Gilpin v. Netograph MacH. Co.

1910 OK 12, 108 P. 382, 25 Okla. 408, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 11, 1910
Docket318
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1910 OK 12 (Gilpin v. Netograph MacH. Co.) 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
Gilpin v. Netograph MacH. Co., 1910 OK 12, 108 P. 382, 25 Okla. 408, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 277 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

Turner, J.

On May 5, 1904, defendant in error, Netograph Machine Company, a foreign corporation, sued C. F. Gilpin, plaintiff in error, in the probate court of Okláhoma county, on his promissory note for $600, dated January 25, 1904, payable to it March 19, 1904, with interest and attorney’s fees in case of suit. After issue joined there was trial to a jury, which resulted in judgment for plaintiff for $680.60 and costs, from which defendant appealed to the district court. There the cause by stipulation was consolidated with the case of E. G. Ea-nkin v. C. F. Gilpin, also appealed by him from the probate court; the same being a suit upon a promissory note for like amount, made by defendant at the same time, payable to plaintiff, and by it endorsed to said Rankin, *410 who had sued and recovered judgment in that court. In the district court, after amended answer and reply filed, there was trial anew to a jury and judgment for plaintiff on both notes for $1,633. Defendant brings the case here for review.

For amended answer defendant admitted the execution of both notes, and among other defenses thereto pleaded fraud in the execution thereof, and, assuming the burden of proof, introduced testimony to maintain the issue. At the close of all the testimony plaintiff demurred to the evidence, which was sustained; and the first question for us to determine is whether the evidence is sufficient to take the case to the jury on the ground of fraud. Without undertaking to weigh conflicting testimony, but viewing it all in the light most favorable to defendant and allowing all reasonable inferences in his favor, on this point the evidence disclosed that on August 20, 1903, defendant in error was a corporation doing business under the laws of Missouri, with its principal office in St. Louis; that G. W. Fryhofer was its agent at Oklahoma City with full power to make contracts for the sale of the exclusive right to use the patent “Coin Netograph Machine No. 55241” in the Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory; that some time prior thereto said agent put on exhibition at the Grand Avenue hotel in said city a sample of said machine for the purpose of selling its use as a patent right; that about that time defendant, being out of business, was approached by J. L. Ladd, and induced to go with him to inspect said machine, which Ladd told him was a good investment; that defendant had known Ladd as a business man in said city for a number of years; that he was regarded by defendant and generally as honest atnd intelligent, upon whose business judgment defendant relied. After inspecting the machine, concerning which defendant knew nothing and so informed Ladd, and that he had no faith in patents and could see nothing, owing to defective eyesight, Ladd again informed him that it was' a good investment, and he, himself, was going to put some money in it, and wa'nted the defendant to join the company when formed and like wise invest. This he agreed to do, and laser a “partnership” was formed for the purpose of handling said machines, consisting of *411 the defendant, Scott Thompson. J. D. Speaker, J. L. Ladd, and A. J. Brown, under the name of the Netograph Machine Company, of which defendant was elected “secretary”. Concerning the deal, the testimony further discloses that defendant talked to the other partners, but mostly with Ladd, and went into it in good faith, and supposed he did, and relied entirely on Ladd and Fryhofer as to the workings of said machine, Frjdiofer assuring him that Ladd was to go in and pay therefor and share therein equally with the rest; that through said Ladd and Fryhofer he was induced to enter into an arrangement, whereby all five of said partners were to join in the purchase of a number of said machines for said Netograph Machine Company with the understanding that each would own a one-fifth interest in the purchase and pay or secure therefor his proportionate share of the purchase price; that as a result of said understanding, on the date aforesaid, they entered into a written contract with the defendant in error, in which for $6,000 it granted them as parties of the second part the exclusive right and license to sell, use, lease, and employ and license others so to do for and within said territories 60 of said machines, pictures and phonograph records, the property of defetadant in error, f. o. b., at St. Louis, said $6,000 to be paid as follows:

“* * * Each of said parties of the second part shall at the time of the approval of the patents hereinafter mentioned by the attorney of the party of the second part, pay the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars, and each of said parties shall execute their individual note to the party of the first part, due in six months after the date thereof, with six per cent, interest from date, and said notes and money to be deposited with the Oklahoma Trust & Banking Company, at Oklahoma Gity, O. T., to he delivered to the parties of the first part, only when the parties of the second part shall have received the said sixty machines and the said pictures and phonograph records: * * * Provided further, that the payment of said money by the parties of the second part shall be deemed and considered as a several contract. * * * ”

After said contract was signed by defendant in error and by all of said partners, defendant, in payment for his one-fifth interest in the property, executed two notes for $600 each, payable to defendant in error, and deposited the same in the bank pursuant to the *412 terms oi said contract, and on January 5, 1904, renewed the same by executing the notes sued on. At the same time Ladd, after signing the contract, in payment for his one-fifth interest in the property, exécuted his note for $600 payable to defendant in error and drew a check for $500, likewise payable, deposited them in the bank, but which were late]- returned to him unpaid by defendant in error, pursuant to a prior secret arrangement between Ladd and Fryhofer to the effect that Ladd should pay nothing for his interest in the property. About half of the machines arrived November 13, 1904; the other half later. Each was intended to show a picture under an electric light and sing a song when a nickle was dropped in a slot and a lever pulled. They were worthless.

It is impossible to read this record without being impressed that Ladd was simply acting as a decoy for Fryhofer as agent for defendant in error to get his copartners* into this deal whereby, unknown to any of them, his one-fifth interest in the property should cost him nothing. Any such trick as that is a fraud. The representation by Fryhofer and Ladd as an inducement to defendant to purchase,'that Ladd, whom defendant regarded highly for his honesty, good faith, and judgment, had agreed to likewise purchase on the same terms, without disclosing the fact that Ladd’s interest in the machine Avas to be given him as a gratuity for securing defendant and others to purchase, was such a fraud as will entitle defendant to defeat a recovery on the notes sued upon.

Coles v. Kennedy, 81 Iowa, 360, 46 N. W. 1088, 25 Am. St. Rep. 503, was a suit to recover upon a contract in writing for the purchase of stock in a mining company. Defendant pleaded among other things that he was induced to execute the contract b]' reason of the fraud of the appellant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Payne v. Beaumont
245 S.W. 94 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
J. Crouch & Son v. Huber
1922 OK 284 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1922)
Le Roy, Adm. v. Meadows
1921 OK 310 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1921)
Menefee v. Oxnam
183 P. 379 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Chisum v. Huggins
1916 OK 48 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1916)
Sipes v. Dickinson
1913 OK 668 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
Noble v. Fox
1912 OK 767 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Ewing Et Ex. v. Ewing
1912 OK 566 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Jefress v. Phillips
1912 OK 43 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Edwards v. Miller
1911 OK 497 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1911)
Prescott v. Brown
1911 OK 513 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1911)
Gast v. King
1910 OK 330 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 12, 108 P. 382, 25 Okla. 408, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilpin-v-netograph-mach-co-okla-1910.