Garner v. Grogan

1929 OK 198, 277 P. 649, 136 Okla. 261, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1929
Docket19013
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1929 OK 198 (Garner v. Grogan) 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
Garner v. Grogan, 1929 OK 198, 277 P. 649, 136 Okla. 261, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 183 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

The parties appear here as in the trial court as plaintiff and defendant.

Plaintiff sued defendant in district court of Pottawatomie county for $400, the amount of a check drawn by defendant on Shawnee National Bank payable to plaintiff and payment whereof was stopped by defendant. The petition is in the usual form. The answer, after general denial, set up that the check sued on was executed for the purpose of carrying out a proposed deal between E. O. and T. A. Beasley, the National Bond & Investment Company, and plaintiff, but that the proposed deal was not consummated, and that defendant’s clerk, by error and mistake, sent the cheek to plaintiff; that no consideration passed and that defendant stopped payment on the check as he had a right to do.

The parties waived a jury and tried the issues to the court, who made certain findings of fact and conclusions of law and rendered judgment for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals.

The evidence discloses that plaintiff, J. D. Garner, under the business title of Garner Motor Company, is located in Wewoka, Okla., and engaged in the sale of Buick automobiles ; that defendant is in business at Shawnee selling Hudson and Essex cars. E. O. and T. A. Beasley purchased a Buick roadster from plaintiff and gave a note secured by chattel mortgage on the Buick car. Later the Beasleys sought to exchange with defendant their Buick car for a Hudson coach. Their negotiations resulted in an agreement to exchange, provided the National Bond & Investment Company, which was engaged in handling automobile paper, would agree to accept and carry the balance of the purchase price of the. Hudson coach. It was agreed, also, that if the plan succeeded, the defendant was to take care of the note and chattel mortgage given by the Beasleys to p’aintiff.

Upon hearing the evidence the court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“That E. O. Beasley and T. A. Beasley purchased from the J. D. Garner Motor Company of Wewoka, one Buick roadster, and gave as part .of the purchase price a note secured by chattel mortgage. Payments were made on this note until the note was reduced to approximately $400. Subsequent *262 to said time, E. O. Beasley and T. A. Beasley proposed to purchase from the defendant, George Grogan, one Hudson coach and to trade in the Buiek roadster. All the papers were made up on this transaction by George Grogan, including a check for $400 payable to plaintiff. These papers were to be held by George Grogan until it should be ascertained whether or not the National Bond & Investment Company would carry the balance due on the purchase price of the Hudson coach. During this time there was some telephone conversation between George Grogan and tiie Garner Motor Company, the plaintiff herein, as to the conditions of the sale of the Hudson coach. Through an error of the defendant’s bookkeeper, the check to the Garner Motor Company was remitted to plaintiff by mail. Upon discovery of this, George Grogan called the Garner Motor Company by phone and advised the plaintiff that he would be compelled1 to stop payment on the check, and that the plaintiff told defendant in this conversation to hold the Buick roadster for plaintiff, and that the defendant further told plaintiff that the sale of the Hudson coach could not go through because of the Beasley Brothers unsatisfactory rating. The Garner Motor Company deposited the cheek received from the defendant and attached to this check the note given by E1. O. Beasley and T. A. Beasley. The mortgage securing this note had never been placed of record and was destroyed by plaintiff. The cheek came back to plaintiff unpaid who filed suit on the check.
“The court further finds that, as a matter of fact, immediately after the defendant learned that the sale of the Hudson coach would not be completed, he tendered to plaintiff the Buiek, roadster left with the defendant by the Beasley Brothers, and that this Buick roadster is still in the possession of the defendant which defendant 'continues to tender to the plaintiff.
“The court further finds that the Beasley Brothers left the country upon their failure to make said trade, and that at this time their whereabouts are unknown to both plaintiff and defendant.
“Conclusion's of Law.
“From the above facts, the court concludes, as a matter of law, that the defendant has a right to stop payment on the cheek at any time before payment, providing the plaintiff has not altered his position to plaintiff’s detriment ; that, as a matter of law, plaintiff still has the right to foreclose his mortgage on the Buiek roadster even though be has destroyed the chattel mortgage, and that plaintiff has not altered his legal status by reason of receiving said check from defendant.
“The court further finds, as a matter of law, that the defendant, having stopped payment on said check is not liable for the amount thereof, to plaintiff, and that the defendant is entitled to judgment for costs.”

The. plaintiff complains, and says that the findings of fact are not sustained by the evidence, and that the conclusions of law are erroneous because unsupported by facts. In the second paragraph of his motion for new trial, the plaintiff says:

“The court found, as a fact, that ‘these papers were to be held by George Grogan until it should be ascertained whether or not the National Bond & Investment Company would carry the balance due on the purchase price of the Hudson coach,’ is not supported by the testimony, in any particular, and no such agreement was entered into by the parties or any one of them, because the trade or exchange was not based or predicated in any manner upon the National Bond & Investment Company, and which finding is wholly and entirely without the testimony and unsupported thereby.”

On page 19 of the record, T. W. White, witness for plaintiff, on direct examination, was asked the question:

“Q. .Between you and Garner and Grogan? What was the agreement? A. That he would pay the check providing the bonding company accepted the deal he and the Beasley boys were transacting — the only condition was that he would pay the check providing we attached the certificate of title and canceled note to the check, and we did that.”

On page 12 of the brief of plaintiff in error, this identical question and answer purport to be quoted, but the words “That he would pay the check providing the. bonding company accepted the deal he and the Beasley boys were transacting,” and omitted from the answer. This answer is misquoted in such a substantial and material way, as we see it, that one might conclude that the purpose was to mislead the court, but knowing coun'sel we feel that it must have been inadvertence.

On page 47 of his brief, plaintiff’s counsel shows his disregard for the record by saying:

“Who agreed that these papers were to be held' by Grogan until the bonding company approved the deal? Certainly not Garner because it was all done and fully consummated before Garner knew anything about the bonding company having anything to do with it, and was not called to his attention prior to December 10th to the 12th, 1926.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 198, 277 P. 649, 136 Okla. 261, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garner-v-grogan-okla-1929.