McLaughlin v. Cheney

1935 OK 664, 46 P.2d 352, 172 Okla. 562, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 11, 1935
DocketNo. 26035.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1935 OK 664 (McLaughlin v. Cheney) 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
McLaughlin v. Cheney, 1935 OK 664, 46 P.2d 352, 172 Okla. 562, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 333 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the. court below. Plaintiffs brought this action to recover a money judgment against defendants Laura C. McLaughlin, Bert McLaughlin, and C. R. Thorp upon two promissory notes which represented rents on certain real estate and against all the defendants to foreclose an alleged landlord’s lien on the crops raised on said premises, alleging that the other defendants, Robert Barr and Ida Barr, had purchased from the McLaughlins and Thorp certain portions of such crops with notice. There were two of said notes, each dated November 14, 1031, and each for $200, maturing on September 1, 1932, and December 1, 1932, respectively, and each bearing 10 per cent, interest from maturity and providing for a reasonable attorney’s fee to be taxed with the costs. The two notes were signed by the two McLaughlins and Thorp, but not by the Barrs, the latter being parties to the action only on the foreclosure phase of the case. The Barrs filed their respective separate unverified answers which merely alleged they had respectively purchased certain .portions of said crops from G. R. Thorp without actual notice of any landlord’s lien thereon in favor of plaintiffs. The defendants the McLaughlins and Thorp filed their unverified answers, same being a general denial, except specifically admitting the execution of the two notes and in effect admitting that said notes represented the rental on certain lands as alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, and further alleging that plaintiffs, acting under a claim of ownership, had caused more than half of the crops grown on said lands and the proceeds therefrom to be held for their use and benefit by defendants the Barrs, and that “the value thereof is in excess of the amounts claimed by plaintiffs, but plaintiffs have refused to cause said part of said crops to be sold and to give the defendants Laura 0. McLaughlin, Bert McLaughlin and G. R. Thorp credit therefor,” and that by reason thereof they were entitled to have said notes decreed fully satisfied, canceled, and returned to them. Upon these pleadings the case went to trial and was heard to the court without a jury. Before any evidence was heard the defendants objected “to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine this matter for the reason that the petition wholly fails to state any cause of action or to confer any jurisdiction whatever upon this court,” which objection was overruled and exceptions saved. The plaintiffs thereupon offered in evidence the two original notes, to which offer the defendants objected “for the reason said notes are wholly incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial as evidence in the case,” which objection was likewise overruled and exception saved. The trial was thereupon proceeded with, and further evidence, including oral testimony of plaintiffs Joe R. ’Cheney and the defendants Ida Barr and Robert Barr, submitted on behalf of plaintiffs, whereupon plaintiffs rested. There was no demurrer interposed by any of the defendants to the plaintiffs’ evidence, but, on the contrary, defendants submitted their evidence, including the oral testimony of defendants Bert McLaughlin and G. R. Thorp. The defendants did, however, at the conclusion of their evidence move the court for judgment “for the reason the evidence of the plaintiffs wholly fails to show any indebtedness from these defendants to-them,” which motion wás overruled and exceptions saved. The evidence as submitted on behalf of defendants McLaughlin and Thorp went only to the question of the crops raised on the premises and their disposition and some labor performed by Mr. McLaughlin for plaintiff Joe Cheney, for which defendants insisted credit should be given on the notes, the entire evidence on the part of the McLaughlins and Thorp being in effect an effort to obtain credits on the indebtedness represented by the notes in such an amount as to satisfy it, or at least to materially reduce it, but in no manner seeking to question the original indebtedness or otherwise attacking the notes. After hearing and considering the evidence, the court did allow certain credits on the notes and dismissed the case as to the defendants *564 Robert Barr and Ida Barr, and rendered a personal money judgment in favor of plaintiffs against defendants Laura O. McLaughlin, Bert McLaughlin, and O. R. Thorp for the aggregate sum of $259.12 and 10 per cent, interest per annum thereon, and an attorney’s fee of $50 and costs of action, and from the order overruling their motion for new trial the said McLaughlins and Thorp appeal.

The defendants in their brief discuss their various assignments of error under only one specification, to wit: “The judgment is not sustained by any competent evidence and is contrary to law,” and the only error urged thereunder in their brief is the court’s admission in evidence of the two notes, this for the reason that said notes were of more than eight months’ duration, and that there is an absence .of evidence, either by indorsement on them or otherwise, that they have been registered and the tax thereon paid as provided by section 12363, O. S. 1931, and, therefore, under section 12368, O. S. 1931, neither of said notes was admissible in evidence.

It is true that there is an entire absence of any showing in the evidence that either of said notes was registered' or U\e tax thereon paid as provided by said section 12363, O. S. 1931, and we assume that in fact there was neither such registration nor tax payment. Conceding, then, for the sake of argument, that said notes were not competent as evidence because of such nonreg-istration and nonpayment of tax, and that it was error to admit them in evidence, was such action upon the court’s part, under the facts and circumstances disclosed by thel record in this case, prejudicial error warranting a reversal of the case? We think not. The defendants rely upon the cases of Wommer v. Wommer, 91 Okla. 79, 216 P. 150; Harrell v. Suter, 100 Okla. 56, 227 P. 403; and Todd v. Webb, 134 Okla. 107, 272 P. 380.

The fact that defendants objected to the sufficiency of the petition' to confer jurisdiction, whereby they sought to raise this question, did not avail them anything, for the reason that the inhibition of section 12368, O. S. 1931, supra, against such non-registered and nontax paid notes went only to the introduction of said notes in evidence and did not extend to the pleadings. Cole v. Kinch, 134 Okla. 262, 272 P. 1017; Alexander v. Wright, 135 Okla. 96, 274 P. 480. The former case of Harrell v. Suter, supra, relied upon by defendants had extended the statutory inhibition against such notes to the pleadings, but Justice Riley, in the case of Cole v. Kinch, supra, refused to follow such extension of the rule and confined the inhibition to the admission of such notes in evidence, and, as set out in syllabus 2 of the opinion in the Cole v. Kinch Case, the Harrell v. Suter Case was specifically overruled in so far as it extended the rule of evidence under section 9613, C. O. S. 1921 (12368, O. S. 1931), to the pleadings, and that extended rule is no longer the law.

Upon the .question of such nonregistered and nontax paid notes being incompetent as evidence, the statute itself (sec. 12368, O. S. 1931) is decisive of that, and the cases of Wommer v. Wommer, supra, and Todd v. Webb, supra, cited and relied upon by defendants, are, of course, declaratory of such statutory inhibition against the admission of such notes in evidence. In the later case of Alexander v. Wright, supra, this court, after referring to the case of Wommer v. Wommer, supra, said:

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 664, 46 P.2d 352, 172 Okla. 562, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-cheney-okla-1935.