Republic Nat. Bank of St. Louis v. First State Bank of Oilton

1925 OK 289, 237 P. 578, 110 Okla. 299, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 845
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 7, 1925
Docket14919
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1925 OK 289 (Republic Nat. Bank of St. Louis v. First State Bank of Oilton) 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
Republic Nat. Bank of St. Louis v. First State Bank of Oilton, 1925 OK 289, 237 P. 578, 110 Okla. 299, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 845 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion toy

RUTH, C.

The plaintiff, First State Bank of Oilton, hied its action against the defendants, Riverside Oil & Refining Company and M. D. Harris, to recover judgment on six promissory notes of $1,000 each, alleged to have been executed on February 20, 1922, by the oil company in favor of Harris and indorsed by Harris for value, before maturity, and without notice of any infirmities, to the plaintiff.

By leave of the court, plaintiff filed its amended petition and the oil company filed its verified answer, and by leave of the court subsequently filed a verified amended answer, consisting of a general denial, and for further defense alleges it executed the noites and forwarded them to the plaintiff bank, with the following letter:

“Riverside Oil & Refining Company, 835-836
“Kennedy Building, Tulsa,- Oklahoma.
“February 20th, 1923.
•“First State Bank,
“Oilton, Oklahoma.
■ “Attention Mr. Abshire.
“Enclosed herewith find seven promissory notes of $1,000 each dated February 20th and due in ninety days, with, eight per cent, from maturity, payable to M. L. Harris. This is in keeping with our agreement with Mr. Harris for the completion of the piling work on the river.
“Under the terms of our contract he was to furnish us with a bond guaranteeing us against loss or liability under material or mechanics’ liens. He has never furnished this bond, so it will therefore be necessary for him to furnish us with a release of any lien claims by the respective employees, and firms and individuals who furnished material for this job. It will be necessary for you to get the enclosed releases signed by the different men who have worked for him on this piling work, and the lumber and hardware dealers, and other material men who have furnished material for the work.
“When those releases have been properly signed, you at liberty to deliver the notes to Mr. Harris.
“Yours very truly,
“Riverside Oil and Refining Company.
“By O. O. Owens.”

The answer alleges that disregarding the instructions in the letter, the plaintiff had Harris come to the plaintiff’s bank, on February 21, 1922, and transfer four of said notes, by indorsement, to the plaintiff for a past indebtedness, and before any releases of leins were signed, and in violation of the trust imposed upon the plaintiff, and accepted by it, and the notes never became effective as an obligation of the defendant oil company.

The amended answer further alleges that the defendant oil company entered into a contract with Harris to drive certain piling around oil wells in the river bed; alleges breách of contract, and claims set off against the notes in the sum of $4,050. Defendant Harris moved to make the Republic Bank of St. Louis a party defendant, as that bank held a mortgage against the property of the Riverside Oil Company. Harris filed his answer to the plaintiff’s petition and admits all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, and in his cross-petition Harris alleges he is the owner and holder of note No. 7, for $1,000, that he filed a lien against the oil company’s property on February 20, 1922, and prays judgment against the Riverside Oil Company, and for foreclosure of this lien.

Plaintiff, in its reply, admits the receipt of the notes and letter of instructions; alleges the conditions in the letter were complied . with; that it had no knowledge of the nonperformance of the Harris contract for which the notes were given, or of the counterclaim.

Defendant Riverside Oil Company filed its answer to the cross-petition of Harris, and upon issues joined the cause was tried to a jury.

After all parties had introduced testimony and rested, the defendant oil company requested certain instructions, which were by the court denied and the oil company excepted.

The court thereupon instructed the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, First State Bank, against the Riverside Oil Company, for $6,000, interest, and attorneys’ fees, and submitted the question of the right of Harris to recover on the remaining note of $1,000, to the jury, and verdict was found for Harris; judgment rendered thereon, from which judgment the Riverside Oil Company appeals, and assigns six specifications of error and presents the same under five heads or “propositions” which will be considered in their order.

The evidence discloses that Riverside Oil Company and M. L. Harris entered into a contract dated January 7, 1921, by the-terms of which Harris was to drive piling in the bed of the Cimarron river to protect the company's oil wells from river water. The contract provided for driving not less than 500 piling, “and such additional piling as the oil company might see fit to have *301 driven,-’ and. at points designated by tbe oil company. After Harris had driven cer-talin piling thc¡ oil company determined, that additional piling should be driven at places designated by it, and on October 13, 1921, the oil company forwarded to M. L. Harris a letter, a portion of which is as follows:

“Tulsa, October 13th, 1921.”
"II. L. Harris,
"Oilton, Oklahoma,
■'Dear Sir: Pursuant to our conversation, Tuesday, October 11, at which time you proposed to continue the work of driving piling in the river bed on our lease, it is my understanding that you will furnish all piling which has not been included in your itemized bill of recent date, and in addition to the above mentioned piling, you will furnish enough additional piling to drive a double row of piling from our No. 13 well where some piling has already been driven, down stream along a designated course to approximately sixty feet past our well No. 8.”

The letter further specifies 30 foot piling at designated points, and the contract of January 7, 1921, provided that piling should be driven down to bed rock, or until the piling “broomed” a,t the lower point; and further provides that Harris will replace at his own expense any piling washed .out or otherwise lost or destroyed, and furnish the oil company a perfect completed contract. The letter then provides that upon completion of the whole contract Harris is to receive one note of $10,000 payable 90 days after date.

Upon receipt of this letter, Harris wrote the following acceptance thereon:

“The above conditions are accepted with the understanding that twenty-five foot piling are to be used for shore piling at all points not designated for thirty foot shore piling.
“Accepted, M. L. Harris.”

The proposition is advanced by the plaintiff and defendant Harris that the letter of October 13, 1921, was a separate and distinct contract from the one of January 7, 1922.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 289, 237 P. 578, 110 Okla. 299, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-nat-bank-of-st-louis-v-first-state-bank-of-oilton-okla-1925.