Madill Oil & Cotton Co. v. City Nat. Bank

1918 OK 279, 193 P. 878, 74 Okla. 322, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 233
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1918
Docket8869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1918 OK 279 (Madill Oil & Cotton Co. v. City Nat. 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
Madill Oil & Cotton Co. v. City Nat. Bank, 1918 OK 279, 193 P. 878, 74 Okla. 322, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 233 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

PRYOR, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Oklahoma county by the City National Bank of Madill, defendant in error, against the Madill Oil & Cotton Company, plaintiff in error, for *323 .the recovery ofl judgment in the sum of $6,-755.50. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff claims that the amount sought to be recovered is an indebtedness that arose by reason of money loaned and advanced to the defendant through its authorized agent and manager, J. W. Hocka-day. The defense of the defendant is that the said agent, J. W. Hockaday, had no authority to secure loans from the plaintiff and bind the defendant company for the payment thereof.

The undisputed evidence establishes the following facts: That the defendant, the Madill Oil & Cotton Company, is a foreign corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the state of Texas and doing business in the state of Oklahoma and operating a cotton seed oil mill at Ma-dill; that during the season in the fall of 1915, J. W. Hockaday was the manager of the plaintiff’s mill at Madill, with authority to purchase cotton seed, manufacture therefrom products and sell the same; that the funds for carrying on the business at Ma-dill were furnished by the president of the company by remittance to the First National Bank, and in addition to these remittances made to the bank, it had made arrangements with the First National Bank for additional loans to supplement its funds to carry on the business. The company carried its account with the First National Bank. The said agent, Hockaday, bought cotton and cotton seed for the company. He made arrangements with the plaintiff bank that he would draw checks on the bank in favor of people from whom he purchased, and on each day he would go to the plaintiff bank and change the checks into drafts by inserting the name of the Madill Oil & Cotton Company. The evidence further shows that this arrangement with the bank was to be kept secret, the reason given by Hockaday to the bank for the secrecy being that if the neighboring gins discovered that he was buying cotton, they would refuse to sell seeds to the defendant company. The evidence is undisputed that the agent and manager Hockaday had no authority to purchase cotton, and the defendant oil and cotton company had no knowledge or notice of any arrangement that the manager and agent had made with the plaintiff bank whereby the indebtedness was incurred. The evidence shows that the president of said company, Mr. Lawrence, when told that Hockaday had made the arrangement with the bank and had incurred such indebtedness, that he immediately denied any knowledge of the transaction, and denied any liability by reason of the same, and expressed denial that Hockaday had any authority to borrow any money or secure credit for said company. He offered, however, to repay the bank all of the funds used by Hockaday in the purchase of seed which the company had received, and tendered his services to the bank in helping them to straighten out the matter, and did assist the bank in disposing of the cotton on hand, the proceeds of which the bank received and applied on the indebtedness.

The only question presented is the authority of the agent Hockaday to bind the defendant company. There being no express authority given to the agent to borrow money, if he possessed such authority it must have arisen from a necessary implication from the nature and scope of his employment and duties, or the company must have by its conduct acted in such manner as to make the acts of the agent come within the apparent scope of his authority. There are no facts or circumstances from which the bank could infer that the agent and manager Hockaday had authority to borrow money and secure credit for the oil company, except the fact that he was the manager of the defendant company, with authority to purchase seed, manufacture the products and sell the same, and to draw checks upon the defendant company’s account in payment of the purchases made. These facts, standing alone, are wholly insufficient to justify the conclusion that the said agent and manager had authority to borrow money and secure credit for said company.

The Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of C. R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Chickasha National Bank, 174 Fed. 923, 98 C. C. A. 535, held:

“An agent authorized to purchase cotton for his principal in a particular locality from any persons having the same for sale and at any price agreed on between them, was a general agent, with implied authority to bind his.principals by any contract for the purchase of cotton in that locality, but such implied authority did not extend to the opening of an account with a bank in the name of his principals, borrowing money and pledging their securities as collateral therefor, where the same was not a necessary incident to the business of purchasing cotton; such power being an unusual one to be conferred on an agent, and not to be implied whether his agency is general or special, unless the very nature of his business requires its exercise.”

In the body of the opinion the court says:

“However, the question as presented is: Did Carter, the general agent of Wolff & Co., for the purpose of buying cotton on their account in the neighborhood of Chick-asha, possess the implied authority to make the contract he did make with the bank, and on the strength of this contract bind *324 his principal either -to the - rep'aiunent -of money borrowed by him from -line >ban-k;.;05 by his act in pledging-;the evidences pi .the ownership of the cptton in -dispute., as collateral security for such repaymenti-.;In-dependently of any claim of ratification 'made by the bank, it is apparent the ttüe'Vsóíúr tion of this problem must depend, 'not oh the extent of the power possessed 'by the' agent to bind his principals by his contracts-for the purchase of cotton at all-; lor his act’s in that regard were clearly within. the scope of his employment as -contemplated by the parties, but it must depend on whether the borrowing of money on account of'his principals, and the pledging of their securities for its repayment, was.a necessary ini cident to the business of purchasing the cotton. If so, the authority will be implied, from the general grant .of power .conferred; and the principals will be held, to have com templated it when the. agency.. Was formed, and tp be bound by its exercise .by. the scope of the employment of the agent, ;uid the bank would be justified in dealing with-Carter :as. it did in this ease. * *..* The. bank did. mot, as it might have done for its protection,first -learn the full extent of .thp .power .pos*-, sessed by Carter from his principals,-but,.on the contrary, -assumed-to engage ih the bus-, iness without any investigation,andi-in reliance on appearances'and " the wiordsof-thq agent; hence if loss befall it,.such"loss must; be attributed to its neglect to .properly, advise itself before engaging in tbe business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 279, 193 P. 878, 74 Okla. 322, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madill-oil-cotton-co-v-city-nat-bank-okla-1918.