Gwinnup v. Walton Trust Co.

1918 OK 257, 172 P. 936, 69 Okla. 319, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 709
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 30, 1918
Docket7021
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1918 OK 257 (Gwinnup v. Walton Trust 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
Gwinnup v. Walton Trust Co., 1918 OK 257, 172 P. 936, 69 Okla. 319, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 709 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by-

BUMM'GNS,-'iC. •'

The parties-will Be referred-'-to Eeré’-'áS ffie'y appeared' in thg* court below. The’-piáíiítifi- commenced-this action’ against the: defendant, alleging! that, in consideration of $4,150 'paid--' by plaintiff to defendant, the deiendaMftagrecd-to appoint plaintiff as its agent in'soliciting and' procuring farm loans in Northeast, Oklahoma at Yinita and Muskogee; that the defendant refused to comply with its agreement and failed and neglected to make the plaintiff its' agent as agreed. The petition prays the recovery of the sum of $4,150 paid defendant by plaintiff and' $25,000 as damages for breach of the contract’. The-'defendant filed an answer and amendment thereto' denying the allegations of the petition and. alleging that F. M. Gwinnup and plaintiff were partners’. doing business under' the' firm name' of F. M. Gwinnup & S'on, engaged’ in the farm.loan business as agents of ’the defendant, having offices at Yiriitia. and Mustogce; that such partnership had existed from 1907 to- 1913 when it was dissolved’ by the death of F. M. Gwinnup; that during said period' the said partnership had been extensively engaged in making farm loans for the defendant ; and that .at. the time of the death of F. M. Gwinnup said firm'was, indebted to the defendant in the sum of $4,150, being-money paid to said firm by the defendant upon loans approved by the defendant, but which money had not been paid by said firm to' the borrowers, and intetest due' the defendant collected by said firm arid n'dt paid over to defendant. The defendant further' alleged that the sum of $4,150 paid by .plaintiff to the defendant was paid in satisfaction of the indebtedness of said firm of F. M. Gwinnup & Son to the defendant which- the plaintiff as -a member of said firm was legally liable to pay the defendant; that the agreement alleged in the petition of plaintiff, if made, was without consideration and void and unenforceable. By an amendment to its answer the defendant alleged that tlie plaintiff by means'of the stationery used by him in his correspondence with the defendant had held himself out as a member of the fifm of F. M. Gwinnup & Son, and he had permitted F. M. Gwinnup to hold him out to the defendant as a member of said firm; that defendant relied upon the representations of the plaintiff and the representations of F, M. Gwinnup, made with the knowledge of plaintiff, and believed that the plaintiff was a member of the firm of F. M. Gwinnup & Son: and that, acting upon such belief’ the defendant did business' with said firm and advanced -the sum o.f $4.150'subsequent-ly paid -by plaintiff to defendant;- that by his acts and conduct in so -holding, and permitting himself to be' held' out as a member of-said firm-"of F.’M:, Gwinnup &’ Son,’ arid l>,y,reason of the fact that defendant rely;-. Mg upon such; ostensible partnership had Advanced said slims, of money,, tlie plaintiff was • estopped from denying that a partner-;’.’ ship actually existed between him and said F. M. Gwinnup.' The plaintiff replied denying the allegations in the answer and thei amendment thereto. At the conclusion’ of* the evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendant, the plaintiff excepting thereto. Judgment being rendered upon this verdict, the plaintiff brings' this proceeding in error to reverse the Judgment of the trial court.

The evidence in this case is very volmni-' nous, covering correspondence between the’ plaintiff and his father, F. M. Gwinnup,' and the defendant over a period of about six years. We will not attempt to set out and review all of the same, but will content ourselves by setting forth the conten-’ lions of the respective "parties upon the evidence. It is the contention of the plaintiff’ that his father was engaged in the farm loan business for himself alone at Yinita, Okla., doing business under the name of F. M, Gwinnup & Son; that he was engaged in the. farm loan business at Muskogee, doing business under the firm name of F. M. Gwtor nup & Son; that his father was the agent of the defendant and be was a subagent of his father;'that his father paid the expenses of the Yinita office and received all the profits of the business of that office: that' he paid the expenses of the Muskogee office and received all the prefits of that office; that he had other connections in the, farm loan business at Muskogee; that thq farm loans that he secured for the defendant were all closed through his father’s of-, fice at Vinita;. that he had repeatedly attempted- to get the defendant to recognize him as its agent and do business with his Muskogee office direct, but it had always refused to do so; that there was a division, of territory between him and his father, and his father paid him all the commissions • on business obtained by him; that when his father died his father was short in his accounts with defendant in the sum of $4,750, which sum he paid to the defendant upon the defendant’s agreement that it would transfer his father’s business to him and’ make him their agent in Northeast Oklahoma, which agreement it subsequently refused to carry out!

It is the contention of the. defendant that the agreement. to employ • plaintiff as its *321 agent, after his father’s death, was never entered into; that its first connection with the plaintiff or his father arose from an application written by his father upon a letter head entitled “F. M. Gwinnup & Son, Offices at Vinita and Muskogee,” in which his father solicited the farm loan business of the defendant in Northeast Oklahoma; in that letter it was stated that the firm had offices at Vinita and Muskogee; that F. M. Gwinnup & Son were employed as the agents in Northeast Oklahoma of the defendant and an account opened up by de- ’ fendant with F. M. Gwinnup & Son; that most of the checks for loans were made payable to F. M. Gwinnup & Son; that the plaintiff deposited cheeks payable to F. M. Gwinnup & Son indorsed in the firm name by himself as a member of the firm; that during all of the period plaintiff in his correspondence with the defendant continually held himself oiit as a member of the firm; that defendant relied upon such representation ; that after the death of F. M. Gwinnup, there being some funds in a bank at Pryor to the credit of F. M. Gwinnup & Son, plaintiff drew a check for said funds, signing the same F. M. Gwinnup & Son by H. G. Gwinnup, surviving partner; that plaintiff made an affidavit and secured the affidavit of his mother and sister, the only other heirs of F. M. Gwinnup, to the effect that the firm of F. M. Gwinnup & Son consisted of F. M. Gwinnup and H. G. Gwinnup and no other person had any interest therein.

The plaintiff explained the giving of the check and the making and procuring of affidavits, on the ground that, the funds in the Pryor bank being the property of the defendant, the chock was drawn and the affidavits made at the suggestion of counsel for defendant in order that defendant might procure the funds without the expense of an administration of the estate of F. M. Gwin-nup. It is further contended by plaintiff that the defendant never believed that he was a member of the firm of F. M. Gwinnup k Son and never treated him as such and that defendant regarded F. M. Gwinnup as their only agent in that part of Oklahoma.

The rule as to the determination of whether or not a trial court was right in directing a verdict is well established in this state as laid down in Reed Grocery Co. v. Miller, 36 Okla. 134, 128 Pac. 271, as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 257, 172 P. 936, 69 Okla. 319, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwinnup-v-walton-trust-co-okla-1918.