Kimball v. Stokes

1931 OK 688, 12 P.2d 620, 155 Okla. 214, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 10, 1931
Docket20639
StatusPublished

This text of 1931 OK 688 (Kimball v. Stokes) 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
Kimball v. Stokes, 1931 OK 688, 12 P.2d 620, 155 Okla. 214, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 144 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

KORNEGAY, J.

This case originated in a justice of the peace court in Garvin county. A bill of particulars was filed in the justice court on the 2nd of April, 1925. Four people were sued. Two of them, namely J. A. Stokes and W. B. Wright, were alleged to have been a copartnership under the style of Wright’s Grocery, and J. B. Wright and F. L. Wright were alleged to be a partnership under the same name. The bill of particulars set out the indebtedness, and there accompanied the bill of particulars a verified statement of correctness of account, dated March 4. 1925, showing an account made on February 7, 1924, and February 14, 1924, for a total of $343.20, with' credits amounting to $175.40, leaving a balance of $167.80. The correctness of this was verified on the 4th of March, 1925, by one of the plaintiffs. Accompanying this was a protested check for $319.80, bearing date of May 27, 1924, payable to the order of Chase & Sanborn, and signed with a printed signature, “Wright’s Grocery,” and the name of W. B. Wright, which appears in ink. The check had been protested for insufficient funds.

The credits given on the account, according to the bill of particulars, were made on August 28, 1924, and September 1, 1924. It was averred in the bill of particulars that in September, 1924, Stokes and Wright assigned to J. B. Wright and F. L. Wright some of their assets, and that J. B. Wright and F. L. Wright had agreed to pay the balance due the plaintiffs and did pay $50 thereon.

Summons was issued for all of the defendants, requiring them to appear on the 21st of March, 1925, service being made on the 18th. All parties defaulted and the result was that a judgment was rendered against them all and an execution was sued out and levied on a Ford car belonging to W. B. Wright, one of the defendants. When this happened, W. B. Wright and J. A. Stokes gave an appeal bond, with Hardee Russell and Crockett Scrivner as sureties, which was approved on the 31st of March, 1925. followed by a transcript that was filed in the district court.

The matter came on for hearing before the district court on the 11th of January, 1929, and was tried by the district judge, Hon. W. G. Long, parties waiving jury. There was a good deal of evidence introduced, but there does not appear to have been any pleadings filed, either in the justice of the peace court or in the district court, on behalf of the defendants Stokes and Wright.

The evidence clearly showed an original liability, both of Stokes and Wright, to the plaintiffs. It also showed a trust mortgage executed by W. B. Wright, on the 8th of January, 1925, operating as Wright’s Grocery, to the Oklahoma City Association of Credit Men, on a printed form with some ink interlineations. The property conveyed is described as being situate in Garvin county, Okla.. and is as follows:

“One Ford roadster * * * one Ford delivery car. All store fixtures located 'in the Burch Building, 219 South Chickasaw St., and also some located in the Driskell Bldg., 405 South Chickasaw St., of Pauls Valley, Okla. Also, all notes, mortgages, and accounts receivable. Also, all other property both personal and real not exempt by the laws of the state of Okla.”

Following that is the following in print: “and possession of said property is now delivered unto said party of the second part.”

In the portion written in, in ink, is the following:

“It is further agreed in consideration of said first party turning over all his assets to said second party not exempt by law, that the acceptance by any creditor under this agreement shall accept his or their pro rata share in full discharge and release of all indebtedness to date of this agreement.”

There was a reference to schedule “A,” which follows the signature, W. Ben Wright, and Wright’s Grocery, scheduling the claim declared on here as “Chase & Sanborn, $193.-20.” Attached to that is a schedule apparently of fixtures, with a valuation placed by someone of $2,603.95, and included 'in that list is a Ford delivery car with a valuation of $350. There is also added a lead pencil list referring to fixtures, page 1 to 3, $2,298.-45; delivery trucks, page 4, $400; accounts receivable, pages 5 to 12, $5,623.86; and it appears that part of these fixtures are in the Burch building, and part of them are in the Driskell building, and some of the fixtures were located in Scri¡vner’s Dry Goods building. Under the head of automobiles, originally marked page 4, but corrected to page 5. in the lead pencil inventory, there is a Ford delivery car, $350, and a Ford delivery truck, $50, making the amount of $400, as carried forward in the resume. There 'is also a final notice to creditors by the Oklahoma City Association of Credit Men, found on page 27, in which a statement is made by the Oklahoma City Credit Association to the creditors that the assignment called for all property, which consisted of a Ford roadster and a Ford delivery car, store fixtures and accounts receivable, and that Mr. Crockett Scrivner laid claim to the majority of them, and *216 exhibited a bill of sale which he claimed had been given him several months before, and that that left only a few fixtures of a home-made kind that had little value. In the inventory that defendant W. B. Wright assisted in making, these fixtures are put in at $2,298.45.

There was a further statement that the accounts receivable, listed at $5,623.86, were locked in a McOaskey register, the key to which was in the possession of J. B. Wright, a brother of W. B. Wright. There was a statement that two different trips had been made to Pauls Valley, and that the association was informed that J. B. Wright was out of the city but would return shortly. W. B. Wright had promised a number of times to call at the office to help straighten the matter out but had failed to come in. The latter part of that letter is as follows:

“As the matter now stands, we have nothing in the way of assets to dispose of. We are unable to get this party to live up to any of his promises and as the assets that were promised to be turned over to us for the benefit of his creditors under the assignment have not been turned over, we have nothing to liquidate.
“We must admit that we are unable to explain the actions of this debtor and do not see how we can render any further service to creditors in connection with this case. If you have any suggestions to offer, will be glad to hear from you, but as the matter now stands we see nothing to do but close our files and permit the individual creditors to take whatever action they deem necessary.
“Tours very truly,
“Oklahoma City Association of Credit Men,
“By A. L. Smith, Manager.”

The facts contained in said notice were established by the agents of the association, who handled the matter and gave testimony. Depositions of its managers showing in detail the transaction were introduced.

After the defendant rested, the plaintiffs began a rebuttal, and they introduced the notice of dissolution of the partnership between Stokes and Wright, and it appeared that the dissolution was had by publication on the 6th and 13th of March, 1924, and the dissolution took effect as of February 28, 1924, which made Stokes liable for the plaintiffs’ account, the last item of which was February 14th.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 688, 12 P.2d 620, 155 Okla. 214, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-stokes-okla-1931.