Invader Oil Corp. v. Commerce Trust Co.

1925 OK 578, 238 P. 441, 111 Okla. 85, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 7, 1925
Docket15295
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1925 OK 578 (Invader Oil Corp. v. Commerce 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
Invader Oil Corp. v. Commerce Trust Co., 1925 OK 578, 238 P. 441, 111 Okla. 85, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 429 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

LOGSDON, C.

Defendants present their argument for reversal of this ease under four propositions, stated in the brief as follows:

Cl) Plaintiff had made a conclusive and binding election of remedies by pursuit of funds in the hands of the Central State Bank, which barred recourse against the makers of the note.

(2) Plaintiff ratified the payment of the note to the Central State Bank, which ratification discharged^ these defendants from further liability.

(3) Thei court erred in admitting incompetent evidence on behalf of plaintiff.

(4) There were two questions of fact which should have been submitted to the jury: .(1) The question of agency, and (2) the question of ratification.

The first proposition is argued under four subdivisions: (a) That plaintiff having two .remedies, each resting upen a different basic right, they were inconsistent;' (b) therefore, the filing of a claim with the Bank (Commissioner was an election; (c) this election was irrevocable; and (d) being a choice as one of two substantive rights as well as an election of remedies, it was irrevocable.

It is not considered that the contention is .tenable as to the existence of two substantive rights. The only substantive right which plaintiff had was to enforce collection of its note. Whether this be done by recovery of a trust fund created for its payment or by judgment against the makers does not change the character of the substantive right. Either remedy effectuates only one result — collection of the debit — which is the primary and only substantive right of plaintiff. A choice of .the remedy by which this right shall be enforced may operate as an estoppel to pursue any other, but it cannot change the character of the substantive right, which remains the same under either theory.

Was there such an election by plaintiff of its remedy as to become irrevocable and to now operate as an estoppel against its successful maintenance of .the instant action?

Defendants rely on the general rule aniw unced by this court in Herbert v. Wagg, 27 Okla. 674, 117 Pac. 209, and on text-writers, and on decisions from other jurisdictions announcing consonant principles. The applicable language in Herbert v. Wlagg, supra, is this:

“The general rule is that when the law gives several means of redress or kinds of relief, predicated on conflicting theories, the election of one of them operates as a! bar to the subsequent adoption of others.”

Plaintiff in its brief concedes the correctness of this general rule, but questions its application to the facts in the instant case. Many of the authorities relied on by defendants to sustain their application of this general rulel to the facts of the instant case have been carefully examined. From this examination, • it is deduced that where a specific fund can be identified as a deposit or transfer cf cash, or where merchandise has been delivered, thus, in either ease, enhancing the value of assets, an election to pursue the specific funds or merchandise, or to file a claim for a. pro rata share of the assets thus enhanced in value, where they have come under legal control, is an election and operates as an, estoppel to pursue any other remedy. Herbert v. Wagg, supra; Vose v. Penny, 78 Okla. 238, 190 *87 Pac. 97; Fowler v. Bowery Savings Bank (N. X.) 21 N. E. 172; Beach v. Ficks (La.) 62 N. W. 753; Tishomingo Sav. Inst. v. Johnson Nesbitt & Co. (Ala.) 40 South. 503; Davenport v. Walker, 116 N. Y. 411; Moline Plow Co. v. Redgers (Kan.) 37 Pac. 111; Claussen v. Head (Wis.) 85 N. W. 1028.

However, the estoppel by election of remedies is subject to the same precedent condition as other estoppels in pais. The election relied on to create the estcppel must be based on a right of election and must be made with full knowledge of the facts on which that right rests. The basic right of an election is the co-existence of two complete and inconsistent remedies, the pursuit of either of which will eventuate in the same ultimate legal result. In the instant case, the ultimate legal result sought is the collection of the debt. Were two inconsistent .remedies co-existent in the instant case so that the pursuit of one by the plaintiff worked an abandonment of the other and now operates as an estoppel to the maintenance of this action?

Upon the representation of B. Frank Wood, one cf the makers of the note, that he paid the note in full on the last day •the Central State Bank of Muskogee was open for business, plaintiff filed its claim as ai preferred creditor with the Bank Commissioner upon the theory, and express allegation in said claim, that said Central State Bank of Muskogee had received said sum of $5,000 in trust for the benefit of •plaintiff. It was later learned that the bank had received no money on the note. It was merely a record transaction by which B. Frank Wood withdrew his brother’s deposit of $10,000 from a bank which he knew to be in a failing condition. 'This was accomplished by his taking credit on the books of >the bank for $8,000, to cover payment of one note for $5,000, and another for $3,000, and drawing $2,000 in currency.

In Bolles’ Modern Daw of Banking, vol. 3, p. 492, see. 10, it is said:

“To recover the trust fund, it must have an actual, as distinguished from a recorded, or theoretical existence. The crediting of a fund without adding an actual corresponding amount creates no right in the beneficiary to recover the sum credited, whether the amount was actually in the bank’s possession or not. The presence of the money credited in the bank is not enough; it must be an addition existing at the time its recovery is sought.”

This text is supported by .a long list of cases from seventeen of the states, and from the federal courts, while the only jurisdiction in which a different rule has been announced appears to be Mississippi. With this uniformity existing, the rule announced by tbs author may be said to be the established rule. Therefore, under the undisputed facts in this case, plaintiff had no right or title to any part of the assets of the Central State Bank of Muskogee as a trust fund. The filing of its claim as the beneficiary of a trust in the assets of the failed bank to the extent of $5,000 was the assertion of a claim which had no existence in fact (r in law. No right to such a remedy ever existed in plaintiff’s favor. Its mistake in so filing its claim was induced by the representation of B. Frank Wood, who now asserts the estoppel. In 20 C. J. 21, it is said:

“An election can exist only where there is a choice between two or more inconsistent remedies actually existing at the time the election is made. Hence the fact that a party misconceives his right or through mistake attempts to exercise a right to which he is not entitled, ,or prosecutes an action based upon a remedial right which he erroneously supposes he has, and is defeated because of such error, does not constitute a conclusive election, and does not preclude him from thereafter prosecuting an election based upon an inconsistent remedial right.”

In 9 R. C. L. 962, sec. 9, the same principle is announced in this language:

“The principles governing election of remedies are necessarily based upon the supposition that two or more remedies exist.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 578, 238 P. 441, 111 Okla. 85, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/invader-oil-corp-v-commerce-trust-co-okla-1925.