Leahy v. Monk

1933 OK 172, 19 P.2d 1077, 162 Okla. 256, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 573
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 14, 1933
Docket20424
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1933 OK 172 (Leahy v. Monk) 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
Leahy v. Monk, 1933 OK 172, 19 P.2d 1077, 162 Okla. 256, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 573 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment rendered in ihe trial court in favor of the defendant, on a verdict in favor of defendant.

Tlie facts are that, in May, 1920. plaintiff purchased 40 shares of bank stock from the defendant for $8,000. paying $4,000 in cash and executing his four notes for the remaining $4,000. Thereafter plaintiff paid two of the notes, leaving two unpaid, which were extended from time to time by the payment of interest. On June 11, 1928, plaintiff filed this suit to recover all sums of money paid to defendant, together with certain sums he had paid into the bank which had been assessed against him as a stockholder, and to cancel the two unpaid notes, tendering back the stock and alleging fraud on the part of the defendant in inducing him to buy the stock, in that defendant had made fraudulent statements and representations as to the value of the stock, and plaintiff further alleged the stock to bo worth nothing when he bought it, and thac defendant well knew it, and that he, the plaintiff, had been damaged by defendant’s fraud and deceit in the full amount of the sums he had paid out.

The defendant by answer in all things denied any fraudulent acts or statements, and by cross-petition sought judgment for $2,000 upon the two unpaid notes which were past due.

Upon these issues the cause was tried to the jury, resulting in a verdict generally in favor of the defendant upon his answer, and verdict in favor of the defendant upon his cross-petition for $2,000, sued for on the two unpaid notes. Judgment was rendered for defendant, and the plaintiff’s motion for new trial was overruled.

Plaintiff appeals to this court and assigns as error the failure of the court to give certain requested instructions, and error in giving one certain instruction, to which plaintiff excepted.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that plaintiff was 28 years of age and without experience in banking; that defendant was about 00 years of age, with many years experience in banking, and in the bank in question, with which he had been connected since its organization, or, at any rate, for many years; that the defendant represented to him that the bank stock “based upon assets of the bank * * * is worth $235 a share,” that in past years large dividends had been paid, but at the present time none were being paid, because the earnings were being applied to pay for the bames new building; ifiaintiff’s evidence further tended to show that while his uncle was one of the original organizers of the bank, and had been a director and vice president thereof since its organization, and while his father was at the time a member of the board of- directors of the bank, he, himself, knew nothing of the condition of the bank or value of the stock, and made no inquiry of his relatives, but relied upon the representations and statements of the defendant. He testified further that the defendant advised him not to talk with his relatives about it.

The testimony on the part of the defendant tended to show that he had not made the statements exactly as claimed by plaintiff ; that he did tell plaintiff he understood the stock had been selling for two and a *257 quarter . to two and a half as. near as lie could find out, but be would take $200 -per share for it, and ¡believed that it was worth that, and that he did advise plaintiff to discuss it with his father who was a director in the bank and the attorney for the bank; that it was, hi fact, his opinion that the stock was worth that much.

It was shown that, in January, 1927, lfiain-tiff was elected a director in the bank and continued as a director until a short time before the 'filing of this suit; that, in' 1927, a large amount of paper in the bank was required to (be charged off, and an assessment ■of 100 per cent, was made upon the stockholders which plaintiff paid. The difficulties of the bank continued and grew until in the spring of 1928, and an additional assessment upon the stockholders of 100 per cent, was required; that part of the difficulties of the bank at that time was caused by certain sums of money loaned to directors, or loaned upon notes indorsed toy the directors; that the name of the plaintiff appeared upon several of such notes. That after he bought the stock in 1926, and became a director in the bank in January, 1927, plaintiff -made no investigation as to the value of this stock, and did not.do so until in the spring of 1928, a short time before filing this suit, at which time he did investigate, and then reached the conclusion that when he bought the stock in May, 1926, the stock was at that time of no value. Many of the notes which were in the bank held as assets of the bank in May, 1926. were among the notes subsequently ordered to be charged off, but there is nothing-in the record to show that the defendant in May, 1926, did not believe the stock to be worth $200 per share. The record shows that plaintiff’s uncle, and a director in the bank, thought the stock was worth $200 per share at that time, and that Mr. Mason, the cashier of the bank, at that time entertained the same view, and that plaintiff’s father, a director of the bank and the attorney for the bank, entertained the same view. And that plaintiff's father in the year 1927 purchased additional stock in the bank for $176 per share, which he then thought was a fair price to pay.

At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff requested certain instructions which were refused, being plaintiff’s requested instructions numbered 3, 1, 11, 5, and 6, in the order in which they are argued by brief.

Plaintiff’s requested instruction No. 3 was to the general effect that a person who relies . upon a material representation which is false, and is thereby induced to purchase property, is not-precluded from recovering damages by reason of the fact that he had an opiportunity to investigate for himself and did not do so, and that he has a right to rely upon positive representations of a material fact.

This instruction was refused by the trial court apparently on the theory that no issue was raised in the pleading or in the trial of the case as to whether plaintiff had an opportunity to investigate the value of the bank stock and neglected to do so, and upon the further theory that the instruction given by the court fully advised the jury as to the law applicable to the issues involved as to whether defendant had made false and fraudulent representations upon which plaintiff had relied and acted to his damage.

We find that the issue in the ease was whether defendant had so fraudulently misrepresented the matter as alleged by plaintiff and denied by defendant, and that the instruction given by the court as instructions numbered 4 and 5, together with the other instructions given, fully advised tbe jury as to the law applicable to' the issues, and that it was not error to refuse this instruction.

The plaintiff’s requested instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 172, 19 P.2d 1077, 162 Okla. 256, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leahy-v-monk-okla-1933.