First Nat. Bank of Anadarko v. Orme

1926 OK 967, 256 P. 748, 125 Okla. 114, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 7, 1926
Docket17169
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1926 OK 967 (First Nat. Bank of Anadarko v. Orme) 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 Anadarko v. Orme, 1926 OK 967, 256 P. 748, 125 Okla. 114, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 8 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

While Pearl Orme, hereinafter designated as plaintiff, brought her action against the First National Bank of Anadarko, hereinafter called defendant, wherein the plaintiff seeks to have canceled a certain note and mortgage, said.mortgage covering her homestead allotment, and to have her title to the lands quieted, and plaintiff alleges that, if she ever executed the note and mortgage, she has no knowledge of her act, as at -the time the same purports to have been signed she was of unsound mind and wholly incapable of using discretion in the transaction of her business affairs, and incapable of entering into a binding contract. Plaintiff further alleges fraud in that defendant took advantage of her weakened mental and physical condition and procured her signature to the instruments.

Plaintiff further alleges want of consideration and that defendant secured her signature to t'he note and mortgage on November 19, 1923, but withheld it from record until June 13,1924, and defendant afterwards released the mortgage of record, and thereafter, on August 19, 1924, refiled the same and caused the same to be recorded in the office of the' county clerk of Caddo county.

To the petition defendant filed its demurrer for that there is a defect of parties plaintiff. Upon the overruling of the a-emurrer, the defendant excepted, and thereafter filed its answer admitting it was a banking corporation and was the owner and holder of the note and mortgage, otherwise denying generally.

The cause was tried to tlie court and Judgment) rendered fojtj plaint’ff, and defendant appealed and presents this case for review upon petition in error and case-made.

The first proposition presented is that this is an equitable cause of action and it is incumbent upon this court to examine the whole record, and if the judgment of the trial court is clearly against the weight of the evidence, this court shall render such judgment as should have been rendered. *115 With this we are in perfect accord and it is useless to cite authorities.

The next proposition presented is that the plaintiffs husband, O. It. Orme, is a necessary party plaintiff, and the trial court erred in overruling the denim-per of defendant to the plaintiffs petition, citing sections 218, 220, 224, and 268, C. O. S. 1921, providing, in substance,| that all parties having an interest in the subject-matter of the action and in obtaining the relief sought may be joined as plaintiffs, but if they refuse to join as plaintiff they may be made parties defendant, and that the court may determine any corntroverisivs between th)e parties before it, when it can be done without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving their rights, but when a determination of the controversy cannot he had without the presence of other parties, the court must order them brought in and a defendant may demur to the petition when it appears from the face 'thereof1 that there is a defect of parties plaintiff.

It'appears from the record the demurrer was overruled February 2, 1925, and defendant elected to take 20 days to answer, and the petition in error was filed in this court February 4, 1,926. In defendant’s motion for a new trial the question of the alleged error of the court in overruling the demurrer is not presented, and this court has held:

“The action of the trial court in overruling a demurrer to a petition, where the defendant has pleaded' further, will not be reviewed by this court unless it is presented te the trial court in a motion for a new trial.” Commercial Investment Trust v. Ferguson, 96 Okla. 162, 220 Pac. 925; Tan Zant et al. v. Reed et al., 109 Okla. 88, 234 Pac. 623.

We have examined the very able opinion of this court, delivered by Mr. Justice Harrison in Simon v. Hine, 78 Okla. 224, 190 Pac. 264, cited by plaintiff in error, but find it is not in point, as in tbe cited case a reformation of a deed was prayed and tbe court could not substitute one instrument for another without having before it all parties signing tbe original instrument, but no such condition obtains in tbe instant cas-'.

Tbe third proposition a-gued by defendant is tbe question of fraud in procuring tbe signature of plaintiff, and this is so interwoven with tbe fourth and fifth propositions to wit, that plaintiff was of unsound mind, and want of consideration, that they will be considered together.

The record discloses plaintiff, with her husband and four children, were living on plaintiff’s homestead allotment in Caddo county. In June, 1923, she was delivered of a child, and afterwards became ill with what the physicians described as “septic multiple neuritis.” On September 22, 1923, she was brought to Dr. Postelle’s sanitarium in Oklahoma City, where she remained until October 13, 1923. Dr. Postelle testified plaintiff had delusions and hallucinations, that when she heard children’s voices coming from the .street., she would want to get out of bed and go to them, declaring they were her children, notwithstanding her children were at home more than 70 miles from the sanitarium. In response to a question as to whether her mental condition was such that she could concentrate so as to be able to transact business in an intelligent way, Dr. Postelle answered, “Well, for tbe first week or two or three sbe was here, absolutely no.” After three weeks at Dr. Postelle’s, plaintiff was conveyed to a private residence in a section of Oklahoma City known as Capitol Hill, where 'She remained for a few days, and then transported to Dr. Hyroop’s sanitarium in Oklahoma City, where she remained until November 5, 1923. Dr. I-Iyroop testified she entered his sanitarium with paralysis in both limbs, paralysis condition of tbe hips; that her state of mind was about that of a child 8 or 9 years of age; she could not remember anything; that they wou’d give her a dinner and in a few minutes thereafter she would declare she had no dinnev and would want another dinner ; that she would object to taking treatment and after they would treat her against her will, she would declare they had not given her treatment and' demand another treatment. She would ask for stationery, saying she wanted to write a “big” letter, and after obtainhig the stationery, would write perhaps one word and throw the paper away and lie with the pencil in her mouth staring into vacancy; sometimes she would answer inte’ligently and at other times, when a question was asked, she would just lie there and stare at him. These were daily occurrences. On November 5. 1923, they took plaintiff on a stretcher, put her in a baggage car and transported her to Anada"ko and took her to the home of her father-in-law and mother-in-law. Plaintiff was hysterical and cried for her baby, but when they brought it to1 her she renounced it, declared they had taken her baby and substituted another. After several days and' several presentations of the baby, she was finally convinced it was her. baby. Defendant argues ■that a young baby changes so rapidly in ap *116

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 967, 256 P. 748, 125 Okla. 114, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-anadarko-v-orme-okla-1926.