Furrow v. First Nat. Bank

1928 OK 213, 271 P. 632, 133 Okla. 137, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1022
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 27, 1928
Docket16725
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1928 OK 213 (Furrow v. First 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
Furrow v. First Nat. Bank, 1928 OK 213, 271 P. 632, 133 Okla. 137, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1022 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

DIFFENDAFFtER; C.

This action involves the question of damages for fraud. The issues were joined and tried upon an amended petition.

The plaintiff, J. W. Furrow, alleged, in substance, a certain transaction wherein defendants Hugh M. Johnson and W. F. Wilson, and the First National Bank of Oklahoma City entered into a .-¡conspiracy to defraud him of certain property of the value of $22,000. He alleges that Hugh M. Johnson and W. F. Wilson induced him to take part in organizing a corporation known as the Art Floral Company, with a capital stock of $50,000, consisting of assets of the Stiles Floral Company, bankrupt, which assets had been bought by the said First National Bank at a bankrupt sale; that they represented to him that the bank had paid $35,000 for these assets and that they were worth $85,000; that by so representing the value of this property, they induced him to take part in the organization of the new corporation, with an agreement that $25,000 of the capital stock, was to be issued to him, the other $25,000 of the capital stock was to be issued to R. M. Scruggs for the bank; that in the organization of the company, $24,000 of the capital stock was issued to plaintiff, and $1,000 to H. W. Blocker, and $25,000 to R. M. Scruggs for Hugh M. Johnson; that the Art Floral Company was to assume and agreed to pay said bank the $35,000, for which it gave its promissory note, payable at $1,500 per month. Plaintiff, who was made president of the said company, signed his own name to said note, as surety; that defendant W. F. Wilson, as attorney, prepared the contract between him and the bank that *138 preceded the organization oí said company, the contract being executed April 6, 1922; that Wilson was acting as attorney in organizing the corporation; that plaintiff was made president of the new corporation and took charge oí said company, with the assets consisting of a retail store on Main street in Oklahoma City, and a greenhouse in the west part of the city, together with the real estate formerly owned by the Stiles Floral Company, and the book accounts of said company and certain other property used in connection with the operation thereof; that after said Art Floral Company was organized and executed its note, which plaintiff signed, to the First National Bank, for the sum of $35,000, the Art Floral Company took; charge of all the assets, and the plaintiff as its president and manager had operated the same for about three months; that all of plaintiff’s stock was held by the bank as collateral security for the note, as was the deed to the real estate; that after said Art Floral Company had operated the business for about two months, it was unable to make the payments of $1,500 a month, provided for in the contract. The bank demanded the payments and informed plaintiff that he was personally liable on the note, and threatened suit to enforce payment; that he did not consider himself personally liable because, after cheeking up the assets of the property, which were represented to him by Hugh M. Johnson, president of said ■bank, and W. F. Wilson, the attorney, to be worth $85,000, which would make up the entire assets of the Art Floral Company, which had been organized as stated, he found .the same to be worth not over $25,000; that he went to the said W. F. Wilson and sought his advice, as an attorney, and was advised by him that he was personally liable on the note; thereafter he and the said Hugh M. Johnson entered into another written contract by which plaintiff was to get a bill of sale to the assets of Furrow & Company, another corporation engaged in the same business, of which plaintiff was manager and principal stockholder, and they would reorganize the Art Floral Company and increase its capital stock to $80,000, and change its name to Furrow Floral Company, and all the assets of the Art Floral Company and the assets of Furrow & Company should make up the capital stock of $80,000; that the assets of Furrow & Company, so turned over, were of net value of $22,000; that plaintiff was to receive additional stock in Furrow Floral Company to the amount of $22.000. thus making the total capital stock of Furrow Floral Company owned by plaintiff to be $46,000; $25,000 to be held by Hugh M. Johnson or some person designated by him for the bank, and the $1,000 to be held by H. M. (Blocker. The remaining $8,000 was left in the treasury. That all of plaintiff’s stock was to be. hypoth-ecated with the bank to secure the payment of the $35,000 indebtedness to said bank. The plaintiff was to become manager of Furrow Floral Company and receive $300 per .month as salary for his services, and that the new company was to pay the $35,-000 note to the bank. The new company was to sign a note for $35,700 to take the place of the former note, with accrued interest. The plaintiff was to be released from personal liability on the first note, and not required to sign the new note. This ■ contract was executed and carried out under the new organization. The new company failed to meet the payments on 'the note, and after operating for about one year, that company went into bankruptcy, whereby plaintiff lost the $22,000 assets he turned into the new company, and he brings this action against the defendants for damages in said amount. He alleges that the defendants are liable to him therefor, for the reason that they had been guilty of fraud and that they had falsely represented to him that the assets of Stiles Floral Company were of the value of $85,000, and that the bank had paid therefor the sum of $35,000, when in truth and in fact the assets were worth but $25,000, and that the bank had in fact paid only about $25,000 therefor. Plaintiff seeks to hold defendants liable for these false representations on the further ground that a confidential relation existed between the plaintiff and Hugh M. Johnson, in that Hugh M. Johnson was an acquaintance of his and engaged in the banking business, and that his company had done its banking business with the First National Bank, of which defendant Johnson was the president, and that by reason thereof a confidential relation existed to such an extent that he relied implicitly upon the statements made by defendant Johnson, and, further, that he relied upon the representations made by defendant W. F. Wilson, for the reason that the same were made to him as an attorney, and that Wilson','- while advising plaintiff thb't he, plaintiff, was liable to the First National Bank on the $35,000 note which he had signed, was at that time the attorney for and representing the bank, which fact plaintiff did not know. The defendants denied the allegations of fraud and all liability for damages. The issues were tried to a jury, and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the *139 court sustained tlie defendants’ demurrer 'thereto, and rendered judgment for defendants, and plaintiff brings this appeal.

Plaintiff sets up several assignments of error, but his principal contention is: That the evidence was sufficient to prove the fraud alleged in the petition, and the liability of defendants to plaintiff, and that it was error for the court to sustain the demurrer to the evidence and render judgment for defendants. The pleadings and evidence are somewhat voluminous, but it is necessary for us to examine the entire record for the purpose of determining whether or not the evidence was sufficient to require the case to be sub'mitted to the jury. There is evidence tending to show that Johnson and Wilson represented to plaintiff that the stock and assets of the Stiles Floral Company were of the value of $85,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 213, 271 P. 632, 133 Okla. 137, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furrow-v-first-nat-bank-okla-1928.