Frensley v. American Nat. Bank

1927 OK 412, 264 P. 188, 129 Okla. 164, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1927
Docket18256
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1927 OK 412 (Frensley v. American Nat. Bank) 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
Frensley v. American Nat. Bank, 1927 OK 412, 264 P. 188, 129 Okla. 164, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 509 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This suit, under the amended pleadings, was to set aside a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage lien on a certain 360-acre tract of land, situated £n Carter county, and more fully described in the pleadings, and also to set aside the order of sale, order of confirmation, and all other orders affecting said tract.

The circumstances out of which the case grew were that in 1909, one Robert Scivally conveyed by warranty deed the 360 acres involved, to plaintiff in error, B. F. Frensley, and in the following year, 1910, mortgaged some 6,000 or more acres of land in said county to a mortgage company for $30,000. Later, it developed that the mortgage included the 360 acres which had been deeded to Frensley, and that said mortgage had been placed of recordi some years before the deed was recorded. The mortgage company, in the meantime, had assigned its mortgage and the American National Bank of Ardmore had become the owner thereof. Thereafter said bank foreclosed the mortgage and had the land sold to satisfy the judgment.

It developed in the foreclosure suit, however, that though Frensley had a deed to the 360 acres of land included in the mortgage, such deed had not been recorded until after the mortgage had been recorded, and the court in decreeing the sale of the land ordered that the land other than that included in the deed be sold first, and in the event it did not bring enough to satisfy the judgment, then the Frensley 360 acres was to be sold. When the first land was sold the American National Bank bid $25,000 for it and was awarded the bid. It does not appear that any other bidder was present or bid upon the land, and the larger tract not bringing enough to satisfy the judgment, the Frensley land was then sold and the American National Bank bid $2, 500 for it, and the bid was awarded to the bank. There appears to have been no other bidder at this sale.

Frensley, upon learning of these proceedings, brought this suit, to set aside the decree of' foreclosure and all other orders affecting his tract of land, on the grounds that the price was grossly inadequate, and that he had never been served with summons, and had no knowledge of the foreclosure suit and been given no opportunity to defend his rights in said suit, and had no knowledge that the land had been sold to satisfy the mortgage, and had therefore been deprived of an opportunity to appear at the sheriff’s sale and protect his rights by bidding in the land. And on the further grounds that after the land had been sold, but before it had become known to him that it had been sold, he had offered to the American National Bank to pay off and satisfy the $30,000’ mortgage, and all interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees in the event a foreclosure was ever had and the land sold. In fact, the land had been sold at that time, but he alleged that he did not know it and that the hank informed him that it had not. whereupon he proposed to the bank that, in the event it should become necessary to sell it. if the bank would notify him. he would pay off the entire-mortgage, interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees and take the land in order to protect his own interests and would make n bond that *165 he would fulfill his promise, and that the bank declined to accept such proposition, knowing that it had already been sold. Later, when in the county treasurer’s office for the puipose of paying taxes on the land, he learned that it had been sold, and upon learning such facts brought this suit.

The bank answered, alleging that service of summons had been had upon Frensley’s attorney of record in the case, and that such attorney, W. D. Potter, of the firm of Cruce & Potter, had voluntarily appeared and, filed an answer in the case; and further denied that it had ever promised to notify Firensley when the land was to be sold, and denied that Frensley had ever offered to pay off the judgment if it would release the land.

Frensley filed, a reply to the bank's answer, denying that Cruce & Potter, or either of them, were his attorneys of record in the case, or had any authority to appear and file an answer in the case, or had ever been employed to represent him in the foreclosure suit; and alleged that, though such attorneys may have assumed to represent him, they had not protected his interest as they should have done.

Upon these issues the court rendered judgment in favor of the bank, and Frensley has appealed here.

The ease presents two decisive issues of fact;

1(1) Whether the price was grossly inadequate.

(2) Whether the foreclosure suit and the sheriff’s sale were accompanied by circumstances showing unfairness or any circumstances sufficient to raise a presumption of fraud. These were disputed issues and have necessitated an examination of the testimony in order to determine the weight of the evidence.

In the first place, it appears that the summons was issued to defendant Frensley, but the summons contained the following-words in parenthesis, to wit: “Serve on Cruce & Potter”; and the summons was served on Cruce & Potter, and never was mailed to defendant Frensley, who then resided in Fort Worth, Tex., and on account of illness was confined, to his room and to his bed Besides this, the sheriff was directed to serve Cruce & Potter as attorneys of record before any record had been made on Frensley’s part in the case. The bank had assumed to serve Cruce & Potter with copy of summons to Frensley, as attorneys of record, when in fact at that time not a word of record had, been made in behalf of Frensley; there was no attorney of record at that time, for he had no notice of any necessity for an attorney, and no record had been made.

In the next place, it does not appear that copy of summons was left with Cruce & Potter or that they demanded a copy, and does not clearly appear that they ever forwarded any copy of the summons to Frensley.

Mr. Potter testified in behalf of the bank in this case, claiming that he had sent a letter to Mr. Frensley at Fort Worth, Tex., informing him of the case, but Frensley and his entire family at Fort Worth denied that any such letter had ever been received, or any other notice of the pending litigation, and the circumstances, in our judgment, corroborate their denial.

The attorney, Potter, claimed, that the defendant Frensley and his nephew came to his office and employed him in the case, but the Frensleys denied this, and the circumstances .of his ill health and inability to attend corroborate their denial.

The Frensleys admitted, however, that they had, previously employed Potter in other litigation and had some cummunieation with him in reference to such other litigation. Potter evidently was mistaken as to his employment in the mortgage foreclosure case, for we do not believe he would have willfully misstated the facts; he evidently got this case confused with other litigation in which he had been employed, because this record shows conclusively that the attorney, Potter, did not diligently protect Frensley’s interest in the foreclosure proceedings nor in the sale of the land. It conclusively appears, on the other hand, that Frensley’s interests were neglected, both in the foreclosure trial and in the foreclosure sale.-

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Related

Cooper v. State Ex Rel. Com'rs of the Land Office
1936 OK 837 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Frensley
1934 OK 114 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Miller v. Gray Eagle Oil & Gas Co.
1933 OK 346 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 412, 264 P. 188, 129 Okla. 164, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frensley-v-american-nat-bank-okla-1927.