Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Wilhoit

1954 OK 127, 270 P.2d 645, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 27, 1954
Docket35836
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1954 OK 127 (Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Wilhoit) 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
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. v. Wilhoit, 1954 OK 127, 270 P.2d 645, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 524 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

Our reference to the parties will he plaintiff and defendant, being their designations in the lower court.

Plaintiff sued to recover the sum of $174.30 upon his first cause of action, and the sum of $161.42 upon his second cause of action. He alleged that as defendant’s agent he operated a Bulk Sales Station in Chickasha, Oklahoma; that he operated under a bulk station contract which authorized him to extend limited credit to his customers; that on two separate dates he sold and delivered to John Simco at Lindsay, Oklahoma, two cargoes of petroleum products and received in payment therefor two checks, payable to defendant, the first check dated October 2, 1948 in the sum of $174.30, and the second check dated October 12, 1948, in the sum of $161.42; that these checks were not paid by reason of insufficient funds to the credit of Simco in the Lindsay Oklahoma Bank on which the checks were drawn; that at a subsequent date plaintiff collected the amount due on the Simco account, which included the amount represented by said checks; that defendant’s agent, King, advised plaintiff to deposit said amount to the credit of defendant in its depository bank at Chickasha, Oklahoma, and that defendant’s Tulsa office would reimburse plaintiff for the face value of the checks. Plaintiff made the deposit as suggested by King, but defendant failed and refused to credit plaintiff’s account for the amount so deposited. Plaintiff seeks a judgment for the face value of the two checks, with interest.

Defendant by answer admitted that plaintiff operated under the bulk station contract pleaded by plaintiff, but denied plaintiff’s relationship as an employee, and averred plaintiff operated as an independent contractor. Defendant admits the two deliveries of its petroleum products by plaintiff to Simco, and the execution of the two checks which, under the contract, plaintiff was obligated to deposit in the defendant’s depository bank at Chickasha, Oklahoma to defendant’s credit. Defendant admits the checks failed to clear the Lindsay Bank upon which they were drawn; that under the contract the defendant’s depository bank at Chickasha should have sent the checks with draft attached to defendant’s bank at Tulsa, Oklahoma, where defendant would have covered said draft and the Chickasha Bank would have received cash for the checks, and the defendant would have charged the amount thereof to the account of Simco, and that he would be so advised; that the Chickasha Bank did not follow said instructions but wrongfully received cash from plaintiff in the amount of said checks and delivered the checks to plaintiff; that defendant was not informed by the Chick-asha Bank, nor the plaintiff of the manner in which the plaintiff handled the transaction, and, therefore, defendant billed Simco in an amount less than the face value of said checks.

Several months later Simco sold his gasoline station at Lindsay to Simmons. Simco, in compliance with the Bulk Sales Law, furnished Simmons with a statement reflecting the amount of Simco’s indebtedness to defendant. Defendant had furnished Simco its statement in a like amount, which statement did not reflect the checks here involved, for the reason defendant had no knowledge that said checks were given in payment of its petroleum products to Simco, or that the checks were handled in the manner as testified by plaintiff; and that by reason of Simco’s insolvency, defendant was unable to collect the amount due it from Simco; that the account of Simco was a limited account on a load to load basis and the last load had to be paid for before the next load could be delivered, and that the plaintiff exceeded defendant’s credit authorization to Simco in making the deliveries of defendant’s petroleum products *648 for which the checks were executed, and that the checks were therefore subject to be surcharged against plaintiff’s account; that the defendant’s employee, King, was without authority to vary or alter defendant’s accounting procedure or its instructions to its depository bank at Chickasha, and denies King did so, or that King advised the plaintiff that if the cash collected by plaintiff from Simco was deposited in defendant’s depository bank that defendant would reimburse plaintiff for the amount of said Recks.

The record presents two questions for our decision: First, does the evidence disclose that the two deliveries of defendant’s petroleum products, made by plaintiff to Simco, exceeded his credit allowances under the bulk station contract, and that therefore the two checks given by Simco when returned for non-payment were properly charged against plaintiff’s' account with defendant, and, second, does the evidence support a finding that a departure from the manner and methods of making the deliveries of defendant’s petroleum products by plaintiff to Simco, in excess of Simco’s credit allowance, and' the handling of the proceeds of the collection made by plaintiff from Simmons, was authorized by defendant’s agent, Ralph King, within the scope of his' authority to act in behalf of the defendant.

Plaintiff produced evidence tending to establish that commencing in the year 1947, he operated a bulk sales station at Chickasha, under contract with the defendant, the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation. Under the contract he was authorized to extend credit to John Simco, a gasoline dealer at Lindsay, Oklahoma on a load to load basis on gasoline and other petroleum products. Under this arrangement when he delivered a load of gasoline he was required to collect any amount then due covering a previous delivery. On the 2nd day of October, 1948, Simco gave his check for $174.30 in payment of gasoline theretofore delivered, and on the 12th day of October, 1948, he gave his second check for $161.42 covering a previous delivery. In due course, plaintiff deposited the checks in the Chickasha Bank, defendant’s depository, for collection. The Simco checks drawn on a Lindsay Oklahoma Bank were not paid for the want of- sufficient funds, and thereafter, the Chickasha Bank so advised plaintiff, whereupon, plaintiff picked up the checks by payment and the two checks were delivered to him.

. Plaintiff and King, defendant’s territory manager in defendant’s sales department, called on Simco on three or four occasions in an effort to collect the indebtedness evidenced by the checks. Several months later Simco sold his gasoline station at Lindsay to Simmons. In that transaction Simmons presumably retained a sum sufficient to take up the checks. After Simmons paid plaintiff the amount of Simco’s indebtedness to defendant, which presumably, included the amount of said checks, plaintiff deposited the funds in the Oklahoma National Bank at Chickasha, Oklahoma, and so advised Ralph King, defendant’s territory manager at Chickasha. When King learned that the proceeds of the checks had been deposited by plaintiff to his individual account, he made objections to the handling of the account in that manner and advised plaintiff that he would consult Mr. Threlkeld, defendant’s Division Auditor, at defendant’s home office in Tulsa, as to how the matter should' be handled. After King phoned Threlkeld, King advised plaintiff to deposit the money with defendant’s depository bank and that if he did so the Tulsa office would send its draft to plaintiff to cover the check transaction.

The following day, at King’s suggestion, he and plaintiff contacted Simmons at Lindsay for the purpose of satisfying King that Simmons had possession of the two checks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 127, 270 P.2d 645, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-continent-petroleum-corp-v-wilhoit-okla-1954.