Kennedy, Ex'rs v. Marshall, Ex'x

1945 OK 213, 160 P.2d 397, 195 Okla. 617, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 26, 1945
DocketNo. 31839.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1945 OK 213 (Kennedy, Ex'rs v. Marshall, Ex'x) 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
Kennedy, Ex'rs v. Marshall, Ex'x, 1945 OK 213, 160 P.2d 397, 195 Okla. 617, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 449 (Okla. 1945).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This cause is presented on appeal from the district court of Oklahoma county, where it was instituted on February 6, 1943, by William B. Kennedy, as plaintiff, against Mabel Marshall, executrix of the estate of Ella Rogers, deceased.

Plaintiff’s petition was divided inte two “causes of action,” the first of which asserted that between and including January 1, 1919, and July 31, 1931, the plaintiff loaned Ella Rogers the sum of $3,775, and that on or about July 31, 1931, an oral agreement was made whereby Ella Rogers agreed that she, through her estate, would repay said sum after her death.

It was alleged that Ella Rogers died on July 19, 1942, a resident of Oklahoma county, and that her estate is being administered by the county court of that county. Plaintiff also asserts that on November 10, 1942, plaintiff filed his claim for the sum of $3,775 with the defendant administrator, who, on November 10, 1942, approved said claim and presented the same to the county judge, who thereupon approved and allowed the same.

Thereafter, and on January 12, 1943, there was filed in the county court a motion to vacate approval of the claim, which motion was heard and sustained. The claim was thus disallowed.

Plaintiff’s second cause of action constituted an effort to state a cause of action on the same debt as that set forth in his “first cause of action.” It adopts by reference all of, the allegations of his first cause of action, and in addition thereto asserts that on or about September 15, 1939, Ella Rogers proposed that the debt of $3,775 be paid in common stock of the T. H. Rogers Lumber Company, which amount of stock the said Ella Rogers then owned and which by will of September 15, 1939, she bequeathed to the plaintiff, W. B. Kennedy.

Plaintiff alleged that thereafter and on March 3, 1941, Ella Rogers executed and published another last will and testament revoking all prior wills without making any provision for the'payment to the plaintiff of the sum of $3,775 in common stock of the T. H. Rogers Lumber Company or otherwise.

Plaintiff in the prayer of his petition sought judgment decreeing that the estate of Ella Rogers is indebted to him in the sum of $3,775 and that the said *618 sum be established as a proper claim against such estate. •

On February 9, 1943, Pauline Fisher Smith and Gladys Wilson Wheeler, the sole beneficiaries under the will of Ella Rogers, filed their motion to be made additional parties defendant. On March 11, 1943, the motion was heard and denied, but it was ordered that said parties .might appear through attorneys of their choice, and it was further noted and ordered that the objection of said parties to the deposition of W. B. Kennedy be withdrawn.

On March 22, 1943, the defendant Mabel Marshall, executrix of the estate of Ella Rogers, deceased, filed her amended answer consisting of a general denial, a plea of the statute of limitations, an assertion that the oral agreement, if made, was wholly without consideration and void; an assertion that there was a fatal variance between the claim filed in the comity court and the claim sued upon in this action, and an assertion that the claim filed in the county court amounted to an election of remedies by virtue of which plaintiff is now estopped to urge the claim sued upon in this action.

Plaintiff’s reply was a general denial.

On November 16, 1943, the cause was tried without the aid of a jury. The plaintiff introduced his evidence and rested. The defendant demurred to plaintiff’s evidence. Both parties moved for judgment. The demurrer to the evidence was sustained by the trial court and plaintiff’s action was dismissed.

On March 23, 1944, the plaintiff died. William Bernard Kennedy, his son, and Roy E. Fellers were appointed joint executors of his estate. This cause was thereafter revived in the names of William Bernard Kennedy and Roy E. Fellers, joint executors, as plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs have appealed and appear before this court as plaintiffs in error. The order of appearance is thus preserved. Our continued reference to the parties will be by their trial court designation.

Plaintiffs first urge that the judgment is contrary to the evidence. They then urge that the judgment is contrary to the applicable law; that the claim is not barred by the statute of limitations; that the agreement is supported by a sufficient consideration; that there is no variance between the claim filed (in the county court) and the claim sued upon, and that the trial court committed error in overruling plaintiff’s motion for judgment and in sustaining defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and defendant’s motion for judgment.

In this case one of the above propositions is all that need be considered. If the trial court was correct on any one of the theories upon which relief could properly be denied, its error, if any, on the remaining theories becomes and is immaterial.

Ella Rogers is a sister of T. H. Rogers, the founder of the Rogers Lumber Company. She worked for the Rogers Lumber Company until 1911, when she quit due to failing health.

The plaintiffs’ testate, William B. Kennedy, was a brother-in-law of T. H. Rogers. Mr. Kennedy was in charge of the lumber company after the death of Mr. Rogers. Beginning on January 1, 1919, and continuing thereafter until July 31, 1931, Mr. Kennedy caused the secretary-treasurer of the lumber company to transfer from his account to the account of Ella Rogers the sum of $25 each calendar month until the total amount transferred was $3,775, which constitutes the fund over which this lawsuit started.

Miss Rogers owned a number of .shares of stock in the Rogers Lumber Company. She also carried her personal account with the company as did Mr. Kennedy. There is no proof in the record which indicates that Miss Rogers knew the source from which her $25 per month came. She may have thought it was a part of the dividends from her stock in the lumber company. Miss Rogers first learned the source from which the $25 per month had been paid in July of 1931. She then decided to *619 treat the money reecived as a loan and then orally agreed with Mr. Kennedy that the sum received - should be paid back on her death from the assets of her estate.

Subsequent to this oral agreement, Miss Ella Rogers drafted a codicil to her then existing will, and thereafter drafted two new wills in each of which W. B. Kennedy was named as a beneficiary of her estate to the extent of $3,775. She then in March of 1941 drafted another will in which Kennedy was not named as a beneficiary. The drafting of this last mentioned will is asserted by plaintiffs to have constituted a breach of contract by Ella Rogers.

In 13 C. J. 359 it is stated that:

“By the great weight of authority a past consideration, if it imposed no legal obligation at the time it was furnished, will support no promise whatever; or, as the rule has been stated otherwise, an executed consideration is no consideration for any promise other than that which the law would imply.

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Bluebook (online)
1945 OK 213, 160 P.2d 397, 195 Okla. 617, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-exrs-v-marshall-exx-okla-1945.