Lenau v. Home State Bank

1923 OK 365, 216 P. 893, 91 Okla. 227, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 727
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1923
Docket11579
StatusPublished

This text of 1923 OK 365 (Lenau v. Home State Bank) 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
Lenau v. Home State Bank, 1923 OK 365, 216 P. 893, 91 Okla. 227, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 727 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion, by

THOMPSON, C.

As a matter of convenience the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court.

The action was a replevin action, and prayed judgment against the defendants for the return of 65 acres of wheat, grown on the northwest quarter of section 2S, township 6 north,, range 18 west, I. M., Kiowa county, plaintiff claiming the same by virtue of a chattel mortgage given by defendant. Thurman, to secure a note executed by him, in the sum of $1,260, upon which $800 had been paid, and alleging said wheat was reasonably worth $1,500; that defendant M. H. Anderson had taken wrongful possession thereof; alleging breach of the condition of the mortgage, and praying judgment against the defendants for the immediate, possession of the 65 acres of wheat, which was in the shock, or the value thereof, and for $100 attorney’s fees.

Defendant Thurman filed his separate answer, admitting the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, and setting up a cross-petition against his codefendant, Anderson, in which he claimed that he was the owner of the wheat, subject to a lien to the United States for $180, and the mortgage of plaintiff; that the wheat was worth $1,500; that during his absence from home, defendant Anderson wrongfully and unlawfully took possession of the wheat, and refused to Teturn the same; and praying- for damages in the sum of $1,000, and asking judgment in his favor for the return of the wheat, or the value thereof.

The defendant Anderson filed a redelivery bond after the wheat had been taken from his possession by the officers under order of replevin, and thereafter defendant Anderson filed his separate answer to the plaintiff’s petition: First, general denial, and alleging that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest. Second, admitting the execution of note and mortgage, but denying that the same was for a valuable consideration, or that there was anything due from Thurman to the plaintiff on account of said note and mortgage. That shortly after the commencement of this action, on the 30th day of August, 1919, he, having purchased the property in controversy from his code-femdant, Thurman, demanded of plaintiff to know the amount due upon the promissory note and was advised by plaintiff’s attorneys that the balance of the indebtedness was $554.46, $100 attorneys’ fees, and the costs of this suit; that he offered to pay plaintiff $654.46, and to. pay the costs of the action, and made a tender of said sum to cover the amount, and attorneys’ fees and costs, which plaintiff refused ; that, there wias nothing due upon the note and mortgage to the plaintiff, and that if there ever had been anything due, it had been fully paid, and discharged; that plaintiff had no lien upon the property in controversy by reason of the chattel mortgage, or any special ownership or interest in the property; praying that plaintiff take nothing, and that he be discharged with his costs.

On the 12th day of December, 1919, defendant Anderson filed his answer to cross-petition of his codefendant, Thurman, denying all the allegations in said cross-petition; denying that Thurman had any interest in the property in controversy, anid alleging (hat he was the owner of same; that defendant Thurman, owner of a leasehold interest ini said lands, the same being Indian lands, on the 4th day of August, 1919, entered into a written contract with O. E. Tliren.tham, by which lie sold his leasehold in said lands, together with all the crops on said lands, to the said O. E. Threhtham for a valuable consideration; attaching the contract as an exhibit; and that, thereafter, by mutual oral agreement of all the parties, this defendant Anderson was substituted for Threntham, and the transfer w.as regularly made by the Indian Department to Anderson, and that he thereby acquired the leasehold, possession of the land, and all the crops on said land, and the crops in eon troversy are a part of said crops, and that actual delivery was made to him of the same at the time of said substitution, and that he has since been the owner thereof, clear of the rights of defendant Thurman, ■and that he had paid the full price for said lease and crops to the defendant Thurman; and praying for possession thereof, and that the title should be confirmed in him, and that the defendant Thurman should recover nothing by ,reason of his cross-petition, and that he should recover his costs.

The part of said contract, attached as an exhibit, that is material is as follows:

“Piart.y of the first part agrees to give second party possession of Indian lease, same being on the N. W. % of see. 28 in township 6 north, range 18, Kiowa county, Oklahoma, together with all crops on said land.
“It being understood that first party shall guarantee the transfer of said lease to second party by the Indian Dept, and peacei-a'ble possession giren second party at the time transfer is made.
“The consideration of said transfer is the sum of ten hundred dollars.”

*229 The same Is signed by C. E. Threntham and iN. D. Thurman.

Plaintiff .replied to Anderson’s answer by way of a general denial, and defendant Thurman filed reply to Anderson’s cross-petition, admitting the contract between himself and Threntham, and alleging that at the time of the execution of the contract the 65 acres c-f wheat had been severed from the soil and was standing in the shock, and was no longer a part of the crops on the land described in said contract; that it was mutually agreed and understood by and between this defendant and the said Threntham that the word “crops,” used in said contract, meant growing crops, standing upon said land, unsev-ered from and still a part thereof; that defendant Anderson assumed the benefits and obligations of said contract in place and instead of the said Threntham, with full knowledge of said understanding and agreement ; that Anderson acquired no greater right under the contract than that held by Threntham, and that the said 65 acres of wheat, standing in the shock, was, and still is, the property of this defendant.

On the 12bh day of January, 1920, trial was had before a jury. '

The testimony disclosed that the plaintiff, the Home State Bank, held a note against defendant Thurman for $1,260.05, which was past due and unpaid, and upon which $800 had been paid, which was secured by a recorded chattel mortgage on 65 acres of wjheat, which had been severed from the soil, grown on Indian leased land, and that this action waá filed on the 29th day of August, 1919; that on the day previous M. H. Anderson had taken possession of the wheat, and was hauling it out of the shock, and was stacking it: that the next day after the suit was brought defendant Anderson offered to pay plaintiff $554.46, balance of principal and interest on the note, and $100 attorney fees, and that attorneys for the hank would not accept same; that the amount due on September 19, 1919, after suit was brought, was $441.10; that a cashier’s check in favor of defendant Thurman, for the sum of $441.10 on the Farmers’ and Merchants’ National Bank was delivered by Thurman to the plaintiff and attached to the note as collateral, but had not beettu applied on the payment of the note at the time of the trial.

The evidence upon the cross-petition, answer, and replies by the two defendants, Thurman and Anderson, is in sharp conflict upon the question whether the property in controversy passed under the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 365, 216 P. 893, 91 Okla. 227, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenau-v-home-state-bank-okla-1923.