Harris v. v. S. Cook Lbr. Co.

3 P.2d 894, 152 Okla. 7
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 15, 1931
Docket19606
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 894 (Harris v. v. S. Cook Lbr. 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
Harris v. v. S. Cook Lbr. Co., 3 P.2d 894, 152 Okla. 7 (Okla. 1931).

Opinions

KORNEGAX, J.

This is a proceeding in error to review the judgment of the district court of Oklahoma county, Honorable Sam Hooker, judge. This case was started by V. S. Cook Lumber Company, a corporation, filing in that court on June 27, 1924, a suit to foreclose a second mortgage executed by E. Highfill to it on December 18, 1923, to secure a promissory note for $4,750 due June 18, 1924, signed by E. Highfill, and covering lots 29 and 30 of block 9, Gault’s addition to Oklahoma City. The mortgage was subject to a mortgage for $15,000 to Local Building & Loan Association. The defendants in the suit were V. V. Harris and E. Highfill. There were two counts in the petition. The first count detailed the execution of the note and mortgage by Highfill, and detailed the connection of defendant Harris, as found on page 8 of the case-made, as follows:

“That on February 6, 1924, the defendant, E. Highfill, executed, acknowledged and delivered to the defendant Y. V. Harris a warranty deed conveying said mortgaged premises to the said Harris, the said warranty deed containing a recital of the said mortgage to this plaintiff and a recital of a first mortgage, superior in lien, to Local Building & Loan Association, which said mortgage last mentioned is more fully described in the second and third counts of this petition. That the transaction between the said E. Highfill and the said property by the said Highfill to the said Harris was verbal, and that, by such transaction, the said High-fill permitted the said Plarris to deduct, and, in fact, the said Harris did deduct, from the purchase price all of the indebtedness and obligations secured by the said mortgage, and thereby the said defendant Harris assumed and made his own the obligations of the defendant Highfill to this plaintiff.”

The conclusion of this count is a statement that plaintiff was entitled to a personal judgment on the note against Harris. The second count adopted the allegations of the first count, recounted the execution by Highfill to plaintiff of the note and mortgage, its recordation on January 4, 1924, and the execution by a former owner, Mary J. Hussel-man and her husband, W. E. Husselman. of a mortgage to Local Building & Loan Association on the property to secure $15,000, and set out the note and mortgage. It called attention to the failure by the owner to pay taxes and installment of interest and on stock called for in the note, and that failure would render the mortgage subject to foreclosure. It further alleged a conveyance by the Husselmans to Highfill on June 13, 1923, conveying the property, subject to the $15,000 mortgage. The allegation as to the assumption by Harris of the debt is found on page 13, and is as follows:

“That, on June 13, 1928, the said Mary J. Husselman and W. E. Husselman executed, acknowledged, and delivered unto E. High-fill a warranty deed conveying all of the said real estate to the defendant Highfill, and that by agreement, as a part of the same transaction, the said mortgage and indebtedness to Local Building & Loan Association was deducted from the purchase price of said property and thereby the defendant Highfill assumed and accepted as his own the indebtedness evidenced by said note; that this plaintiff does not know and cannot allege whether such agreement was verbal or written; and in like manner as heretofore alleged, upon the conveyance of said property by the said Highfill to: the defendant Harris, he, the said defendant Harris, by verbal agreement deducted the said obligations from the purchase price and assumed and accepted the same as his own.
“That despite the covenants and obligations evidenced and expressed by the said note and the said mortgage to Local Building & Loan Association, the defendants herein failed and refused to pay such obligations as they matured, and failed and refused to pay the taxes upon the said real estate, with such effect that, upon the 27th day of June, 1924, there was due and wholly unpaid upon the said obligation so held by Local Building & Loan Association, the sum of $1,059.05, and there were due and unpaid for more than 40 days after the same became due and payable, taxes in the sum of $404,84, and that on said 27th day of June, 1924, this plaintiff, holding, as heretofore alleged, a mortgage inferior in lien to the mortgage of said Local Building & Loan Association, and its rights as such second mortgage being threatened by the said defaults upon the part of the defendants herein, paid the said sum so in arrears to Local Building & Loan Association and paid the said taxes so In arrears, a total payment of $1,463.89. And that by reason thereof the defendants herein are indebted unto this plaintiff in the said sum, together with interest thereon accruing at ten per cent, p'er annum from June 27, 1924,. the date upon which such payments were made, and upon which this suit is filed, for which said sum this plaintiff Is entitled *9 to judgment against tlie said defendants and eaeli of them.”

The third count called attention to the covenant of Highfill to pay taxes, and the failure of the defendants to pay them, and also to pay installments due under the first mortgage. There was a prayer for relief on the first cause and for personal judgment against defendants on the note for $5,444.46 and interest, and on the second cause for $1,463.89 and interest, and on the third, that unless defendants paid within six months, the property be sold, subject to the loan company’s mortgage.

Harris appeared and filed a motion to quash, followed by a demurrer. Young Pespper got leave to intervene, and did so by showing that he held the loan company’s mortgage by purchase made June 30, 1924, .and sought foreclosure. Plaintiff demurred to the answer and cross-petition, and demurrer was overruled. The Harris demurrer was also overruled, and he filed an answer February 14, 1925. He admitted that plaintiff’s mortgage was subject to foreclosure. He admitted the conveyance to himself, but denied personal liability, and denied express assumption and the deduction from the purchase price of the mortgage indebtedness. He denied the payment to the loan company of anything- for taxes or on the note. Plaintiff replied to the cross-petition of Young Pepper. It withdrew its admission of priority pleaded in the former pleadings, and pleaded that the mortgage had been bought by Harris, the owner of the property, for the purpose of cheating the plaintiff, and deduced from the conduct of Harris that the ownership of the property and of the first mortgage had become united in Harris, and therefore the first mortgage was discharged, thereby making plaintiff’s mortgage superior. It set up, also, that the plaintiff was entitled to carry out the conditions of the loan company’s mortgage by payment of $208.50 a month until the stock matured, and getting the benefit of the stock maturity, and that when the stock was canceled the note and mortgage were canceled. The prayer on this answer varied from its original prayer as found on page 65, as follows:

“Plaintiff further shows to the court that since the filing of this action, it has learned that said sum of $1,059.05 tendered by it to said Local Building & Loan Association on June 27, 1924, to be applied upon said note and mortgage held by said Building & Loan Association was not so applied, and, therefore, this plaintiff is not entitled to a judgment against the defendant Harris and the -defendant E. Highfill for said sum. .

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

Related

Grose v. Romero
1948 OK 120 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1948)
Billingsley v. Parmenter
1937 OK 674 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
V. S. Cook Lumber Co. v. Harris
1937 OK 448 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Clark v. Ellison
1937 OK 382 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 894, 152 Okla. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-v-s-cook-lbr-co-okla-1931.