Geo. M. Paschal & Bro. v. Bohannan

1916 OK 652, 158 P. 365, 59 Okla. 139, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1147
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 13, 1916
Docket6053
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1916 OK 652 (Geo. M. Paschal & Bro. v. Bohannan) 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
Geo. M. Paschal & Bro. v. Bohannan, 1916 OK 652, 158 P. 365, 59 Okla. 139, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1147 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

MATHEWS, C.

The parties will be designated as in the trial court. This was a replevin action instituted in .the county court of Cotton county wherein plaintiff sought to obtain possession of certain personal property mortgaged to the firm by the defendant to secure the payment of two certain notes and 'an open account. An order of replevin was issued and the imoperty taken by the sheriff, and after holding the same' for the statutory time, no redelivery bond having been made, the same was delivered to the plaintiff. The mortgaged property having been advertised for sale as provided by law, the defendant obtained an order from the district court, under section 4026, Rev, Laws 1910, enjoining them from foreclosing their mortgage by advertisement. Defendant in his answer pleaded payment, and in his cross-petition asked for judgment against plaintiff for $13.66, whicli he claimed was overpayment, and further alleged that plaintiff had charged him the sum of $30 as interest on the notes, which he claimed was at a usurious rate, and he prayed for judgment for double that amount, in the sum of $60. Defendant asked for further judgment in the sum of $100 as a penalty for failing and refusing to release the two chattel mortgages of record, for $100 as damages for the taking of the mortgaged property under the replevin writ, and also asked for the return of the property and for $50 attorney fee for the defense of the action.

The plaintiff filed a motion for judgment upon the pleadings, which motion was overruled, and exceptions saved.. The case was, tried to a jury, which returned a judgment m ravor of defendant as follows:

We, the jury impaneled and sworn in the above-entitled cause, do upon our oaths find for the defendant, and fix the amount of-damage recovery of $326.91, as follows:
Penalty for not releasing mortgage_$100.00
Damage for unlawful taking team and wagon _100.00
Attorney’s fee_ 50.00
Return mules, wagon, or equivalent_210.00
$460.00
1-ess bal. on open account_133.09

Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict, the motion for new trial was overruled, and this appeal perfected.

The motion for a new trial was. in the main, in the language of the statute, and defendant urges that the same was insufficient, citing Walter A. Wood Co. v. Farnham. 1 Okla. 375, 33 Pac. 867. This exact question was recently passed on in the case of the First National Bank of Wetumka v. Nolen, 59 Okla., 157 Pac. 754, and it was there held that the statutory ground for a new trial, viz., “error of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by the party making the application,” will, when embraced *140 in the motion for a new trial, present on appeal any objection or exception properly made and saved during the progress of the trial. We do not commend this practice, and believe that the complaining party should be required to point out specifically the ruling of the trial court complained of, but the same has been approved by this court ever since the adoption of the Kansas procedure in early territorial days.

The only exception to the court’s charge appears at the end thereof in'these words, “to all of which the plaintiff excepted.” It has long since become the settled law of this jurisdiction that a general exception to a charge of the court containing several distinct instructions, some of which are correct, is not sufficient to save an exception to any specific instruction. Shelby v. Shaner, 28 Okla. 605, 115 Pac. 785, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 621; Johnson v. Johnson, 43 Okla. 582, 143 Pac. 670. Section 5003, Rev. Laws 1910, provides such a simple method for reserving exceptions to the court’s instructions we are unable to understand why attorneys so often fail to properly save such exceptions. However, an examination of the court’s instructions does not reveal any substantial error therein, and, even if there was, the same could not avail plaintiff here for the above reason. So the only question properly before us is: Do the pleadings and evidence sustain the verdict? After an examination of the same we conclude that neither. the pleadings nor the evidence justify the verdict.

The evidence in the ca.se shows that the 'plaintiffs wore merchants in the town of Walters, and the defendant a farmer near there; that on February 12, 1912, he gave plaintiffs a note for $150, secured by a chattel mortgage, and received therefor a book which contained coupons in the sum of $132, which entitled the defendant to purchase articles from plaintiffs’ store to the amount of $132, and to pay for the same \vith these ..coupons. On May 17, 1912, he executed a second note to them for $100. 'secured by chattel mortgage, and received a coupon book for $88. to be traded out as in the first instance. On May 26, 1912, defendant began trading in plaintiffs’ store on an open account, and by November following the account amounted to $138:55. Each of the chattel mortgages contained the following provision:

“It is understood and agreed that, should the undersigned become indebted to the said Geo. M. Paschal & Bro. in any other 'sum or Sums of money in addition to that above mentioned, this conveyance shall and does cover and constitute a lien on all the above-described property, to secure the payment, of any and all such renewals or additional sum or sums, and shall be as binding against the property hereinabove conveyed as if such renewals or additional sum or sums were described in accurate detail herein.”

During the fall of 1912 the defendant made several payments in cash and produce to plaintiffs in the total sum of $225.46. These cash payments were applied first to the liquidation of the open account and next to the payment, of the $100 note.

It appears that the misunderstanding between the parties arose as to whether the payments should be credited on the notes or the open account; the defendant contending that he directed the payments made by him to be credited on the notes, and plaintiffs contended that they had no such instruction from defendant. Defendant further contended that the two chattel mortgages given by him to plaintiffs did not cover the open account. On the 8th day of March, 1913, the defendant caused a written notice to be served on plaintiffs wherein it was set out that defendant had paid the two notes of $150 and $100, respectively, by paying in cash and produce the sum of $225.46, and the sum of $30, which he claimed credit for upon the ground that it was a usurious charge of interest upon the. two notes, and further demanded that they file a release of said mortgages with the proper officer showing payment in full of the indebtedness secured thereby.

A mortgage given to secure a stated indebtedness, and therein stipulated that, should the maker become indebted to the mortgagee in any further sum, the instrument should cover and constitute a lien on the mortgaged property to secure the payment thereof, effectively operates to secure an open account made while said mortgage was still in force and effect. Davis v. Carlisle, 5 Ind. T. 83, 82 S. W. 682.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 652, 158 P. 365, 59 Okla. 139, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geo-m-paschal-bro-v-bohannan-okla-1916.