Muskogee Industrial Finance Corp. v. Perkins

1961 OK 110, 361 P.2d 1065, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 551
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 9, 1961
Docket38853
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1961 OK 110 (Muskogee Industrial Finance Corp. v. Perkins) 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
Muskogee Industrial Finance Corp. v. Perkins, 1961 OK 110, 361 P.2d 1065, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 551 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Parties are referred to as in the trial court, or by name. This was a mortgage foreclosure action in which Muskogee Industrial Finance Corporation, plaintiff, sued C. P. Perkins and J. W. Kaiser, as defend *1067 ants. The petition alleged, among other things, that plaintiff held a mortgage on certain property, signed by J. W. Kaiser; that defendant C. P. Perkins had held a prior mortgage on the same property, but that the debt secured by said mortgage had been paid in full, thereby making plaintiff’s mortgage a first mortgage; and prayed for a money judgment against Kaiser, foreclosure of the mortgage, sale of property, etc. Perkins’ answer and cross-petition alleged, among other things, that the debt secured by the prior mortgage had never been fully paid; that the property concerned was the joint property of Kaiser and his wife; that two subsequent mortgages had been executed to Perkins; that the debts secured thereby were past due and unpaid; and prayed for a money judgment against Kaiser, foreclosure of the mortgages, sale of property, etc., with the prior mortgage being accorded first priority.

For convenience, we here list the four mortgages in the order of dates of execution (recording was in the same order) :

Mortgage 1: From J. W. Kaiser and his wife to Perkins;

Mortgage 2: From Kaiser to Muskogee Industrial Finance Corporation;

Mortgage 3: From Kaiser to Perkins;

Mortgage 4: From Kaiser and his wife to Perkins.

Mortgages 1 and 2 describe other property as well. In all cases, the promissory notes evidencing the debts secured by the mortgages were signed by Kaiser only and not by his wife; and in all cases, the mortgages were recorded very shortly after the dates of. execution. No question of notice, actual or constructive, is involved in this appeal.

Trial was had to the court, a jury having been waived, and at the conclusion thereof, a judgment and decree of foreclosure was entered finding for plaintiff Muskogee Industrial and defendant and cross-petitioner Perkins in the various amounts prayed for under the respective mortgages. Priority of liens was established, and in accordance therewith, the proceeds of the foreclosure sale were ordered to be applied first to the payment of costs, second to Perkins as reimbursement for certain taxes paid, and thereafter as follows: third, to Perkins, $7,348.50 under Mortgage 1, said amount to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of the one-half interest owned by Kaiser; fourth, to Muskogee Industrial, $8,749.89 under Mortgage 2, said amount to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of the one-half interest owned by Kaiser; fifth, to Perkins for amounts due under Mortgage 3; and sixth, to Perkins for amounts due under Mortgage 4. In this summary, we have disregarded interest and attorney fees in the interests of clarity.

Muskogee Industrial appeals, and here argues two propositions:

The first one is to the effect that the debt secured by Mortgage 1 had been paid and the lien of the mortgage thereby extinguished, thereby making Mortgage 2 a first mortgage, and that the judgment was therefore contrary to law and against the clear weight of the evidence.

The evidence showed that at the time of the re-financing arrangement which resulted in Mortgage 3, Kaiser needed more money and apparently did not tell Perkins of Mortgage 2 to Muskogee Industrial. In the paper work pursuant to the re-financing arrangement, Kaiser gave a check for $7,-422 (the exact amount then due under Mortgage 1) to Perkins, and Perkins gave Kaiser a check for $20,000, taking a new note and mortgage in that amount plus interest, with the mortgage listing additional property as well as that here concerned. It was shown that at various times after the date of Mortgage 1, Kaiser made payments in substantial amounts to Perkins without designating the particular indebtedness to which the payment was to be applied. It is agreed that Perkins had a right to choose the particular indebtedness upon which to apply the payments, and no issue is made of that point here. No. release of Mortgage 1 was ever demanded or given, and the note secured thereby was never returned to Kaiser. Both Perkins *1068 and Kaiser testified that it was never intended that Mortgage 1 should be released, although Perkins freely admitted that at the time of the execution of Mortgage 3, he had no actual knowledge of the intervening mortgage in favor of Muskogee Industrial Finance Corp. Maxine Pate, bookkeeper for Perkins, testified with regard to the re-financing arrangement, that the •exchange of checks ($7,422 from Kaiser to Perkins, $20,000 from Perkins to Kaiser) was made as a convenience to her. She said: “Well, my bookkeeping was rather crude, and instead of adding this on, and since we did want to add more security, instead of adding this on this original ledger sheet we wanted to set up our payments over again, and it was purely a bookkeeping convenience for me, the way we did it.” On cross-examination, she said on this point: “Well we would have had to had (sic) two separate payments, so just — it was really just a continuation of this note, adding more security and advancing more cash.” In answer to a question as to whether “you couldn’t have taken a mortgage on the other security and held your mortgage on the Car Lot too, without that interfering with your bookkeeping”, she said: “Well the value of the other security wouldn’t have been worth the additional cash that we were advancing. I say we— that Mr. Perkins was advancing.” There was no objection to any of the quoted testimony.

There was also evidence that when Kaiser gave the $7,422 check to Perkins, his bank account was overdrawn, and that it could not clear, and did not clear, the bank, until the $20,000 check from Perkins to Kaiser was deposited; and that both Kaiser and Perkins knew of these facts.

As mentioned before, a jury was waived in this case, and the court became the trier of the fact. Under those circumstances, we are bound by the general rule stated as follows in Strahm et al. v. Murry, 200 Okl. 640, 199 P.2d 603:

“Where a jury is waived in a law action and the cause is tried to the court, the judgment will be given the same effect as the verdict of a properly instructed jury, and if reasonably supported by any competent evidence will not be disturbed on appeal.”

This is not to be confused with the general rule in a purely equitable action, to the effect that a judgment will not be reversed unless it is “clearly against the weight of the evidence.”

Plaintiff first argues under this proposition that the debt secured by Mortgage 1 was paid and the lien thereof extinguished, and cites 36 Am.Jur., Mortgages, Sec. 406, page 890 and Sec. 415 at page 895 to the effect that when such is true, the next encumbrance junior thereto becomes a first lien. These citations are of no assistance here, because they assume the very thing here in dispute — whether or not the debt secured by the prior mortgage had in fact been paid.

Plaintiff also cites language from the body of the opinion in Brady v. Interstate Mortgage Trust Co., 96 Okl. 293, 223 P. 145, where both an original note and mortgage, and a renewal note and mortgage, were involved.

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Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 110, 361 P.2d 1065, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muskogee-industrial-finance-corp-v-perkins-okla-1961.