First Nat. Bank of Ada v. Stephenson

1926 OK 432, 247 P. 993, 119 Okla. 46, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 4, 1926
Docket16540
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1926 OK 432 (First Nat. Bank of Ada v. Stephenson) 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
First Nat. Bank of Ada v. Stephenson, 1926 OK 432, 247 P. 993, 119 Okla. 46, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 262 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, O.

An action was commenced in the district court of Carter county on October 7, 1923, by the defendant in error, H. A. Stephenson, as plaintiff, against the Merchants & Planters National Bank of Ada, Okla., G. D. Drain, K. A Drain, and Bose Johnson, as defendants, to quiet the title of the defendant in error, Stephenson, to approximately 600 acres of land in Carter county.

It appears that in the year 1920, H. A. Stephenson was the owner of the land described in his petition, and on that date he, together with Leon Stephenson, who was under contract with H. A. Stephenson to convey Stephenson 50 acres of the land, conveyed tihe entire 600 acres to K. A. Drain. At the same time a contract was entered .into between Stephenson and Drain, enson some 200 acres known as the “farm whereby Drain agreed to reconvey to Stephland,” ■ when certain indebtedness against the land had been paid by Drain.

On the 22nd day of December, 1921, G. D. Drain, who was the father of K. A Drain, to whom the land had previously been conveyed by K. A. Drain, executed a mortgage to. the Merchants & Planters National Bank covering the entire 600 acres, in which K. A. Drain and Nettie Drain, his wife, joined, to secure an alleged .promissory note in the sum of $5,712.23.

The object of the action by H. A. Stephenson -was to quiet his title to. the entire 600 acres, not only as against the Drains, but against the Merchants & Planters National Bank as well. Service of summons having been had upon the Merchants & Planters Bank, a default judgment was entered against it on the 8th day of .November, 1923, quieting Stephenson’s title in the land as against the claim of the Merchants & Planters Bank, and continuing the cause for service as to the other defendants.

Service was later obtained upon the Drains, and thereafter, on the 4th day of December, 1923, the First National Bank of Ada, having obtained leave of court, filed its plea of intervention in which it set up a claim to the land under the mortgage of the Merchants & Planters Bank, alleging that the note and mortgage had been assigned to it by the Merchants & Planters Bank.

Amended pleadings were afterwards filed by all of the parties, and in reply to the amended plea of intervention of the First National Bank of Ada, the defendant, in error Stephenson, among other things, pleaded the former judgment in the action against the claims of intervener, alleging that at the Merchants & Planters Bank in bar of the time he filed his original action, no assignment of the mortgage of the Merchants & Planters Bards to intervener, First National Bank, had ’been filed for record in Carter county, and that he was without actual uotice of the claims of the intervener at the time he obtained his judgment.

On request of intervener, First National Bank of Ada, the court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and rendered final judgment denying the claims of the intervener under its alleged mortgage, and in favor of the defendant in error Stephenson, quieting his title in 200 acres of the land, and in favor of the Drains quieting *47 their title in 400 acres of the land against the claims of all persons.

Motion lor a new trial was filed by the intervener, heard, and overruled, and it appeals. There is no controversy here, as we understand it, between H. A. Stephenson and the Drains, over the disposition made by the trial court in its judgment of their claims in the land, and as we view the case, if the trial court correctly concluded, as a matter of law, that the claims of the intervener had been barred by the former judgment of Stephenson against thu Merchants & Planters Bank, this judgment settled every controverted issue in the case.

Tf intervener was bound by the former judgment, and that judgment operated finally to confirm the title of H. A. Stephenson in the land, as against the claims of intervener under the mortgage pleaded by it, intervener could not be affected in anyway by the nature of the judgment thereafter rendered as between Stephenson and the Drains. It would effectually bar any claim in the land set apart to the Drains in the judgment, as well as in the lands set apart to Stephenson. Therefore, the crucial question for determination is, Did the trial court err as a matter of law in finding that the intervener,. First National Bank of Ada, was bound by the judgment rendered in the action on the 8th day of November, 1923?

It is contended by intervener in the first place, that the defendant„in error Stephenson had actual notice of its claim at the time of the institution of his action on October 2, 1923. The trial court found that the delendant in error Stephenson had no-knowledge of the transfer of the note and mortgage by the Merchants & Planters Bank of Ada to the First National Bank. This finding is supported by the testimony *.£ the defendant in error Stephenson, who testified that he did not learn that intervener had any claim against his property until after he filed his action, and this testimony is -borne out, we think, by Stephenson's action in bringing the lawsuit. Since Stephenson was intent upon clearing the title to his land, there does not appear to- he any good reason why he should not have brought his action against the intervener, as well as the- Merchants & Planters Bank, had he known of inteiwener’s claim against the property. While the evidence on this proposition was somewhat conflicting, we think the trial court was well within its rights in concluding, on this phase of the case, that Stephenson had no knowledge ot we ownership by Intervener of said note and mortgage at the time he commenced his action.

it is insisted in this connection that K. A. Drain was the agent of Stephens on, and since it is conceded that Drain had knowledge of intervener’s claim, such knowledge must he imputed to Stephenson.

It was the theory of intervener that the defendant in error Stephenson, at the time he executed his deed to K. A. Dram, conveying the 600 acres of land, was indebted to one Bose Johnson upon a note for about $5,000, and that this note, which was secured by a mortgage on the land, was one of the debts owing • by Stephenson which Drain was authorized to pay, and that acting under Stephenson’s direction, he, Drain, did pay the Bose Johnson note by executing a new note and mortgage to the Merchants & Planters Bank after the deed was delivered. However, Stephen son denied owing Johnson anything on this note at the time ,his deed to Drain was executed, except about $700, which was afterwards paid to the Merchants & Planters Bank, and that the Bose Johnson note was not included among his obligations which Drain was to pay in the transaction in which'he executed and delivered his deed. In other words, Stephenson claimed that Drain had no authority to pay -the Bose Johnson claim, and if he did so he exceeded his authority. It was intervener’s claim at the trial that it did not obtain information of any claim by Stephenson to the land until some months áfter the note was transferred to it by the Merchants & Planters National Bank, and it would appear therefore that intervener did not rely upon any apparent authority of Drain'as Stephenson’s agent at the time it received the note.

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Related

Patterson v. Ralph
1937 OK 338 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Phillips v. Roper
1935 OK 329 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 432, 247 P. 993, 119 Okla. 46, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-ada-v-stephenson-okla-1926.