Inc. Town of Wainwright v. Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. Co.

218 P. 306, 92 Okla. 75
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 29, 1923
Docket11274
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 218 P. 306 (Inc. Town of Wainwright v. Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. 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
Inc. Town of Wainwright v. Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. Co., 218 P. 306, 92 Okla. 75 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, C.

This action was commenced March 8, 1919, against the incorporated town of Wainwright to recover on a warrant issued to the Eureka Fire Hose Manufacturing Company in the sum of $499-.-68. The petition, in addition to the allegations necessary to recover on such an instrument, alleged that on or about the 12th day of July, 1916, the warrant was stolen from the plaintiff, and alleged the warrant to be wrongfully in the possession of the defendant. The defendant answered, in substance, that the warrant was paid in full on the’ 25th day of September, 1916; denied that the warrant was wrongfully in its possession, and alleged that the warrant was paid in full and came into its possession without any notice or knowledge of any wrongdoing. A copy of the warrant with the indorsements thereon was set out as an exhibit and is as follows:

“Claim No. 36-37, Series 1915-1916, Warrant No. 37 $499.68/100 General Warrant, Treasurer of the City of Wainwright, Oklahoma. City Clerk of Wainwright, Okla. Nov. 18, 1915.
“Pay to Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. Co., or bearer,
“Four Hundred Ninety-nine — 68/100 Dollars with interest at 6% from date of registration to legal maturity.
“Estimate approved for this fund, $679.07 Drawn on this fund to date, $577.78. Bal. to credit of funds, $101.29.
“For .hose bought, dated 1912, out of the General fund of the City, by order of the Council.
Attest;
“Clyde C. Adair, Clerk,
“J. H. Hobbs,
“Chairman Board of Trustees.
“Indorsements.
“For collection.
“Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. Co.
“By Mosier and ---
“No. 7167 A. Reynolds.
“Paid in full this 25th day of Sept. 1916.
“Eureka Fire Hose Co.
“By K. H. Burgess, Atty.”

Jury was waived and the case tried to the court. Judgment was f„r plaintiff for the face of the warrant and interest, and the defendant appeals.

There is no apparent conflict of evidence. Some time prior to the issuance of the warrant, the plaintiff, through its attorney, John H. Mosier, of Muskogee, recovered a judgment against the town of Wainwright and the warrant sued on was issued to the plaintiff in satisfaction of that judgment- The plaintiff company left the warrant in the hands of its attorney, 3. H. Mosier, whose law firm was at that time known as Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds, for collection when the proper levy had been made for that purpose. The law firm of Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds did a considerable collection business and had in its employ one K. H. Burgess, who had charge of whatever collections were assigned to him by any member of the firm. He had authority to make collections and give receipts by signing the firm’s name, but had no authority to indorse checks for' the firm. It does not appear from the evidence what other duties he performed in and around the law offices- of Mosier, Green-slade & Reynolds. Some letters were written by the law firm of Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds to- the proper authorities of the town of Wainwright in reference to the payment of the warrant and, in response to a letter from that firm (whether written by any member of the firm of Mosier, Green-slade, & Reynolds or by Burgess, is not disclosed), the trustees of the town of Wainwright and the town treasurer went to the law offices of Mosier, Greenslade, & Reynolds in the city of Muskogee on the 25th day of September, 1916, for the purpose of reaching some settlement of this warrant. They met with Burgess' in the offices of Mo-sier, Greenslade, & Reynolds and he assumed to be acting for that firm. Proposi *77 tions were made back and forth between the town trustees on the one side and Eur-gess on the other, looking to a compromise settlement. These four representatives of the town of Wainwright were in the offices of Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds for a con-, siderable time in the forenoon, and again’for something like an hour in the afternoon. They finally reached an agreement of compromise whereby the trustees of the town agreed to pay $400 in full settlement. The trustees of the town, when they had reached an agreement with Burgess, suggested that they should have the O. K. of Mr. Mosier to the compromise. Burgess left the room and returned and made a statement, in substance and to their satisfaction, that the compromise settlement was satisfactory with the law firm of Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds. The town treasurer, then drew his check on the Farmers’ State Bank o£ Wainwright, payable to the order of Eureka Fire Hose Manufacturing Company in the sum of $400, and Burgess indorsed the warrant: “Paid in full this 25th day of Sept., 1910, Eureka Fire Hose Co. by K. H. Burgess,” and delivered the warrant to the treasurer of the town of Wainwright. Nothing more was heard by the authorities of the town of Wainwright about the warrant until about the time this action was commenced more than two years later.

Burgess took the $400 check given him in settlement of this warrant and indorsed it as follows: “Deposited for collection. Eureka Fire Hose Mfg. Co., King II. Burgess Atty.,” and deposited it in the Muskogee National Bank for collection. In due course the cheek was paid and the money was appropriated by Burgess to his own uso and benefit and was never turned in to the law firm or the company and they, or any of them, had no knowledge of this settlement until some tim in 1919, when Burgess entered a plea of guilty of embezzlement of funds and was sentenced to the penitentiary. At the time of sentence Burgess! made and furnished to J. H. Mosier a list of what purported to be liis defalcations, larcenies, and forgeries, in which he listed this particular warrant as having been stolen from the cash drawer of the safe of Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds. 1-Ie detailed the circumstances of the settlement with the trustees of Wainwright, and the indorsement of the check given by the treasurer to the plaintiff and of his embezzlement of that money. The evidence shows that this warrant was left with ,1. H. Mosier, as attorney for the plaintiff, for collection with the proper -levy had been made to pay it; that it was deposited by him in the cash drawer of hisf safe, whev' he believed it still was until he was informed by Burgess, at the time of his conviction, of its disposition by him. The plaintiff company had never authorized Mosier, Greenslade & Reynolds, or any of them, to compromise this claim or do any thing other than collect it in full when the proper levy had been made and the fundsi realized for its payment. The law firm of Mosier, Green-slade & Reynolds, or any member of the firm, never at any time placed this warrant in Burgess’ hands or authorized him to collect this warrant or present it for collection, and never at any time approved the compromise settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 306, 92 Okla. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inc-town-of-wainwright-v-eureka-fire-hose-mfg-co-okla-1923.