Farmers State Bank of Burbank v. Tipton

1934 OK 709, 38 P.2d 569, 170 Okla. 26, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 662
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
Docket23078
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1934 OK 709 (Farmers State Bank of Burbank v. Tipton) 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
Farmers State Bank of Burbank v. Tipton, 1934 OK 709, 38 P.2d 569, 170 Okla. 26, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 662 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal prosecuted by the Farmers State Bank of Burbank from a judgment of the district court of Osage county.

The record is somewhat confusing and difficult to understand; however, the following is a statement containing those facts necessary to determine the question here presented. The bank will be referred to as plaintiff and Delia Tipton as defendant.

One Dell Tipton borrowed money from the plaintiff bank on December 31, 1928, giving therefor his promissory note in the amount of $775 due April 30, 1929. Said note was secured by a chattel mortgage covering-eight Jersey cows, seven yearlings, 31 shoats, five work horses, and all natural increase. The note was renewed on May 31, 1929, by the execution of a new note and mortgage. Dell Tipton defaulted on Ihe note, and this action was instituted by the plaintiff bank to recover on the note and to foreclose the chattel mortgage. Delia Tipton, the wife of Dell Tipton, and the defendant in error here, filed her answer and special plea, claiming that the major part of the stock covered by the mortgage was her separate property and was owned by her prior to the execution of the note and mortgage. Dell Tipton has become a fugitive from justice, and the plaintiff obtained a default judgment, under the mortgage, as against him. This appeal involves only the rights of the plaintiff bank and the defendant Delia Tipton.

The defendant, in support of her claim, testified that for some time before and after the execution of the note and mortgage, she and her husband, Dell Tipton, lived together on the same farm; that for several years it had been her custom to own property individually, said property consisting, for the most part, of live stock; that this property had been listed separately by the tax assessor, and that she had paid the taxes on the same, or, at least, had given her husband the money with which to pay said taxes; that she did not know of this note and mortgage; that she purchased the stock to which she here asserts ownership as follows: Three head of horses, five Jersey cows, from her husband. (Two other head of horses are here involved, but Delia Tipton makes no claim as to them.) The record shows that this stock was on the farm both before and after the sale to her, and that Dell Tipton used the same in the same manner after the sale as he had before, and there was no other fact or circumstance indicating an open and continued change of possession. The balance of the stock shown in the mortgage either did not exist or was purchased by her from third parties at a distance from the farm. However, the record further discloses in this connection that she gave money to Dell Tipton with which to make these purchases, and that he made all negotiations, including the .consummation of the transactions, and paid for the stock with his own personal checks, and thereafter delivered said stock to Del'a Tipton at the farm.

Mrs. Tipton did not take a bill of sale from her husband, nor did she file an inventory of her separate estate, as provided in section 6612, C. O. S. 1921 (sec. 1658, O. S. 1931).

The trial court submitted the case to the jury, which found that Delia Tipton was the owner of all the stock herein involved, excepting the two horses to which she makes no claim, and that she was entitled to the same as against the claim of the plaintiff bank. This appeal is brought here on numerous asignments of error; however, the briefs of counsel confine themselves solely to assignment of error No. 4, the same being:

“The court erred as a matter of law in overruling the motion for directed verdict made by the plaintiff at the close of all the evidence.”

This prayer was for a directed verdict as to seven head of Jersey cows and five head of horses.

This appeal presents the sole question of whether or not section 6021, O. O. S. 1921 (section 1000S, O. S. 1931), airplies to a transfer of personal property between husband and wife, under the facts in this case. Section 6021, O. O. S. 1921 (section 10008, O. S. 1931), reads:

“Every transfer of personal property other than a thing in action, and every lien thereon, other than a mortgage, when allowed by law, is conclusively presumed, if made by a person having at the time the possession or control of the property, and not accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things transferred, "to be fraudulent and therefore void, against those who are his creditors while he remains in possession, and the successors in interest of such creditors, and *28 against any person on whom his estate devolves in trust for the benefit of others than' himself, and against purchasers or incumbrances in good faith subsequent to the transfer.”

Section 6021 contemplates, both from its very language and from the decisions thereunder, an actual delivery and subsequent, open change of possession (Love v. Hill, 21 Okla. 347, 96 P. 623; Sankey v. Suggs, 111 Okla. 293, 239 P. 149) ; and it appears from an examination of authorities of other jurisdictions that this rule is uniform whether the parties to the transfer be husband and wife or strangers. In the case of Lockhart v. Edge, 167 N. W. 164, the South Dakota Court was called upon to answer the same question as (hat involved herein under a section of their statute which is identical with our section 6021, C. O. S. 1921. In determining that the rule applied to transfers between husband and wife, the South Dakota Court said:

“Was this attempted sale accompanied by an immediate delivery of said personal property, followed by an actual and continued change of possession at all times from the 26th day of May, 1915? To support the court’s finding, the evidence must show delivery and change of possession immediately following the sale.
“The judgment must stand or! fall on what occurred immediately upon the sale in connection with delivery and change of possession. Was there a sufficient delivery and change of possession? No one would claim that there was such a delivery and such change of possession as would be sufficient under any other conditions than those naturally existing between husband and wife. (Cites cases.) The real question, then, is, Shall a different rule be applied under section 2369 where the parties are husband and wife than in the ordinary case ?
“Respondent urges that the filing of the bill of sale should be considered in her favor. In this she is in error. There is no statute authorizing ihe filing of bills of sale and rendering such filing or even a recording thereof, notice to any one. If our statutes authorized such a .filing- and made it constructive notice, such notice might be held to excuse a visible and open change of possession where otherwise it would be required.

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1953 OK 235 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 709, 38 P.2d 569, 170 Okla. 26, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-of-burbank-v-tipton-okla-1934.