be summarized in the general proposition 'that the Enid Bank & Trust Company had no authority under the laws and under its charter to *552 enter into the transaction here complained of, and even if the bank had such authority, O. J. Fleming, as president, was not shown to have been authorized to so obligate the bank, and that the transaction as carried on was done and had without the knowledge of the board of directors or of the bank, and therefore the contract sued on was not a contract of the Enid Bank & Trust Company, and no liability against the bank was created by virtue thereof. All of these contentions might be grouped in the statement that the contract sued on was ultra vires the bank, and, even if not, the president was not shown to have any authority to execute such a contract for the bank.

These questions were presented in the trial by way of demurrer to the petition, objection to the introduction of any evidence, objection to the introduction of certain evidence, and demurrer to the plaintiffs’ evidence. It should be borne in mind that the defendants stood on their demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence and presented no evidence by way of defense. Hence, the case must be determined on the pleadings and on the evidence offered by plaintiffs.

While plaintiffs’ petition is not as definite and certain as it might be, we do think it fairly charges the Enid Bank & Trust Company solicited plaintiffs to buy stock from it; that they agreed to buy certain shares at a stipulated price; that a few days later the deal was consummated; the certificate of stock was delivered and the purchase price was paid; that incorporated in and as a part of the agreement to sell was an agreement to repurchase; that the entire agreement covering both the sale and repurchase was reduced to writing, and that agreement was incorporated in and made a part of the petition by exhibit, and that a demand for repurchase with tender of stock was made in accordance with the agreement, which was refused.

The evidence fully sustains these allegations. That a banking institution under the laws of Oklahoma can only carry on as a part of its regular business, such business as the state laws and its charter authorize, and that it can only act through its board of directors and its officers and others duly authorized, are propositions which need no citation of authority or argument to sustain.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 203, 56 P.2d 835, 176 Okla. 550, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enid-bank-trust-co-v-yandell-okla-1936.