Illinois Bankers Life Ass'n v. Grayson

1927 OK 150, 256 P. 894, 125 Okla. 81, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 24, 1927
Docket17070
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1927 OK 150 (Illinois Bankers Life Ass'n v. Grayson) 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
Illinois Bankers Life Ass'n v. Grayson, 1927 OK 150, 256 P. 894, 125 Okla. 81, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 8 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

HUNT, J.

This is. an appeal from the district court of McIntosh county by the Illinois Bankers Life Association from’ a judgment rendered on an instructed verdict of the jury against it and in favor of the defendants in error. The parties appear here as. in the court below. ■ The facts as disclosed by the record are as follows-:

The Illinois Bankers Life Association brought suit to. foreclose a real estate mortgage on certain land in McIntosh county executed by Stellá V. Grayson oh July 10,' 1916, the then owner of the land. The note and mortgage with certain interest coupons were made to the Conservative Loan Company, said interest coupons being made payable at their office in Shawnee, Okla. The note also contained the provision that any part of the principal could be paid in múltiples of $100 on any interest-paying date after the expiration 'of two years by giving 60 days’ notice in writing. On August 23, 1919, more than three years after the note and mortgage were executed, Stella V. Grayson sold the land to William Jacobs, defendant herein, who assumed the $3,000 first mortgage and the $600 second mortgage. He had an abstract made and examined by a reputable attorney, and this abstract revealed that both the first and second mortgages were still owned by the Conservative Loan Company of Shawnee, Okla. On October 1, 1919, William Jacobs paid to the Conservative Loan Company the. full amount of the second mortgage, and also paid to it the $180 interest due on the $3.000 first mortgage. 1-Ie paid this after receiving notice from the Conservative Loan Company to make payments .to it. On September 30, 1920. William Jacobs paid to the Conservative Loan & Trust Company $180 interest due. and $2 000 on the principal of the note, and received a receipt from the Conservative Loan & Trust Company for the $2.000. On September 28. 1922. William Jacobs again paid up the amount of interest due on the $1,000 balance, and made a $500 payment on the principal, thus reducing the loan to $500. . Un October 1, 1923, having learned, in the meantime, that the Illinois Bankers Life Association owned the note, Jacobs made a tender to this company of the balance of $500 and $32 interest, being $2 more than was legally due. Both this company and its attorney, Joe Bailey Allen, rejected the tender,' claiming $3,180 due instead of $530, and notified Jacobs that suit would be brought at once if he didn’t pay the full claim of $3,000 and $180 interest. Suit was brought, to which-Jacobs answered, alleging that he had paid the plaintiff, through its agent, the Conservative Loan Company, or the Conservative Loan & Trust Company, $2,500; that ho owed a balance of $500 with interest for one year, which he had tendered to plaintiff and which tender had been refused by plaintiff; that the Conservative .Loan Company and the Conservative Loan & Trust Company were one and the same company, and that both of said organizations had been authorized by plaintiff to collect both principal and, interest for plaintiff in this loan, as well as many other loans, .and were the. agents of-the plaintiff; that the defendant, Jacobs, was entitled to have said $2,500 payment credited on his note, and tendered the balance, $532, in open court and asked that same be accepted and his note and mortgage canceled.. There was testimony intro duced by the old officers of the Conservative Loan Company that these companies were expressly authorized to collect both, principal and interest, and that W.. H. Woods, the. president, of the-Illinois Bankers Life Association, had verbally made an agreement when he. was in Shawnee whereby this company should represent the Illinois Bankers Life Association in collecting the interest and- principal on all loans which the Illinois Bankers Life Association had acquired through these companies in Oklahoma ; and had the right to collect all loans, both interest ¿nd principal, and re-invest same in other loans. The record clearly establishes the fact that the Conservative Loan Company collected loans before they matured in numerous cases and remitted to plaintiff by check or by substituted lo.ans, which they termed, replacement, loans. Plaintiff knew the Conservative Loan Company carried an account on its books in plaintiff’s favor, since they were collecting loans of principal and interest and were advised of *83 such collections, when replacement loans were substituted in lieu of the cash collected. Both defendant Jacobs and Mr. Woods, president of plaintiff company, testified that no notice was ever given to Jacobs to remit either principal • or' interest direct to plaintiff until the Conservative Loan Company was thrown Into the hands of a receiver in 1923. At that time the plaintiff company had owned this note nearly seven years, and all the transactions concerning it had been had by plaintiff with the Conservative Loan Company or the Conservative Loan & Trust Company. The account of the Illinois Bankers Life Association with the Conservative Loan Company had been credited with these two payments made by Jacobs.

The sole question here presented is whether or not the Conservative Loan Company, or Conservative Loan & Trust Company, acted as agent of the plaintiff in the collection of amounts it is admitted were paid to them on this note and mortgage of Jacobs. There is really no controversy as to the fact of the payments and the circumstances surrounding same; plaintiff’s contention being that the Conservative Loan Company, or Conservative Loan & Trust Company, was not its agent, had no authority express or implied to collect either the principal or interest on this note, and that any payments so made by Jacobs were made at his own risk, and the plaintiff, not having received the same, was not bound thereby.

Plaintiff in error contends that no sufficient evidence competent to establish agency was introduced, and therefore proof of payment was not admissible, and requested four instructions, which were refused by the court, the giving of either of which would have amounted to a peremptory instruction for plaintiff. In support of this contention the following authorities are cited: Stapleton Motor Sales Co. et al. v. Coley. 107 Okla. 269. 232 Pac. 28; Oklahoma Automobile Co. v. Benner, 70 Okla. 261, 174 Pac. 567; Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Lamb & Tyner. 28 Okla. 275. 114 Pac. 333; Thorp Oil & Specialty Co. v. Home Oil Refining Co.. 79 Okla. 226. 192 Pac. 573; McDonald v. Strawn. 78 Okla. 271, 190 Pac. 558. We have examined each of these eases, all of which are to the general effect that agency cannot he proved against another by evidence of the declarations of an agent, and where one purports to act as agent for another, that fact of itself is not sufficient evidence upon which to submit the question of agency to the jury, all óf which is good law, and'to which we--mostvheartily subscribe. The eases cited, though, are not in point with thé instant case, either as to the'facts involved ■ or the law ■ applicable. For instance, in Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Lamb & Tyner, supra, which is cited twice in plaintiff in error’s brief, it -was held error to allow plaintiffs to‘ testify that the messenger of the defendant company, who called' them to attend injured employees of the defendant company, stated, that he was sent by the president or manager of the company, and that the company would pay for the services, in the absence of any other evidence showing said messenger to be the agent of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 150, 256 P. 894, 125 Okla. 81, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-bankers-life-assn-v-grayson-okla-1927.