Jacobs v. Colcord

1929 OK 181, 275 P. 649, 136 Okla. 158, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 23, 1929
Docket18330
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1929 OK 181 (Jacobs v. Colcord) 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
Jacobs v. Colcord, 1929 OK 181, 275 P. 649, 136 Okla. 158, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 158 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

TEEHEE, C.

This cause is ancillary to a suit brought by the plaintiff in error, G. W. Jacobs, hereinafter called plaintiff, against the North American Oil Company, as defendant, to recover on an account of $2,339.50, in which plaintiff garnisheed an account of the defendant carried with the Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City, in the amount of $1,579.25, and in which garnishment proceedings defendant in error C. F. Colcord, hereinafter referred to an intervener, intervened, alleging a superior equitable lien to the fund held by the bank.

In his plea intervener alleged, in substance, that on or about May 29, 1923, lie loaned to the defendant North American Oil Company $65,000, and as security therefor defendant assigned to him a certain productive oil and gas lease in the Smackover oil field in Arkansas, against which there was then subsisting a vendor’s lien of $53,666.33, payable out of an undivided part of the Oil production; that the loan was for the express purpose of liquidating certain other lien claims against the particular leasehold incurred by the defendant in the operation thereof, then estimated to be in the amount of the loan; that pursuant thereto intervener directly paid a note of defendant in the sum of $15,000, and deposited with the Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City the remainder, $50,000, under the designation of “Special Smackover Account, *159 North American Oil Company,” with the bank authorized to honor checks drawn on the account signed by one L. D. Callahan, who was neither an officer nor an employee of the defendant company, and employed by the intervener as his agent; that pursuant to said loan agreement, claims against said leasehold were paid by said Callahan cut of the deposit made as aforesaid, so that there remained as a balance in said account at the time of the filing of this cause the sum of $1,579.25; that in the course of the adjustment of liens and claims against said leasehold, it developed that the amount represented by the defendant oil company at the time of the transaction to be due on the vendor’s lien, instead of being the sum of $53,666.33, was, in fact, $57,598.85. by reason whereof there was paid out of the oil production $3,932.52 more than was then represented to be due, and which payment inter-vener was entitled to receive and would have otherwise received the same had such indebtedness been in the amount as represented by the defendant oil company at the time of the original transaction, and thus he did not receive all the property contracted for; that the fund deposited as aforesaid in the bank was a trust fund for the purpose expressed in the loan agreement, namely, to liquidate claims against the leasehold assigned; that the same did not become the property of the defendant oil company, but was carried in its name under the special designation for the] purpose of identification; that the same was never subject to check by the defendant oil company or any of its officers; that the defendant oil company acquired no right in equity in and to said fund other than for the purpose of paying the claims aforesaid, and that as intervener received less than the property assigned to him in the amount of $3,932.52, thus, in effect, paying in that sum liens and claims in excess of the amount represented by defendant oil company to be then due and subsisting, he is entitled in justice and equity to have said balance remaining in the bank applied in partial liquidation of said excess sum, and by reason thereof his right thereto is superior to that acquired by plaintiff by said garnishment proceedings. By reply plaintiff denied all allegations contained in the interplea.

It was stipulated by and between the plaintiff and the intervener that, at the time of the loan transaction between the defendant oil company and intervener, there remained due, as a part of the purchase price of the leasehold assigned to intervener, the sum of $57,598.85, payable out of one-half of the oil production; that thereafter said sum was fully liquidated in said manner and proper acknowledgment of payment executed and recorded, which instrument of acknowledgment would be used as evidence without further authentication.

The cause, was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. The defendant oil company being in default, judgment in the amount sued for was thereupon rendered for plaintiff, and the court found the issues arising upon the garnishment proceedings for the intervener, and decreed that inter-vener “has a first and prior lien and equitable interest upon the money sought to be garnisheed in the hands of the Liberty National Bank, and that said fund is not subject to garnishment at the instance of this plaintiff, G. W. Jacobs, until the prior claim of O. B. Colcord thereon is first fully satisfied and paid, and the court adjudges that the claim and rights of said C. B. Col-cord in said fund are in excess of the.principal amount thereof,” and further that said garnishment proceedings be released and discharged.

Bor reversal of the judgment, plaintiff submits two propositions, to wit:

“The money garnished was without question the assets of the North American Oil Company, and subject to garnishment under the findings of facts included in the judgment of the trial court.
“The intervener, C. B. Colcord, failed to establish an equitable right or lien to the funds garnished, the facts, on the contrary, showing that the transactions upon which he relies are fraudulent in fact and in law, and cannot be the basis of an affirmative right in the intervener, nor entitle him to a lien on the money garnished by the plaintiff.”

These propositions are properly resolvable into the single question of whether or not the action of the trial court in awarding judgment for the intervener is clearly sustained by the evidence, and will be here so treated.

The salient facts established by the evidence requiring our notice may best be shown by a brief narrative of the history of the transaction out of which the fund in controversy originated. This substantially is as follows:

The defendant oil company purchased the leasehold mentioned from the original owners, Morris & Marr, on November 23, 1922, for a certain cash consideration, and the sum of $75,000 payable out of one-half of the oil production. Binding itself confronted *160 with threatened lien suits against the leasehold based on accounts incurred in the operation thereof, the defendant oil company, of which intervener, Colcord, was an officer and director, on May 26, 1923, negotiated from him a loan of §65,000, the fund to be used in freeing the leasehold of such lien claims, and as security for the loan thus made, the defendant oil company assigned all of its right, title and interest in said leasehold to intervener. These claims, as then represented to be subsisting, aggregated $65,000, the amount of the loan, a list whereof was then furnished. The loan was made by intervener under the distinct understanding that the loan would be used for the express purpose of liquidating such claims, and to that end he paid direct a note of the defendant oil company for $15,000 and deposited with the Liberty National Bank, the garnishee, $50,000 as a special fund and so designated under the title “Smackover Special Account, American Oil Company,” and arranged with the bank that cheeks thereagainst were to be honored when drawn by his agent, L. D. Callahan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 181, 275 P. 649, 136 Okla. 158, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-colcord-okla-1929.