Keys v. Ponder

1924 OK 103, 247 P. 33, 118 Okla. 234, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 748
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1924
Docket12738
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1924 OK 103 (Keys v. Ponder) 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
Keys v. Ponder, 1924 OK 103, 247 P. 33, 118 Okla. 234, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 748 (Okla. 1924).

Opinions

C. P. Walker, Cy Williams, and R. A. Baird were convicted of a misdemeanor in the county court of Greer county, and an arrangement was male and entered into whereby a cash deposit was made in the City State Bank of Mangum (now the Guarantee State Bank of Mangum, Okla.) for the purpose of procuring T. S. De Arman and Percy Cornelius, president and cashier, respectively, of said bank, to sign the appeal bonds of the defendants in appealing their case to the Criminal Court of Appeals. Acting on instructions contained in a telegram received from John C. Keys, who was in New York, Albert H. Keys, his son, wrote a check on the account of John C. Keys in the Citizens' State Bank of Lawton, Okla., for $4,500 and caused three cashier's checks of $1,500 each to be issued therefor, and said cashier's checks were delivered to C. P. Walker who carried the same to the City State Bank of Mangum, and, on October 27, 1914, deposited $3,600 thereof to the credit of De Arman and Cornelius, and said $3,600 was not subject to check. The appeal bond of each defendant was then signed by De Arman and Cornelius as sureties, and each bond was for $1,200, making a total of $3,600, and this left a balance of $900 out of the original $4,500, and C. P. Walker procured a cashier's check from the City State Bank of Mangum for this amount and deposited the same to the credit of John C. Keys in the Citizens' State Bank of Lawton.

At the time the $3,600 was deposited, a written contract was entered into between De Arman and Cornelius, as parties of the first part, and C. P. Walker, as party of the second part, wherein it was agreed that the $3,600, or so much thereof as necessary, was to be used by the parties of the first part, as sureties on said bonds, to pay any sum for which they might become liable on said bonds, and said contract further provided:

"Now, therefore if the said Cy Williams, R. A. Baird and C. P. Walker shall well and truly make their appearance as under the provisions of said bonds assigned by the first parties, then said money so deposited by the said C. P. Walker in said City State Bank shall by said first parties who are president and cashier of said bank, or whoever may have control of said bank, be paid back to said C. P. Walker.

"It is further provided that by mutual consent, said above sum may be paid back to the said C. P. Walker at any time the parties hereto may so agree."

The Criminal Court of Appeals reversed the judgment against Walker and his associates, and, on August 7, 1919, the county court of Greer county dismissed the case against said defendants and entered an order exonerating the appeal bonds and discharged the sureties from any liability in connection therewith. John C. Keys immediately made demand on the bank for the $3,600, which was refused because W. P. Ponder was claiming the same by virtue of an assignment he had procured from C. P. Walker of his interest in the contract with De Arman and Cornelius, and said assignment is as follows:

"I hereby transfer, sell and assign all my rights, title and interest in a certain contract made between myself and Percy Cornelius and T. S. De Arman as shown by the above copy to W. P. Ponder for a valuable consideration.

"Witness my hand and seal this 8th day of Dec., 1917. (Signed) C. P. Walker.

"Witness: J. H. Guyton."

On August 8, 1919, John C. Keys filed suit in the district court of Greer county against the Guarantee State Bank, T. S. De Arman, Percy Cornelius, and C. P. Walker for said $3,600. On October 7, 1919, W. P. Ponder filed suit in the district court of Greer county against the same defendants for said $3,600. Thereafter, said actions were consolidated and W. P. Ponder was treated as plaintiff and John C. Keys and the three defendants, above named, were considered as defendants, and said action, as consolidated, was proceeded with to determine who had the prior right to said fund. A jury was waived and the cause submitted to the court resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant Keys brings error.

It is clear, from the record, that John C. Keys was the owner of the $3,600 and that he merely caused the same to be deposited by C. P. Walker in the bank at Mangum to indemnify the officers of said bank in making appeal bonds for Walker and his codefendants and that Walker never had any interest in said funds. Therefore, Walker breached the trust that was imposed in him by Keys when he fraudulently assigned said contract to the plaintiff on December 8, 1917.

The first question is: What rights did the plaintiff, as assignee of said contract, acquire in or to the $3,600? Said contract *Page 236 is merely a chose in action and it is the general rule that the assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to all existing claims and acquires no greater interest therein than his assignor had at the time of the assignment. Gillette Libby v. Murphy, Carroll Brough, 7 Okla. 91, 54 P. 413; Jack v. Nat. Bank of Wichita, 17 Okla. 430, 89 P. 219; Guaranteed State Bank of Durant v. D'Yarmett, 67 Okla. 164, 169 P. 639. But the plaintiffs contend that this rule does not apply because the defendant Keys placed in the hands of Walker evidences that Walker was the owner of these funds and permitted him to deal with them as his own, and Ponder, being an innocent purchaser for value, became the owner of said funds.

Walker did not assign to the plaintiff the actual property, $3,600, as the plaintiff contends; but the language of the assignment, "I hereby transfer, sell and assign all my rights, title and interest in a certain contract, * * *" shows that Walker assigned to the plaintiff only such rights as Walker might have under the contract, and at that time it was nearly two years before the criminal ease was disposed of, and it depended on contingencies as to whether Walker, even on the face of the contract, could ever claim any right to the $3,600. There is no evidence that the defendant Keys authorized or permitted Walker to handle the $3,600 or to exercise control over it as his own. The record shows that the defendant let Walker have these funds in trust to be used to indemnify the officers of the hank in making certain appeal bonds; that the defendant Keys did not authorize Walker to make the contract with reference to said funds; and there is nothing to show that said defendant knew said contract was made and there is nothing in the conduct of the defendant, with reference to said contract, which was assigned to the plaintiff, that would estop said defendant from asserting his rights to the $3,600.

The next question is — was the plaintiff a bona fide purchaser? To constitute a bona fide purchaser three things must exist: A purchaser in good faith, for value, and without notice.

The contract, that was assigned to the plaintiff, shows on its face that the $3,600 was placed in the hank to indemnify its officers in making three criminal bonds, and the case against the defendants had not been disposed of, and there was no way to tell, at that time, what disposition would be made of the $3,600, and this was sufficient to place the plaintiff upon inquiry.

In discussing a similar question, the court in the case of Gillette Libby v. Murphy, Carroll Brough, supra, at page 111 of 7 Okla. 54 P. 419, uses the following language:

"When Gillette Libby received the assignment of this chose in action from Jackson, it was their duty to ascertain from the county what equities Jackson had to assign, and whether it had had actual notice of any previous assignment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 103, 247 P. 33, 118 Okla. 234, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keys-v-ponder-okla-1924.