Rector v. Wildrick

1916 OK 624, 158 P. 610, 59 Okla. 172, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1166
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 6, 1916
Docket7576
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1916 OK 624 (Rector v. Wildrick) 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
Rector v. Wildrick, 1916 OK 624, 158 P. 610, 59 Okla. 172, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1166 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BLEAKMORE, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Craig county on May 17, 1913, by J. W. Wildrick. against James W. Orwig, Katie E. Orwig, his wife, B. L. Hart, and R. A. Leavitt, to recover on certain promissory notes, and to foreclose a real estate mortgage securing the same, and on May 19th thereafter, Davis Hill and the Vinita National Bank were served with garnishment summons. Hart and Leavitt were not served with process. Orwig and wife answered. The garnishees also answered. Later John F. Rector was made a party defendant and answered.

By the evidence it appears that on February 24, 1911, Orwig and wife executed and delivered to B. L. Hart their five negotiable promissory notes, one for $300 and four for $275 each, maturing, respectively, on the 1st of January of each of the next succeeding five years, together with a mortgage on 80 acres of land situate in Craig county, Okla., to secure the payment thereof. The mortgage was duly recorded. A short time thereafter Hart, by proper indoi’-sement, transferred all of said notes, save the one for $275, due January 1, 1913, to R. A. Leavitt. In the fall of 1911, prior to the maturity of either thereof, Leavitt indorsed and delivered said four notes to the plaintiff Wild-rick. There was no assignment of the mortgage by Hart to Leavitt or by Leavitt to the plaintiff; Hart retaining the possession thereof. On March 15, 1912, Hart, the record owner and holder of said mortgage, without the knowledge or consent of Wildrick, executed a release of the same, which was duly recorded on May 8,1912, at which time Orwig and wife executed a first mortgage to another party on a large tract of land, including the 80 acres covered by the mortgage given to and released by Hart; and at the same time made a second mortgage, securing a note of $1,000 to Hart, and the note for $1,250 executed to Leavitt, in lieu of the four notes transferred by Hai't to him, and which he at the time represented were owned and held by him, and in his possession at his office at Little Rock, Ark. There was some testimony tending to show that Orwig had been informed of plaintiff’s ownership of the four notes in question at the time of this transaction, but the evidence is conflicting in this i-egard.

A year subsequent to the transactions last referred to, and some six months after Wild-rick had learned of the release by Hart of the mortgage securing his notes, Orwig and wife entered into a written contract with the defendant John F. Rector, then a resident of Illinois, to convey .to him 460 acres of land, including the tract covered by the mortgage securing the notes in suit, for an agreed eozzsideration of $30,800, a portion of which was the conveyance to Orwig of a farm in Illinois valued at $20,000 and the assumption of certain mortgages appearing of record on the Oklahoma land, the balance to be paid in cash. The defendant Rector was ignorant of the existence of the plaintiff and of the transactions by which he acquired the notes in suit. After entering into the contract with the Orwigs, John F. Rector returned to his home in Illinois, leaving his father, H. J. Rector, on the ground to represent him in *173 tlio performance thereof. The Orwigs furnished an abstract of title, which was examined and favorably passed upon by an attorney employed by H. J. Rector. Pursuant to such contract, on Hay 16, 1916, the Orwigs executed their deed to the 160 acres his home in Illinois, leaving his father, H. J. Rector, who on that day filed the same for record with the register of deeds of the proper county, and delivered to Orwigs the deed of his son to the Illinois land, a draft for $6.000 and a check for $1.300, drawn on the. Cuba State Bank of Cuba, Ill., signed, “J. F. Rector, per H. J. Rector.'’ Thereupon H. J. Rector returned to Illinois. On the following-day, Hay 17, 1913. this action was begun, and two days later the garnishment proceedings were commenced against Davis Hill and the Vinita National Bank, in which bank the. .$1,300 check had been deposited for collection by Orwig. A few days after the arrival of H. J. Rector at his home in Illinois he received a telegram from Orwig. requesting that the payment of the. check be stopped, and stating that a letter of instructions would follow. H. .T. Rector, without consulting his son. .the defendant herein, who resided some distance in the country from him, sent the telegram to the bank upon which the cheek was drawn, with no instructions in regard i hereto. Later, he received a letter from Orwig, stating that he (Orwig j had been sued and the hank in which the check was deposited garnisheed, and requesting that the check I)e dishonored and a draft for the amount thereof he sent to him at Affon, Okla. This letter H. J. Rector delivered to the said bank of Cuba without instructions as to its action thereon. Tn compliance with the request of Orwig the bank refused to pay the check, and forwarded to him at Afton Okla., a draft, for .$1.300. which he received and cashed.

With reference to the transactions involved II. .T. Rector testified:

“Q. After the contract having been made, what did your son do? A. He returned to Illinois. Q. And what did you do? A. I stayed here to close the contract. Q. Did you complete the contract with Hr. Orwig? A. Yes. sir. Q. And when was it completed? A. Seventeenth day of May, 1913, 17th or 16th. *! * * Q. Wliat information did you get. from Hr. Orwig, after you had gone back home after the deed had been turned over, and after you had given the checks and paid the cash? A. I returned home that evening— Saturday evening, believe it was. Two or three days after I got home. I received a telegram. ‘Stop payment on the check, a letter of instructions will follow.’ I sent it to the bank. Q. Did you give the bank any directions? A. No. sir. * * * Q. Did you get a letter of instructions — did you get a letter afterwards? A. I believe that I did; yes. sir. Q. What did you do with it? A. Turned it into the bank. Q. Did you. upon receiving that letter, give the bank any instructions or directions? A. Nothing; only just turned it to the bank. Q. How did you turn it to them? A. I believe I delivered it to them in person. Q. How far did you live from Cuba? A. Five miles by rail. Q. In the letter, did it give you the details of what was going on down here? A. It said something like this. ‘They garnisheed the bank,’ or something to that amount. Q. Did they say who had? A. No, sir. Q. Did you acquire knowledge during any of that time that Mr. Wildrick was claiming that these notes were his, and that they had not been paid? A. No, sir. Q. When did you first acquire that knowledge? A. Some months afterwards; I can’t say jwst when.”

The defendant John F. Rector testified:

“Q. Did you give a check, or did your father give a check, for ,$1,300 for part of the purchase price of this land? A. Yes, sir. Q. What do you know about that proposition, John? You heard the testimony of Mr. Orwig —did you give any directions to the bank? A. No, sir: I did not. Q. Did you re.ceive any communication from Mr. Orwig? A. No, sir. Q. Did you learn before the money was paid by the bank out of your funds that Mr. Wildrick had sued Mr. Orwig on these four notes introduced in evidence, claiming a mortgage on part of the property that you had bought and had run a garnishment? A. No, sir; I knew nothing of Wildrick for some time, later. Q. About how long after, John? A. I think it was the last dav of December, when I was in your office, 1913. Q. That was after you had moved down here? A. No, sir. Q. When did you move here? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 624, 158 P. 610, 59 Okla. 172, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rector-v-wildrick-okla-1916.