First Nat. Bank v. Golden Glow Ref. Co.

1930 OK 277, 288 P. 960, 143 Okla. 299, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 631
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 3, 1930
Docket19326
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1930 OK 277 (First Nat. Bank v. Golden Glow Ref. Co.) 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 v. Golden Glow Ref. Co., 1930 OK 277, 288 P. 960, 143 Okla. 299, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 631 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

LEACH, C.

The First National Bank of Tulsa commenced this action in the district court of Tulsa county against the Golden Glow Refining Company and J. A. Boyd to recover a balance alleged to be due on a promissory note executed by the Golden Glow Refining Company ahd indorsed by J. A. Boyd, W. A. Moore, and J. M. Chandler.

No defense was made by the refining company and judgment was entered against it by default.

The defendant Boyd pleaded as a defense to the action that the note and his indorsement thereon were made without consideration and for the accommodation of the plaintiff bank.

Upon a trial of the cause a general verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant Boyd, and judgment was entered thereon accordingly, from which the plaintiff bank appealed.

The plaintiff demurred to the answer of the defendant Boyd on the ground that the answer failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a defense, also objected to the introduction of any evidence on behalf of the defendant on the same ground, which demurrer and objection were overruled, and such ruling is assigned as error and presented as grounds for the reversal of the judgment appealed from.

The plaintiff’s brief contains no citation *300 of authorities' upon the assignments of error here involved, but is devoted to an argument to the effect that, since the defendant admitted the execution of the note and alleged that it was executed for the accommodation of the bank, under the provisions of section 7699, C. O. S. 1921, which defines an accommodation maker, he is liable thereon, and. that, .in order to state a defense to> the cause of action alleged, an allegation would have to be made to the effect that the bank parted with no consideration in taking the notes out of its files, and that it suffered no detriment thereby.

It was alleged in the answer of the defendant, in part and substance, that the note sued on was made and delivered by the Golden Glow Refining Company, and indorsed by the defendant and his co-indorsers at the request of plaintiff and for its accommodation; that the note arose out of the following eventualities: That, prior to August 27, 1919, the Golden Glow Refining Company, then a corporation, sued the Duluth Gas Oil Refining Company in the district court of Creek county; that, on the date last mentioned, the Union National Bank of Tulsa intervened in that action and alleged in its petition, sworn to by its president, that the Duluth Company executed and delivered to P. E. Magee, as trustee, for' the use and benefit of the Union National Bank, 25 notes of $1,000 each, and as security for the payment thereof, executed a mortgage covering certain described lots in the city of Sapulpa, together with a refinery located thereon and all the buildings, machinery, personal property, and equipment on said lots, and prayed judgment on the notes and for foreclosure of the mortgage; that, after the institution of such suit, P. E. Magee, as trustee for the bank and also chairman of the board of directors, represented to the answering defendant, Boyd, who. was president of the Golden Glow Refining Company, that the intervener bank had withdrawn from its note case the 25 notes of the Duluth Gas Oil Refining Company sued on, and requested the Golden Glow Company to make and loan to the bank, for its áccommodation, the note of the Golden Glow Refining Company, in the same amount as the Duluth Company notes, for the purpose of using the notes of the Golden Glow Company as a substitute for the notes of the Duluth Company, in order that the intervener bank might maintain the complement of its security until it might collect the Duluth Company notes, or realize the payment of them out of the mortgaged property, and requested the defendant to become an indorser on such note when made as an accommodation to the bank for the purpose aforesaid, and the said Magee assured the defendant that the note would be returned to them when it should have served the need of the bank as aforesaid; that, in compliance with such request, the original note, of which the note sued on is a renewal, was executed; that on February 17, 1920, judgment was rendered in favor of the intervener bank on the certain notes sued on and for foreclosure of the mortgage and sale of the property covered thereby; that prior to execution and sale of the property, the judment debtor, Duluth Gas Oil Refining Company, was adjudged a bankrupt, and a sale by the state court was thereby precluded; pursuant to an order of sale of the bankruptcy court, a sale of the mortgaged property was had on November 4, 1920; at which sale the property was bid in by the Union National Bank for the amount of its judgment; that on April 18, 1921, the trustee in bankruptcy executed and delivered his deed, conveying the property sold to the First National Bank, which had on December 31, 1920, consolidated or merged with the Union National Bank and succeeded to all its rights ; that contemporaneous with the merger of the Union and First National Banks, W. E. Brown, who was president of the Union Bank, became chairman of the board of directors of the plaintiff bank, and certain other officials of the Union B'ank became vice presidents of the plaintiff bank; that such officials, together with others of both banks, fully canvassed in detail the renewal note of the Golden Glow Refining-Company and its- indorsers, and all of said officials of both banks well knew the status of said renewal note, and quoting from the answer of defendant:

“That the fact of said note’s being purely and only a free bailment, as it were, for the accommodation of the Union National Bank and nothing else, was well known to both banks. That after the merger, whenever requested by plaintiff for the same purpose and no other, said note was renewed from time to time until the- note sued on was made and delivered and which is the last of said renewals of said original note. That the maker and indorsers' of said original, and all of said renewals thereof, never received any consideration or thing of value for either the original note or any of the renewals thereof, and all weire made at the request of plaintiff and its predecessor in interest for their accommodation and use only as aforesaid, and not otherwise; of all of which facts both banks had full and complete knowledge, and, notwithstanding which, plaintiff has brought and is prosecuting this action.”

It was further alleged by amendment to' *301 such answer that the certain credit or payments on the note shown to- have been made by the indorsers, Chandler and Moore, were, in fact, the proceeds of the sale of the property covered by the mortgage executed by the Duluth Gas Oil Refining Company, and that the amount realized from the sale of said mortgaged property should be credited upon the note of the Duluth Company, and should not be credited as a payment made by the said Chandler and Moore.

We are of the opinion that the answer of the defendant, in the instant case, brings the pleading within the rule announced in the case of Oilton State Bank v. Ross, 108 Okla. 24, 234 Pac. 567, wherein it is stated in the syllabus of that case as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 277, 288 P. 960, 143 Okla. 299, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-golden-glow-ref-co-okla-1930.