First National Bank of Poteau v. Allen

1923 OK 46, 212 P. 597, 88 Okla. 162, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 571
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 30, 1923
Docket10970
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1923 OK 46 (First National Bank of Poteau v. Allen) 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 National Bank of Poteau v. Allen, 1923 OK 46, 212 P. 597, 88 Okla. 162, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 571 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

On April 8, 1916, the defendants in error executed their promissory note sued on herein to the First National Bank of Poteau, Oklahoma, in the sum of $5,000, due and payable October 8, 1916, and in default of payment of said note, the plaintiff in error, referred to herein as the plaintiff, brought a suit on January 6, 1918, in the district court of Garvin county, Oklahoma, that being the county of the residence of the defendants in error, Kate Allen and Andy Allen, her husband, herein referred to as defendants, and said cause having been tried to the court without a jury, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants, from which- -the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Tom Wall, of Poteau, Okla., who had up to April, 1916. been cashier of the plaintiff bank, and defaulted in a large, sum- was a *163 Mother of the defendant Kate Allen. On discovery of the shortage, the National Bank Examiner, the directors and officers of the plaintiff hank, held a conference with the said Tom Wall, in which the . said Wall agreed that he would secure if possible notes from certain of his relatives in favor of the plaintiff bank to cover a part of the shortage. That among the notes secured from relatives who lived near was one from Dan W. Patton, a brother-in-law to Tom Wall. The defendants lived in Garvin county, some 200 miles from Poteau, and with the knowledge of the plaintiff bank, the said Dan Patton on April 8, 1016, and only about three days after he had executed his note to the plaintiff bank, went to the home of the defendants, and there stated to the defendants, in substance, that Tom Wall would be prosecuted for violation of the national banking' law, unless the shortage was made good, and if the defendants would execute the note in question, payable to the plaintiff bank, said prosecution could and would be forestalled. The said defendants did not owe the plaintiff bank anything, neither did they owe the said Dan W. Patton any sum, and the trial court found that said note was given without consideration, and that the purpose and object of executing the note by the defendants was to prevent the criminal prosecution of the said Tom Wall for embezzling the funds of the plaintiff bank, and the bank knew that said Tom Wall was securing notes from his relatives to cover up the shortage in the plaintiff bank, and that the said Dan W. Patton, at the time he induced the defendants, Kate Allen and Andy Allen, to sign the note in controversy, was the agent of the plaintiff bank, and that the bank was chargeable with the statements made to said defendants in order to get their signatures to the note.

The plaintiff contends that, while there was no consideration paid to the defendants by the plaintiff bank, and concedes that the defendants owed the plaintiff bank no sum of money, still plaintiff in error says that at the time the note was executed by the defendants and delivered to it, it then owned as part of the assets of the bank, a note of a similar amount executed by Dan W. Patton, and that cn the delivery of the defendants’ note by the said Dan W. Patton, that the bank surrendered the Patton note, and that it thereby became a holder in due course for value, and that the defense pleaded by the defendants cannot avail them.

The note in question was executed at Purdy, Garvin county. Oklahoma. None of the officers of the bank were present, and tine conversation which led up to the execution of the note was had solely between the defendants and their brother-in-law, Dan W. Patton.

The deposition of the said Dan W. Patton was taken and offered in evidence by the plaintiff, and among other questions asked by the plaintiff and answers given by the defendant, were the following:

“Q. I will ask you if you know the purpose for which the note which you took from Kate Allen and Andy Allen to the bank was ^tued? á. Yes, I know the purpose. Q. I will ask you if this note was taken for the purpose of securing the shortage in Wall’s account lo the First National Bank of Poteau, Oklahoma ? A. It was.”

The defendants contend that at the time Dan W. Patton put his note in the bank, immediately after the shortage was discovered, it was understood between the officers of the bank and the said Patton that his note would be withdrawn as soon as the note from the defendants was secured, and that the defendants’ notes would be taken in lieu of the note of Dan W. P'atton. The record as to this contention is not clear, but it does appear ‘hat the bank was fully aware of -the fact that the Dan W. Patton note and other notes secured from the relatives of the said Wall, including the note of defendants herein, were being executed by the relatives of the said Tom Wall to cover at. least a part of his shortage. If the Allen note was to cover a part, of the Wall shortage, as testified to by plaintiff’s witness. Patton, it must have been that part which the Patton note undertook to cover for only a few days, and until the Allen note could be secured. The officers and directors of the bank must have understood when the Patten note was taken that it was merely until the Allen note could be secured; for when the Allen note was presented thei acting cashier alone was present, and his testimony shows that he immediately accepted the Allen note and delivered the Patton note to Patton himself. By such a substitution of notes, in pursuance of an understanding at the time the first note was received by the bank, the bank would merely be carrying out its contract to accept the Allen note, and would not be suffering any detriment it was not already bound to suffer in delivering the Patton note.

The trial court concluded that “As a matter of law, 'he consideration of the note in controversy was against public policy, and void; * * * that there was not any consideration for which the defendants exe- *164 euted the note in controversy." The evidence clearly shows that the defendants received nothing in return for their note which the law would consider a good or a valuable consideration, but that the sole purpose and object of it was to prevent the eriminal prosecution of Kate Allen’s brother.

The finding of fact by the trial court that Pan W. Patton was the agent and representative of the bank in securing the note sued on, and that it was secured under representations that it would prevent the prosecution of Tom Wall, brother of Kate Wall, would operate to affirm the judgment of the lower court, and the purpose of said note being against public policy, the note was void. Plaintiff, however, seriously contends that it did not participate through its officers in making such representations, and that there is no evidence reasonably supporting file finding' of the court that the said Dan W. Patton was in any sense the agent of the plaintiff bank. We are doubtful whether the record sustains the finding that Patton was the bank’s agent, but it does not follow that the judgment should be reversed. Riddle v. Hudson, 68 Okla. 172, 172 Pac. 921.

Section 926, Rev. Laws Okla. 1910:

“Any benefit conferred, or agreed to be conferred upon the promisor, by any other person, to which the promisor is not lawfully entitled, or any prejudice suffered or agreed to be suffered by such person, other than such as he is at the time of consent lawfully hound to suffer, as an inducement to the promisor, is a good consideration for a promise.”

In 1 Mod. Am.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 46, 212 P. 597, 88 Okla. 162, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-poteau-v-allen-okla-1923.