Norton v. Beydler

1925 OK 588, 238 P. 856, 111 Okla. 79, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 7, 1925
Docket12645
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 588 (Norton v. Beydler) 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
Norton v. Beydler, 1925 OK 588, 238 P. 856, 111 Okla. 79, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 427 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This appeal is prosecuted by plaintiffs in error K. A. Norton and E. Davis, defendants below, to reverse a judgment of the district court of Alfalfa county, obtained by the defendant in error, F. M. Beydler, who, as plaintiff in said court, had recovered a judgment against plaintiffs *80 in error on two promissory notes. The action originated before a justice of the peace of Alfalfa county, who rendered a default judgment in favor of the defendant in error on both notes, and the plaintiffs in error duly perfected their appeal to the district court, where, upon trial de novo before the court and a jury, on the 21st day of March, 1921, judgment was again rendered in favor of the defendant in error. Panties will 'be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The notes were alleged to have been made payable to J. M. Goodson, and by him, before maturity, in due course indorsed and delivered to the plaintiff. The two notes were for different amounts, one of them signed by the defendant K. A. .Norton and the other by the defendant E. Davis, and both made payable to Goodson, but only one trial was had of the two eases, it being stipulated, for the purpose of trial and appeal, that the evidence and the issues were the same in both cases.

The answer of the defendants admitted the execution of the notes sued on, but denied that ithe plaintiff wa« a holder of the notes in due course, and pleaded fraud in the procurement of the notes and failure of consideration.

It will be observed that the plaintiff, in his bill of particulars, claimed to be an innocent purchaser of the notes from J. M. Goodson before their maturity. The notes matured on August 1, 1919. It developed at the trial that these notes had in fact been transferred to the plaintiff after maturity; that the notes hiad been transferred to the Huber Manufacturing Company before they were due, and that the plaintiff obtained them from the Huber Company after they were due. The acquisition of the ownership of the notes by the Huber Company prior to maturity, and its continued ownership thereof for a period of time after maturity, was disclosed by evidence introduced on behalf of the defendants.

After trial and during the argument upon motion for a new trial filed by the defendants, vhe trial court permitted the plaintiff to amend his bill of particulars to conform to the evidence introduced so as to allege that the Huber Company obtained the notes, before maturity, for a valuable consideration and in due course from 'the payee, J. M. Goodson, and by it indorsed to the plaintiff.

■ The first proposition urged by the defendants as ground for reversal is in giving insfruotiou No. 9 to the jury. The instruction complained of is as follows: '

“Bearing specifically upon the two oases now about to be submitted to you, I charge you that if you find that the Huber Manufacturing Company was a holder of said notes, or either of them, in due course, as hereinbefore explained in these instructions, you need go no further with the consideration of these cases, or such case as you'so find, but your verdict should be for the plaintiff in both cases, or such case as you do so find; but if you fail to so find, that is, that the Huber Mfg. Company was a holder in due course of said notes you must then take up the consideration of the defenses of the defendants in said cases, and if you find from a preponderance of the 'evidence that the payee, J. M. Goodson, obtained said notes, or either of them, by false or fraudulent representations and without consideration as alleged, and set out in the defendants answers, your verdict should be for the defendants or such defendant as you do so find.”

We think this instruction is a fair statement of the law applicable to the case when the same is considered in connection with instruction No. 6, on the burden of proof. It must be remembered that the defense interposed by the defendants was fraud. Instruction No. 6 told the jury that before the plaintiff could be said to have established himself as a holder of the notes in due course, where, fraud was relied on as a defense, he had the burden of showing by the preponderance of the evidence that he obtained the notes without notice of the fraud, and this statement of the law is in harmony with the rule announced by this court in the case of Lambert v. Smith, 53 Okla. 606, 157 Pac. 909, and other later cases.

The instruction criticized simply told the jury that if the plaintiff had met the requirements of the burden of proof imposed on him by instruction No. 6 it would be unnecessary to do the vain and useless thing of again considering the merits of the defense of fraud in the procurement of the note relied on by the defendant. Certainly, if the plaintiff 'had established himself as a holder in due course under the rule announced in Lambert v. Smith, supra, no one could contend that the jury would be required to consider again the defense interposed by the defendants when such consideration could not affect in any way the result of thie trial. We do not think the statement of so plain a proposition of law, in the connection in which it appears in the instructions, unduly emphasized the contention of the plaintiff, or that it tended to mislead the jury by giving undue prominence to a particular fact in thie case.

The next proposition relied on is that the *81 notes sued on in the case at bar were not negotiable, as the result of which the plaintiff's claim that he was the holder in due course cannot be maintained. This contention is without merit. The trial court instructed ithe jury, in its instruction No. 5, that the notes sued on were negotiable notes and that both parties had agreed thereto, to which no exception was taken by thie defendants. If error was committed by the trial court in this particular, it has not been preserved for review, and the objection cannot be raised for the first time in this court on appeal.

It is next contended that the trial court erred by the following statement incorporated in the last portion of its instruction No. 6. The language complained of is as follows:

“* * * In this connection, I further charge you that it appearing from the evidence in these cases that the plaintiff, F. M. Beydler, did not obtain the notes in controversy from the Huber Mfg. Company until after they became due, you will therefore bear in mind that the question as to whether the plaintiff in these eases was a holder in due course will and does depend on the fact as to whether the Huber Mfg. Company was a holder in due course, and if you find that the Huber Mfg. Company was a holder in due course, as described in these instructions, you should find for the plaintiff.”

We have already referred to the fact that during the trial, evidence was introduced by the defendants that the notes sued on were acquired by Huber Manufacturing Company from J. M. Goodson before maturity, and that .the trial court, ait ithe hearing of a motion for a new trial, permitted the plaintiff to amend his petition to show this fact. By this evidence it was disclosed for the first time at the trial that the Huber Company obtained the notes sued on before maturity, and that it continued to be the owner and holder thereof for a considerable period' of time after their maturity.

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Related

Ward v. Coleman
170 P.2d 113 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 588, 238 P. 856, 111 Okla. 79, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-beydler-okla-1925.