Porter v. Rott

1926 OK 20, 243 P. 160, 116 Okla. 3, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
Docket15772
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1926 OK 20 (Porter v. Rott) 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
Porter v. Rott, 1926 OK 20, 243 P. 160, 116 Okla. 3, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 628 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

POSTER, C.

In this case an action was instituted in the district court of Rogers county by William Tyler Rott, one of the defendants in error, as plaintiff, against Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation, J. B. Porter, and Mount Virgin Oil & Gas Company, as defendants, to foreclose a real estate mortgage upon 50 acres of land owned by Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation located in Rogers county, and to subject certain property and assets of said corporation, alleged to be in the hands of the defendant, J. B. Porter, to the payment of the mortgage indebtedness.

It was the theory of the plaintiff, as disclosed by his petition, that he was induced .to loan the sum of $15,000 to the Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation by and through fraudulent representations of the defendant J. B. Porter, an officer and director of said corporation, for the purpose of appropriating the proceeds of said loan to his own individual use, and that as a result of such fraudulent conduct he paid the proceeds of said loan in the sum of $15,000 to the said ,,T.~-B. Porter, took the company’s note therefor, due and payable three months aftei uate secured by a mortgage on 50 acres of land in Rogers county, but that the said J. B. Porter, instead of turning the proceeds of said loan into the corporate treasury, appropriated all of it to his own personal use, whereby he became individually liable to said company and to the plaintiff! for said amount. It was further charged that the said J. B. Porter had sold stock in said corporation and collected therefor the sum of $19,000, appropriated that sum to his own use, and that he should be required to account to said corporation therefor, for the use and benefit of William Tyler Rott. An attachment was issued against J. B. Porter, who was a nonresident- of the. state of Oklahoma, and levied upon certain real estate located in Rogers county standing in the name of C. J. Dixon and James Pan-gan, who intervened in the action, and by motion obtained a dissolution of said attachment, from which action of the court in dissolving such attachment no appeal has been taken. Various parties, alleged stockholders in Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation, intervened in the action, and filed their plea in intervention,, in which they asserted the right to recover against J. B. Porter, the various sums which they had been induced to pay for stock in said corporation by reason of alleged fraud perpetrated on them by said Porter in the sale of said stock.

A demurrer to the petition of plaintiff was filed by J. B. Porter and to the plea of the interveners by J. B. Porter and Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation on the ground that neither the petition nor the plea stated a cause of action; heard and overruled and exceptions taken. There is no controversy-among any of the parties as t.o the rights of the Mount Virgin Oil & Gas Company, whose oil and gas lease upon the land in controverss’ is conceded to be prior and paramount to the mortgage of William Tyler Rott. Answer was filed by J. B. Porter and Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation to the *5 petition of William Tyler Rott, which, among other, things, asserted that the transaction, upon which the action of the plaintiff Rott was founded, was usurious. 'Issues were joined between the plaintiff Rott and the defendants J. B. Porter and Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation and between the intervening stockholders and said defendants, and a trial to the court, without the intervention of a jury, which was concluded on the 21st day of December, 1923, resulted in a judgment of foreclosure in favor of the plaintiff Rott against1* the defendant Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation for the sum of $14,222.04, and for any deficiency remaining unpaid on said judgment, after the sale of the real estate, judgment was rendered against J. B. Porter personally therefor, and required him to account to the plaintiff for such deficiency out of the sum of $29,500, for which sum the trial court also gave judgment in favor of Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation against Porter. The court further rendered judgment in favor of tihe 'Intervening stockholders against fh'e defendant J. B. Porter, personally, for the several amounts claimed to have been paid by them to J, B. Porter for stock in the ¡Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation; dissolved the attadiment levied upon certain real property in Rogers county owned by C. J. Dixon and James Dangan, and appointed a receiver for the corporation. From this judgment and from an order overruling their motion for a new trial, the defendants below, J. B. Porter and Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation, appeal to this court for review of said judgment.

For convenience the defendant in error William Tyler Rott will be hereinafter designated as plaintiff, the defendants in error, interveners, as intervening stockholders, and the plaintiffs in error, as defendants, as they appeared in the erial court.

The first proposition urged by the defendants for a reversal of the judgment is that the transaction upon which plaintiff’s action was founded was usurious. It appears that the defendant, J. B. Porter, had promoted and organized the Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation and had interested one Louis Cannaviella, a tobacco dealer of Brooklyn, New York, and a person of Italian descent, to subscribe for some stock in said corporation. The corporation, through its organizer and promoter, J. B. Porter, afterwards its president and general manager, was prospecting for oil upon 50 acres of land which the corporation owned in Rogers county, Okla. It appears that the company started drilling operations upon its land, but for lack of funds was unable to proceed with the work, and the company, through J. B. Porter, enlisted the aid of Cannaviella to procure a loan of $12,000 to enable the company to proceed with its drilling operations.

Cannaviella, it seems, while interested as a stockholder in having the company obtain the loan, could not afford to, spend the time and expense which would be necessary in visiting New York City for the purpose of negotiating the loan. He thereupon agreed with the defendant Porter that for the sum of $3,000, to be paid when the mortgage became due, he would undertake to interest someone in making the loan. He took the matter up with the plaintiff in New York City, and after making several trips from New York City to Rogers county, finally succeeded in obtaining the loan from plaintiff in the sum of $12,000. The record discloses that Cannaviella obtained a power of attorney from the plaintiff in New York for the purpose of closing the transaction between the plaintiff and Porter, pursuant to which the sum of $12,000 was paid by the plaintiff to the Revere Stockholders Oil Corporation, acting through its representative, Porter, and a note for the sum of $15,000 executed and delivered to the plaintiff due three months thereafter secured by a , mortgage upon the real estate owned by the company in "Rogers county.

The tjrial court rendered judgment in-favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $12,000 only, with interest and attorneys’ fees added upon the theory that Cannaviella was the agent of the borrower, and since Cam naviella was not a party to the suit, judgment could not be rendered in his favor for the $3,000. In this we perceive no error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 20, 243 P. 160, 116 Okla. 3, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-rott-okla-1926.