McMullen v. Holcombe

1926 OK 524, 256 P. 888, 125 Okla. 178, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1926
Docket16541
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1926 OK 524 (McMullen v. Holcombe) 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
McMullen v. Holcombe, 1926 OK 524, 256 P. 888, 125 Okla. 178, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 14 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

An action was brought in 'he district court of Osage county by the defendants in error, M. L. Holcombe and Clarence Lohman, as plaintiffs, against the Midland Supply Company, a corporation, R. V. McMullen, and Wm. W. Gruber, plaintiffs in error, as defendants, to recover upon four promissory notes aggregating approximately $6,500. Parties will hereinafter be designated as- thiy appeared in the trial court.

While the action was pending, and prior *179 to the trial, the defendant Midland Supply. Company was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States Court, and the alction abated, as to it. A motion by the defendants Gruber and McMullen to likewise abate the action as to them being overruled, the action proceeded on behalf of the plaintiffs against the defendants Grubclr and McMullen.

It appears that the defendants Gruber and McMullen were the president and secretary, respectively, of the Midland Supply, Company, and that the firm of Sands, Holcombe & Lohman had been representing the Midland Supply Cclmpany as attorneys for ■ a number of years prior to May 22, 1923, and that on that date the company owed the attorneys a sum of money for legal services evidenced by a series of promissory notes,which the company had executed and delivered to- them in payment of said fees.

The plaintiffs allege in their petition that on this date the Midland Supply Company, as maker, and Wm. W. Gruber and R. V.' McMullen, as indorsers thereon, executed and delivered to Sands, Holcombe ’& Lehman the four promissory notes set out therein, and that before maturity and for a valuable consideration the payees therein, Sands Holcombe & Lohman, had transferred and indorsed said notes to the plaintiffs, Holcombe and Lohman, and that they were the. clwners and .holders thereof in due course.

The defendants filed a verified answer to the petition of plaintiffs, and each cause of action thereof, in which they admitted the execution of the notes under circumstances which it was claimed only made them accommodation indorsers for the payees, and in which, among other things, they specifically denied that said notes had been transferred to the plaintiffs before maturity and for valuable consideration, as alleged in plaintiffs’ petition.

' In the trial of the case the plaintiffs introduced the fdur promissory notes in evidence and rested. The defendants thereupon demurred to the evidence of plaintiffs, which was overruled and exceptions saved. The trial court also rules, over the objection of defendants,’ that rhe burden of prdof then rested upon the defendants to- establish the affirmative defenses set out in their answer.

' Considerable evidence was then introduced on both sides directed largely to the controverted question as to whether or nett the defendants Gruber and McMullen indorsed said' notes under such circumstances as would make them accommodation indorsers for the Midland Supply Company, or whether they indorsed the notes merely as indorsers with-opt consideration for the accommodation of the payees..

. .The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for .the. plaintiffs. Motion for a new trial was filed by the defendants, heard, and overruled, and from phis judgment and- from the order overruling their motion for a new Mai the defendants appeal. It.is contended by the defendants that their ■ demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence, interposed at the close of plaintiffs’ testimony, should have been siis.táíned.

The -argument-is that plaintiffs having alleged-, in-the third paragraph of their petition that the notes sued on had by the-payees therein,- -Sands, Holcombe & Lohman, been transferred to the plaintiffs before maturity and- -for -valuable consideration, and there being- a- verified denial of this allegation by the • defendants in- their answer, the burden of -proof was on the plaintiffs to prove this allegation,- which burden could not be' discharged merely by ■ the introduction'-of the notes in -evidence and without further proof of the gehuinenéss of'the indorsement.

It is true in the condition of the pleadings, as they' stood at the time defendants; demurrer to ’plaintiffs’ evidence was overruled; that no proper evidence of the genuineness of the indorsement of the note from Sands, ■ Holcombe & Lohman had been introduced, but it appears that during the trial both plaintiffs testified to a state of facts somewhat at variance with the allegations contained in- their petition, which was not objected to by the defendants at the time, and in this condition of the record, we think, under familiar rules of procedure obtaining in this jurisdiction, that -thc-i petiidbn"of rhe plaintiffs in. this particular will be¡ deemed to have been amended so as to conform to the evidence so introduced without objection.

In. answer to a question propounded by edunsel the plaintiff, Clarence Lehman, stated as follows:

“I might state at -this time that the old firm of Sands, Holcombe & Lohman was dissolved, and in the arrangement and division of the matters between us, Mr. Holcombe and I took these and I am not — that is the reason I said a while ago that I would not be sure that I put those in the note file, because the note file had been of Sands, Holcombe & Lohman.. Q. And in the division between Sands and you and Holcombe it was arranged that you and Holcombe in dividing up tne- firm business would take this paper? A. Tes, sir.” '

Mr. Holcombe testified in answer to a question propounded as follows:

*180 “When was the firm of Sands, Holcombe & Lo-hmam dissolved? A. March 1st.”

This is also substantially the testimony of defendants. It thus appears that in the trial all parties, notwithstanding- the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition, regarded the plaintiffs as the original payees in the notes and not as owner and holder by indorsement in due course from the original payees.

All parties seemed to have agreed in the trial of the case, that Sands had no interest in this papar by reason of the prior dissolution of the firm of Sands, Holcombe & Lohman in March, • whereby it was agreed that Holcombe and Lohman should take the paper from the Midland Supply Company as the sole payees therein. By reason of the defendants’ failure to object to this line of testimony we think they waived and abandoned the objections previously made by their demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence, and that the petition of the plaintiffs should be considered as amended so as to- declare clwnership by the plaintiffs in 'the notes as original payees, rather than by indorsement in due course from such original payees.

In this situation the authorities cited and r.ilied on by the -defendants have no application. Obviously, then, it was the theory of all parties at the trial -that plaintiffs’ righ'-s were not to be measured by: the rules obtaining where a transferee in good faith of underdue commercial paper sues an indorser of the original note, but should be measured by the rules obtaining where the original payee in the note sues such indorser.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 524, 256 P. 888, 125 Okla. 178, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmullen-v-holcombe-okla-1926.