Fish v. Bloodworth

1912 OK 721, 129 P. 32, 36 Okla. 586, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 920
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1912
Docket2212
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1912 OK 721 (Fish v. Bloodworth) 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
Fish v. Bloodworth, 1912 OK 721, 129 P. 32, 36 Okla. 586, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 920 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

AMES, C.

The plaintiff sued the defendant for the proceeds of a loan which she alleged that he had procured for her as her agent. She alleged that she had delivered to him a note and mortgage, and that he had procured the money from the lender and had failed to deliver it to her. The defendant admitted having procured the money for her, but alleged that he had sent a check for the money to one Graham, the plaintiff’s agent; that the check was payable to the joint order of Graham and the plaintiff; that it had been indorsed by them both and returned to him; and that in that manner he had remitted to her the money which she claimed. The defendant lived at Guthrie, while Graham lived at Pauls Valley. The plaintiff claims that *588 Graham was the defendant’s agent, while the defendant claims that Graham was the plaintiff’s agent. It is clear that, when the defendant procured the loan, after deducting his commission he sent the check to Graham, payable to the order of Graham and the plaintiff. The check was drawn upon a bank at Pauls Valley. Graham presented to this bank what purported to be an authority from the plaintiff permitting him to indorse the check. He thereupon indorsed the check with his own name and with hers and procured the money. There was evidence tending to show that this written authority was a forgery, and there was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had admitted executing it. . There was evidence tending to show that .Graham was the plaiutiff’s agent, and there was evidence tending to show that Graham was the defendant’s agent. The allegations of authority were not denied under oath, nor was an)' reply to the answer filed; but the case was treated in the trial court as though the issues were completed, and will be so treated here. Under the instructions of the trial court, the case was made to. turn upon the issue as to whether the written authority purporting to have been executed by the plaintiff, authorizing Graham to cash the check, was a forgery, and upon this issue the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff.

We do not think this was the controlling issue in the case, as the means which Graham pursued in securing possession of the money was a mere incident to the fact that he did secure the money and did not account for it. If Graham were being prosecuted for forgery, then, of course, whether or not he had this authority would be the material issue; but here the question is: Shall the plaintiff or the defendant suffer by the wrongdoing of Graham? The plaintiff is innocent in the matter; the defendant is innocent in the matter. There, must be a complete loss of the proceeds of this loan to one of two innocent parties. Which one shall suffer the loss Graham has the money. He has absconded. The money therefore cannot be procured from him. Shall the loss be borne by the plaintiff or the defendant? Manifestly, it must be borne by the one for whom Graham was acting. If Graham was acting as agent for the defendant, then his em *589 bezzlement must be charged to the account of the defendant. If Graham was acting as agent for the plaintiff, then manifestly the payment of the money to him was payment to the plaintiff, and she must stand the loss. If the defendant, instead of sending the check to Graham, had sent currency, the situation would have been the' same. The fact that Graham may or may'not have been guilty of forgery is purely incidental, because the ultimate question is who is responsible for his conduct, and whether he forged the authority does not determine whether he was agent for the plaintiff or defendant, because he might forge this authority had he been agent for either. Manifestly it was the duty of the defendant to pajr the money over to the plaintiff, or her authorized agent. If, therefore, Graham wás her authorized agent, he got the money, and when he got the money it was equivalent in law to the plaintiff herself having received it, and if he forged the authority it would not alter the fact that he had the money. On the other hand, if Graham was the defendant’s agent, then it is equally clear that the defendant had not discharged his duty by pa)dng the money over to the plaintiff, because remitting the money to his own agent would not be a remittance to the plaintiff. The case must, therefore, turn upon the question whether Graham was the agent for the plaintiff or defendant, and as this issue was not properly submitted to the jury, and as the instructions made the case turn upon the question of forgery, there was error which requires a reversal.

One other question requires consideration. The plaintiff’s husband was permitted to testify as to a conversation taking place some time after the check had been cashed, between the cashier of the bank,.the plaintiff, and himself, over the objection of the defendant that he was an incompetent witness, on account of the relation between him and the plaintiff. He testified that he' was acting as agent for his wife in going with her to the bank to talk about the matter with the cashier. This is an adroit and ingenious position, but in its final analysis it seems no^ more than a claim that he was the agent of his wife to hear a conversation. The statute provides (Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 5842) :

*590 “The following persons shall be incompetent to testify: * * * (3) Husband and wife, for or against each other, except concerning transactions in which one acted as the agent of the other, or when they are joint parties and have a joint interest in the action; but in no case shall either be permitted to testify concerning any communication made by one to the other during the marriage, whether called while that relation subsisted, or afterwards. * * * ” .

The existence of the agency may be shown by the wife or husband. Smith v. Travel, 20 Okla. 512, 94 Pac. 529. And when the agency is established then the husband or wife may testify. Armstrong, Byrd & Co. v. Crump, 25 Okla. 452, 106 Pac. 855; Wade v. Sumner, 30 Okla. 784, 120 Pac. 1011. But what was the “transaction"’ concerning which the husband proposed to testify in this case? It was not the transaction between the plaintiff and the defendant. Pie did not claim to have acted as her agent in that respect. It was not any aspect of the business which he transacted for her, but it was merely a conversation with the cashier of the bank. The cashier testified that the plaintiff admitted to him that she signed the written authority, while the plaintiff denied the admission, and the transaction in which her husband acted as her agent was to hear this denial and corroborate her testimony at the trial.

Some of the cases hold that the husband or wife cannot testify for the other as the agent, when the matter about which the testimony is offered occurs in the immediate presence of the other, who can testify as fully as the one claiming to be the agent. Miller v. Stebbins, 77 Vt. 183, 59 Atl. 844; Pingree v. Johnson, 69 Vt. 225, 39 Atl. 202; Eastabrooks v. Prentiss, 34 Vt. 457; Leigh v. Citizens’ Savings Bank (Ky.) 102 S. W. 233. On the other hand, in Menk v. Steinfort, 39 Wis. 370, it is held that, where the agency exists, the husband may testify as to acts done by him as the wife’s agent, whether done in her presence or absence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 721, 129 P. 32, 36 Okla. 586, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-bloodworth-okla-1912.