McClure v. Weigand Tea & Coffee Co.

1932 OK 499, 12 P.2d 877, 158 Okla. 115, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 939
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1932
Docket20388
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1932 OK 499 (McClure v. Weigand Tea & Coffee Co.) 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
McClure v. Weigand Tea & Coffee Co., 1932 OK 499, 12 P.2d 877, 158 Okla. 115, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 939 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

CULLISON, J.

This is an action to collect upon a fidelity bond issued May 9. 192T, to the “Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a co-partnership, consisting of E. J. Weigand and W. A. Weigand,” by Ora Curran, principal, and M. D. Curran and G. L. McClure, as sureties, wherein all three signers of said bond agreed to indemnify “the said Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership as aforesaid, and its assigns, against all losses, damages, and expenses which they may pay, stand, or be put unto by reason of any act of misconduct, embezzlement, mismanagement, neglect or default of or by the said Ora Curran as such salesman, or otherwise.

On May 5, 1927, Ora Curran entered the employment of the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership. The bond, in question was executed four days thereafter to secure the faithful performances on the part of Ora Curran as collecting agent for the company. On July 1, 192.7, the Weig- and Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership, assigned its business assets and good will to the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a corporation, and Ora Curran continued to work for the latter as salesman until about July 28, 1027, when he left its employ, having at that time in his possession $171.61 which he collected for the company and which he did not pay to it.

This action is brought on the bond by the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a corporation, as assignee, against all three of the signers of the bond, for reformation of the bond and to recover the amount of Ora Curran’s defalcation.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court.

The record discloses that plaintiff commenced this action February 29, 1928, in the district court of Woods county, Okla., by filing therein its petition. Said petition, after setting forth the names and residences of the. parties, recites the employment of Ora Curran by the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership, and the execution of the fidelity bond in the sum of $2,009 in favor of the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership, by the defendants, on behalf of Ora Curran to secure faithful performance on his part as collecting agent in said employment. The petition also alleges a mistake of the scrivener in drafting the bond. The bond, as drawn by the scrivener and signed by defendants, reads:

“* * * shall at all times hereinafter keep indemnified the said Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, * * * against all losses, damages (sustained by them) * * * by reason of any act of misconduct, embezzlement, * * * by the said Weigand Tea & Coffee Company * * *”

• — when in truth, and in fact, it was intended, agreed, and understood that the defendants would indemnify the coffee company against all losses and damages sustained by it, by reason of any act of misconduct or embezzlement on the part of the defendant. Ora Curran, as such salesman, or otherwise.

The petition sets out the assignment, of the bond by the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a copartnership, to the plaintiff, Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a corpora *117 tion, on July .l, 1927, and that Ora: Curran remained in the same employment under the assignee, plaintiff herein, under the same terms and conditions in all respects as that of his employment by the copartnership aforesaid; that Ora Curran has failed and neglected to remit in accordance with the terms of his employment and has appropriated and converted $171.61 to his own use and benefit; that plaintiff has made demand upon defendants for the payment of said sum due it, as aforesaid; that defendants, and each of them, by refusing payment, have breached said bond in certain particulars, and prays the court (1) that the bond be reformed to- comply with the intention of all parties thereto by correcting the scrivener’s mistake, and (2) that plaintiff have judgment on the 'bond against these defendants in the sum of $171.61. A copy of' the bond sued upon together with an itemized account of the amount owing plaintiff from defendants, duly verified, is attached to said petition.

Thereafter, on March 24, 1928, the defendants M. D. Curran and G. L. McClure filed their demurrers to the petition of plaintiff on the ground that said petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendants. Said demurrers being overruled by the court, these two defendants filed their separate answers September IS, 1,928, which deny all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition not expressly admitted; admit the incorporation of the plaintiff under the laws of the state of Kansas, admit the execution of the bond, and that copy of said instrument is attached to- plaintiff’s petition; admit the bond contains the recital complained of by plaintiff by reason of an alleged scrivener’s error-, but denies that the intention of the parties was that such recital should have been as plaintiff contends, denies any mistake in the wording of the bond, denies the allegation that the discovery was not made for a long time thereafter, and denies that plaintiff is entitled to have the recital amended or to have placed thereon such construction. Said answers further allege that at no time did defendants ever agree that said bond could be transferred or assigned, and had no knowledge of said assignment; denies that defendants ever became sureties for Ora Curran in his employment with this plaintiff assignee; denies that the conditions of the bond have been broken as alleged; denies that plaintiff is entitled to have the bond reformed or in any manner changed, and denies that said petition states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants; denies that there is anything owing from defendants to plaintiff. Further answering, and by way of an affirmative defense, defendants allege that the terms of the bond were ambiguous and uncertain and that all parties agreed the same was not assignable and that defendants would become liable only in case of a cause of action accruing in favor of the Weigand Tea & Coffee Company, a co-partnersnip, and that the bond was signed upon such belief. Defendants deny that the assignment of the bond was ever made between the ‘then obligee and the plaintiff as-signee until long after ,the sale and transfer of the business from the copartnership to the corporation, and not until after the alleged cause of action against the said Ora Curran had accrued; that said pretended assignment was made without consideration and in an attempt to perpetrate a fraud upon defendants, and praying that plaintiff take nothing by reason of the said action.

Plaintiff filed its reply to the separate answers of M. D. Curran and G. L. McClure on September 24, 1928, denying all the allegations therein except such as specifically admit the allegations of plaintiff’s petition.

The action was tried to the jury December 13-, 1928, and at the close of all the testimony, the court gave the jury the following instruction, over the objections of the defendant G. L. McClure:

“By the Court: Gentlemen of the Jury: In this case, the court directs you to return a verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendants and each of them for the sum of $171.61. * * *”

The jury returned its verdict, as instructed, and the court rendered its journal entry of judgment in this cause, for the plaintiff and against the defendants and each of them.

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Related

Wood & Co. v. Sutton
1936 OK 667 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 499, 12 P.2d 877, 158 Okla. 115, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-weigand-tea-coffee-co-okla-1932.