Jack v. National Bank

1906 OK 85, 89 P. 219, 17 Okla. 430, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1906 OK 85 (Jack v. National Bank) 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
Jack v. National Bank, 1906 OK 85, 89 P. 219, 17 Okla. 430, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 51 (Okla. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Hainer, J.:

There is very little, if any, dispute concerning the material facts in this case.

On December 12, 1903, the Southwestern Bridge & Iron Company filed in the office of the county clerk of Garfield county its account against said county in the sum of $1435.

On April 12, 1904, H. H. Watkins, a stockholder and director of the Southwestern Bridge & Iron Company representing himself to be the treasurer of said corporation, sold and assigned said account to plaintiff in error, J. P. Jack, the said assignment being made upon the back of the original claim on file in the office of the county clerk.

On January 15, 1.904, the Southwestern Bridge & Iron Company, through its president, sold and assigned said claim to the National Bank of Wichita, of Wichita, Kansas, but neither Jack nor the hoard of county commissioners had any notice of such assignment until some time in the early part •of July, 1904.

On July 26, 1904, said account was audited and allowed, and a warrant was drawn payable to the Southwestern Bridge & Iron Company. Demand was made by Jack upon the county clerk and the board of county commissioners for said warrant, which was refused, and Jack then commenced this action against J. E. Danely, county clerk, the board of county •commissioners of Garfield county and the- Southwestern *432 Bridge & Iron Company, to recover possession of the same. The county clerk and the board of county commissioners answered, disclaiming any interest in said /warrant, and brought it into court, to be delivered to the true owner, as might be determined by the judgment of the court. The National Bank of Wichita, by leave of court, intervened, setting up its claim to said warrant. The cause was tried to the court, without a jury, and judgment was entered for the bank for possession of the warrant, and for costs of the action, and the plaintiff in error prosecutes this appeal from said judgment.

One -of the principal questions involved is whether or not a corporation can permit a person to hold himself out as its officer or agent, in a certain course of dealings, receive the benefit of the transactions had with him, and then after-wards deny Ms authority. And, whether persons dealing in good faith with the officers and agents of a corporation may rely upon the exercise of their apparent powers.

It appears from the evidence that Watkins was not in fact, treasurer of the bridge company, and had no express authority to make the assignment; but representing himself to be the treasurer of the company he had filed in the office of the county clerk other accounts of the company against the county, which accounts had been audited and allowed, and some of which had been sold and assigned to Jack, the plaintiff in error, and others to other persons, the company receiving the benefit of the proceeds of all of these transactions, and never at any time denying the authority of Watkins. And that relying upon the transactions he had theretofore had with Watkins as treasurer of the company, Jack purchased from him the assignment of the claim in *433 controversy in this case, and the proceeds were placed to the credit of the bridge company in the Citizens Bank of Enid, in which the company had an account at that time.

It is clear from the evidence that Watkins held himself out as treasurer of the company, and assumed to act as such, and that the company recognized his acts, and acquiesced in them. Moreover, Bradford, the president of the bridge company, in his letters to the plaintiff, does not question the authority of Watkins to make the assignment; but, on the contrary, he states that he will adjust the matter with the plaintiff as soon as satisfactory arrangements can be made with the bank.

In vol. 21 A. & E. Enc. Law (2 ed.) page 853, it is said:

“The authority of an officer or agent need not necessarily be express, but may be implied from circumstance.
“Thus officers of a corporation may ordinarily bind it by their acts done in its behalf in the general course of the corporate business and their own employment without the authority of any by-law or formal resolution of the board of directors.
“A corporation may render itself liable for the acts of a; person by holding him out to the public as agent, or by permitting him to act as such, and thereby becoming estopped' to deny his authority.”

In 10 “Oyc.” 938, the rule is thus stated:

“Persons dealing in good faith with the officers of a corporation may rely upon what they do or omit to do in the exercise of their apparent powers. Stating the same doctrine' differently, authority will be presumed on the part of an officer of a corporation, who openly exercises a power which presupposes such authority, where such corporate acts show that the corporation must have contemplated the legal existence of such authority,”

*434 And, again, on page 1067 of the same volume, it is said:

“If an officer of a corporation or other person assuming to have power to bind the corporation by a given contract enters into the contract for the corporation, and the corporation receives the fruits of the contract and retains them after acquiring knowledge of the circumstances attending the making of the contract, it will thereby become estopped from afterwards rescinding or undoing the contract.”

Applying these principles to the case under consideration, we are of the opinion that the bridge company is estopped by its acts and conduct from denying the authority of Watkins to make the assignment to Jack.

The law is well settled that municipal warrants or obligations possess none of the attributes or qualities of commercial paper. Hence, the holders of such warrants or obligations, ■even when payable to order or bearer, stand in the shoes of the payee; and their rights and remedies are essentially •different from those of holders of negotiable paper. It is manifest that the holder of a mere claim, before it is audited .and allowed, or a chose in action, has no rights superior to those of the holder of the warrant, after the same has been duly issued by the proper authorities. Manifestly, the assignee of a claim,- or of a chose in action, stands in the shoes ■of the original pajme. The rights of the holder of such a claim or chose in action are subject to the same legal and -equitable, defenses as in the hands of the original payee. It ■.then follows that the bank in this case has no greater rights than the Southwestern Bridge & Iron Company, and its relief must be governed by the same legal and equitable rules.

*435 This brings us to what we regard as the principal question involved in this case, that is, the rights of two assignees of a chose in action, for a valuable consideration, where both parties seem to be acting in good faith, and where one of two innocent parties must suffer.*

The state courts on this question seem to be somewhat in conflict. Some of the courts hold that .the prior assignment is superior in right.

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Bluebook (online)
1906 OK 85, 89 P. 219, 17 Okla. 430, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-v-national-bank-okla-1906.