Hummell v. Brown

1923 OK 993, 221 P. 738, 93 Okla. 256, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 20, 1923
Docket11918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1923 OK 993 (Hummell v. Brown) 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
Hummell v. Brown, 1923 OK 993, 221 P. 738, 93 Okla. 256, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 410 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The parties to this action will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the trial court.

The action was commenced by the plaintiff against the defendant on the 2nd of July, 1919. The action is a suit in replevin, for the purpose of obtaining possession of certain personal property in which the plaintiff claimed a special ownership because of a certain chattel mortgage executed by defendant in favor of one Charles P. Yadon, to secure the payment of a number of promissory notes, executed by defendant to the said Yadon, aggregating the sum of $600. Copies of the chattel mortgage and notes are attached to the petition. The plaintiff alleged the sale and transfer of the instruments sued on, by Charles P. Ya-don to plaintiff; and ownership in plaintiff at the time of bringing the suit. The petition of plaintiff as to the transfer of ownership of the instruments sued on alleges:

“That thereafter the plaintiff herein, E. M. Brown, for a good and valuable consideration, purchased said notes and mortgage, prior to June 6, 1919, which was before any of said notes secured by said mortgage had become due; that the plaintiff herein has made due demand from the defendant for payment on the first note and all of said notes; but that payment has been refused; that by provisions of said mortgage hereinafter mentioned it is provided that in the event of default in the payment of any one of said notes as set out in said mortgage, then and in that event all of the balance of said notes becomes due and payable.”

At the time of filing the petition the plaintiff also filed an affidavit in replevin and replevin bond, and process was duly issued and served, and the defendant made a redelivery bond and retained possession of the property. In due course the defendant appeared and filed a general denial by way of answer.

An examination of the instruments sued on discloses that they were dated May 6, 1919, the first note being due June 6, 1919; and the notes following in their order falling due on the 6th of each succeeding month thereafter. There was a provision in the chattel mortgage that in default of payment of any one of the notes all may be declared to be due and payable at the option of the mortgagee, and the mortgagee shall have the right to the immediate possession of the mortgaged property. The s)nit was filed after default in payment of the first note of the series, and before the second note fell due. All of the series of notes were made payable to the order of Charles P. Yadon. The first one of the series bears the notation upon the back thereof as follows:

“5-21-19. Pay to E. M. Brown.”

All the others of the series bear the following indorsement:

“5-21-19. Pay to the order of E. M. Brown. Charles P. Yadon.”

The right of the plaintiff to have foreclosure of the mortgage for the aggregate debt was acquired by reason of the default of the payor upon the first of the series of notes.

The cause was tried to a jury on June 1, 1920. In the statement of the cause to the jury, the defendant interposed the defense to plaintiff’s action that there was an infirmity in the instruments sued on; and that the title thereto was defective in the plaintiff because of the fact that the notes and mortgage sued on by plaintiff were acquired by the payee, Charles P. Yadon, by reason of fraud and misrepresentation upon the part of such payee and upon the part of his agent, a man by the name of Miller; and that there was a failure of consideration for which the notes were given; and that the plaintiff knew at the time he bought the instruments of the wrong perpetrated by the payee and his agent, Miller; and the failure of consideration; and of the infirmity and defect in the title of the payee. No objection was made to the interposing of such defense, because of the insufficiency of the pleadings or otherwise. The plaintiff introduced the notes and mortgage, and after a. long direct and cross-examination, the plaintiff rested his case.

The evidence offered by way of defense tended to prove that one Miller was the *258 agent of Charles P. Yadon, the payee named In the notes, and the mortgagee named in the mortgage on which the plaintiff relied, and as such, he approached the plaintiff to aell her a certain lot of hotel equipment located in the town of Keifer, in a place known as the Francis Hotel; and represented to her that the place was being operated by. a Mrs. Porter, and that Mrs. Porter was making $400 per month clear in the operation of the hotel; and that plaintiff could take charge of it and make it ijay $500 per month clear profit; that Miller detailed to her the specific property in the Francis Hotel, nnd told her that it was in good condition, and that there was nothing to be added to step into the Francis Hotel and so to doing a successful hotel business and make around $500 per month clear of all expenses; that Miller and the defendant went to Keifer to look the property over, but when they got there Miller hurried away, telling her that he would warrant that the stuff was there and just.as represented; that in making the deal the defendant would be dealing with Mrs. Porter, the owner of the property who wanted to quit the hotel business; that defendant knew practically nothing about hotel properties, and relied upon the representations made to her by Miller as to the articles of property and their condition, and the amount of clear profit being made by Mrs. Porter, and what defendant could probably make if she would take charge; that based upon the representations of Miller, defendant concluded that she would deal for the property if proper arrangements could be made to finance the same; that Miller represented to her that Charles P. Yadon would lend financial assistance to her, and she and Miller went to Yadon’s place of business and she made the notes and mortgage to secure the payment of the sum of $600, the mortgage being given on her own property in the town of Tulsa; that-she then found that Charles P. Yadon was the owner of the Keifer hotel property by reason of a bill of sale conveying the same from Mrs. Porter to Yadon, and which bill of sale was transferred and assigned by Yadon to the defendant, after the notes and mortgage had been executed to him; that defendant went to Keifer to lake charge of the Francis Hotel and on doing so found that much of the property had been taken away and was not there, as was represented to her; that much of it that remained was dilapidated, old, worn, and useless; that she found some of the rooms had no furniture at all in them and that she would have to refurnish the hotel in part; that she found that Mrs. Porter had not been making a profit in operating the place, and after trial found that she could not only not make money, but that she could keep the place open only by sustaining a loss of several dollars a day, and had to abandon the project. There was other testimony on the part of the defendant along the same line, but the foregoing is enough recited to show the trend of it.

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Related

White v. City Nat. Bank of Norman
1954 OK 44 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Young v. Hembree
1937 OK 654 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 993, 221 P. 738, 93 Okla. 256, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummell-v-brown-okla-1923.