McKinnon v. Monarch Loan Co.

1925 OK 482, 239 P. 170, 111 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 9, 1925
Docket13513
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1925 OK 482 (McKinnon v. Monarch Loan 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
McKinnon v. Monarch Loan Co., 1925 OK 482, 239 P. 170, 111 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 473 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

This was an action instituted by the Monarch Loan Company, as plaintiff, against G. G. McKinnon and Lula McKinnon, as defendants, to foreclose a mortgage which was in default for approximately $3,000.

The Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay was made a party defendant and filed a cross-petition against defendants G. G. Mc-Kinnon and Lula McKinnon, seeking fo foreclose a mortgage on the same lands for approximately $2,800.

Judgment was rendered in favor of the Monarch Loan Company, without contest, for the amount sued for, and also a judgment was rendered in favor of the Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay against Lula McKinnon and G. G. McKinnon for approximately the amount sued for.

For reversal of the judgment in favor of the Farmers Exchange Bank of Lindsay the defendants Lula McKinnon and G. G. Mc-Kinnon have appealed to this court, and assign numerous errors under two general propositions to the effect: First, that the trial court erred in refusing to allow the plaintiffs in error to 'prove the issues tendered by them; and, second, that the testimony shows that the plaintiffs in error had on deposit in the Farmers Exchange Bank $1,618, which should haye been accounted for by the defendant bank.

Briefly stated, the following are the facts disclosed by the record:

G. G. McKinnon, in the fall of 1918, bought a considerable amount of cotton on bills of exchange drawn on the Farmers Exchange Bank, which were duly paid. He continued to buy cotton and had in his possession, on December 6, 1918, 94 bales of cotton stored in an open yard in the town of Lindsay. It appears that this cotton was unprotected from the weather and had deteriorated in quality, some of it having been damaged by the rain, and the outside of a number of bales had rotted.

The Farmers Exchange Bank had advanced to the defendant McKinnon the entire purchase price of cotton purchased by him, including this 94 bales, charging him 10 per cent, interest thereon.

In February and March, 1919, the 94 bales of cotton were shipped by the defendant McKinnon in the name of the Farmers Exchange Bank to Cleveland & Sons, cotton factors, in the city of Houston, Tex.

‘It appears that the tickets issued by the said cotton factors on said cotton were delivered into the custody of the bank under the contract of pledge incidental to the payment of said bills of exchange drawn by the defendant McKinnon, and paid by said bank.

It further appears that the said cotton factors advanced, according to the custom of the trade, to the Farmers Exchange Bank, a considerable sum of money which was used in retiring the bills of exchange drawn by the defendant McKinnon on said bank thereby eliminating the interest of McKin non and his bills of exchange 'therefor to the extent of said advancements.

It further appears that the price of cotton had very materially decreased, and the bank, having advanced all of the purchase price of said cotton, was in a situation of losing a sum of money equal to the difference between the sum paid out and the market value of the cotton.

On December 6, ¿918, the bank made a demand upon Mr. McKinnon to margin according to the usage and custom in that respect and the defendants McKinnon executed their note for $3,000, payable one year *215 after date, secured by a mortgage upon the homestead of the McKinnons.

It further appears that the, said note was not executed for the purchase price of said cotton, but only for a sum representing a reasonable margin to protect tbe bank against loss by reason of the decline in the cotton market.

The bank thereupon continued to carry the whole of the purchase price of said cotton, amounting at the time the note was given to approximately $14,500, and thereafter, in the month of June, 1919, the market price of cotton had increased to such an extent as to reduce the loss which Mr. McKinnon had sustained because of the decline in the market.

It is contended by the defendant, McKinnon, that the 94 bales of cotton were sold in violation of the directions given by him to the bank; that he directed the bank to wire Cleveland & Sons to sell the cotton at 33 cents a pound “hog around.”

The meaning of this phz-ase is said by counsel for the defendants McKinnozi to be “that the buyer takes the cotton just as it is at a certain! flat price, or all around. There is to be no classifying, cheeking, or reconditioning; just so many bales as they lie at so much per pound all around.”

On June 12, 1919, the Farmers Exchange Bank instructed the said cotton factors to “sell the McKinnon cotton at price quoted, thirty-one fifty, or better.”

Mr. Cleveland, the senior meznber of the cotton factor’s firm, testified in answer to the question as to the meaning of the basis of 31.50 or better in the cotton business that “the selling instructions received from the bank directed us to sell the cotton at 31.50 or better, meaning 31.50 basis middling or better.'

It is not disputed that on June 12, 1919, the cotton in question was sold at 31.75 “basis middling”; that the cotton factors furnished to the Farmers Exchange Bank an account sale showing in detail tbe classification of the cotton, the weight upon sucn sale, the price received, the total sums realized therefrom, together with the total charges against said cotton.

The record shows that the cotton in question was received by the cotton factors at Houston in a damaged condition.

Mr. Cleveland further stated that in the interior lists of cotton are frequently sold at what is termed the “hog around” price, carrying with it the understanding that the list is to be accepted as it stands and if •bales in the list are damaged account is taken of the damages by the buyer, but without conditioning; that this practice cannot be followed in the factors’ market for the reason that cotton factors cannot sell cotton at a "hog around” price, involving allowing no inspection; that the cotton sold by factors'is sold allowing the buyer the privilege of inspection and rejection.

The controversy between the bank and the defendant McKinnon is that he directed the bank to wire the said cotton factors to sell the cotton at 33 cents per pound “hog around”, and that the bank failed to comply With his directions.

It is not contended that the price obtained by the defendants, McKinnons, of 31.75, was less than the market price on the date of sale, nor is it contended that they did not receive full credit for the proceeds of the sale and that there remained a balance due the bank of approximately $2,800, for which sum suit on the note was instituted.

The theory of counsel for the McKinnons, as we understand it, is that the defendant bank would be liable for the difference between the amount actually received for the cotton, 31.75, per pound “basis middling”, and what they sought to prove the bank was directed 'to sell said cotton for, 33 cents per pound “hog around.”

There is no cc ntention that the highest market price.was not obtained or that cotton was worth 33 cents per pound “hog around” or that it was worth more, than 31.75, basis middling, on the date of the sale.

Assuming that the bank wrongfully sold

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 482, 239 P. 170, 111 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinnon-v-monarch-loan-co-okla-1925.