Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Co. v. McMichael

1954 OK 265, 277 P.2d 122, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 5, 1954
DocketNo. 36104
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1954 OK 265 (Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Co. v. McMichael) 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
Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Co. v. McMichael, 1954 OK 265, 277 P.2d 122, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 695 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

•This is an action brought by Jack W. McMichael and J. D.- McMichael, partners doing business under the firm name of McMichael Concrete. Company against Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company, Inc., a corporation, Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., a corporation, and Kay Construction Company, a corporation, to recover a bal-, anee due for material alleged to have been sold and delivered to defendant Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company. It is sought to hold the other defendants liable on the theory that under an agreement entered into between Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., and Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company the entire assets of the paving company were to be transferred to the Kay Construction Company and that the building company and Kay Construction Company agreed to assume and pay all the debts and liabilities of the paving company.

Jacobson-Lampkin Company in its separate answer denies that it is indebted to plaintiffs in any amount and denies that the material in question was contracted for or purchased by it from plaintiff and affirmatively pleads that such materials were purchased by Kay Construction Company and that it alone is liable therefor.

The Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., in its answer pleads substantially the same defense. The defendant Kay Construction Company did not answer but defaulted.

A jury was waived by all parties and the case was tried to the court resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs against defendant Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company and discharging all other defendants. Defendant paving company appeals and relies for reversal on the ground that there is no evidence to support the judgment as against it.

The record discloses that the Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company was organized about one year prior to the time suit was brought and is engaged in the paving'biisiness. Its main activities were confined to [124]*124paying streets in certain tracts lying close to the City of Tulsa. One of these tracts is known as Ranch Acres, the other as the Walter Foster Tract. The stockholders and board of directors of the paving company consists of I. A. Jacobson, Ben Lamp-kin and A. M. Covington. The Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., is a corporation organized for the purpose of and is now engaged in the building and construction business. Its main activities at the present are confined to the building of residences in the acreage above described and known as Ranch Acres. The stockholders and the board of directors of this company consist of I. A. Jacobson, Russell N. Jacobson and the attorney for the corporation. The defendant Kay Construction Company was organized on the 11th day of July, 1951, but did not obtain its charter until the 18th day of July, 1951. Its stockholders and board of directors consist of Ben Lampkin, Clarence Northcutt and Lee Drake. Ben Lampkin was the promoter o.f this corporation. He contacted the above named persons and they all agreed to form the corporation and to purchase the assets of the Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company, and entered into an agreement to do so. The agreement was approved at a meeting of the stockholders and board of directors on July 11, 1951, and on July 12, 1951, Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company by bill of sale conveyed all of the physical assets of that corporation to the Kay Construction Company. The Kay Construction Company as part consideration for the purchase of these assets agreed to take over and complete the paving contracts then held by Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company to pave the streets in the areas above mentioned. In addition thereto they executed promissory notes and a chattel mortgage was executed against the assets transferred to secure payment of the balance of the purchase price. The amount of the notes is not stated in the record nor is the consideration agreed to be paid by the Kay Construction Company for the purchase of these assets shown by the record.

The property covered by the mortgage above referred to was sold at foreclosure sale on July 12, 1952. The record does not show who the purchaser was at that sale nor the price for which the property was sold.

The only evidence offered by plaintiffs to establish their case consists of the evidence of Mrs. Martha Giles. She testified in substance: She was bookkeeper and credit manager for plaintiffs. She has charge of the accounts receivable. The books of the company show that the paving company opened an account with plaintiffs sometime in July 1951 (the exhibit introduced in evidence shows the exact date to be July 12, 1951). She did not know by whom the account was opened or who contracted for the purchase of the material; whether the material in question was ordered by letter or by personal contact at the office or by telephone. The entry in the books shows that the account was opened by the paving company. The books were made up from signed delivery tickets returned to the office. The tickets showed that the various materials appearing in the invoice which were delivered under these tickets were charged to the paving company. She did not make up the delivery tickets. She did not take the orders for the material but they were taken by some other employee of the office and she did not know by what authority the materials contained in the delivery tickets were charged to the paving company. She further testified that prior to July 12, 1951, the paving company had carried no account with plaintiffs and had transacted no business with them.

W. C. McKnight testified that prior to July 12, 1951, he was an employee of the paving company as its manager; that he was thereafter employed by the Kay Construction Company and is now manager of that company. On the evening of July 11, 1951, Mr. Lampkin called him by telephone and advised him that the Kay Construction Company had taken over the assets of the paving company and that he was now working for that company. On the morning of July 12, under directions from Mr. Lam-pkin he called the office of plaintiffs by telephone and told the person with whom he was talking that he was working for the Kay Construction Company; that the [125]*125company was in need of some concrete. He then ordered certain amounts of concrete to be delivered to the Kay Construction Company and directed that the Kay Construction Company be billed for the concrete. The concrete was to be delivered to 36th and Sandusky Streets and was to be used in paving the streets in the Ranch Acres Tract. He further testified that the paving company had never transacted any business with plaintiffs; had ordered no material from them; that it had been buying all its materials from Field Brothers.

I. A. Jacobson, president of the paving company, likewise so testified and further testified that immediately after the assets of the paving company were transferred to the Kay Construction Company he notified all persons with whom the company had been dealing of this transfer and advised them to charge no further materials for use in paving the streets in these areas to the paving company. He further testified that after he ascertained that plaintiffs had been charging certain items to the paving company he wrote a letter to the plaintiffs bearing date of August 18, 1951, advising them that on July 12, 1951, the Kay Construction Company purchased all the assets of the paving company, and requested plaintiffs to mail all invoices for materials delivered for use in connection with the Ranch Acres project to the Kay Construction Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fields v. Volkswagen of America, Inc.
1976 OK 106 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 265, 277 P.2d 122, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-lampkin-paving-co-v-mcmichael-okla-1954.