Richardson v. South Western Cotton Seed Oil Co.

1905 OK 33, 81 P. 781, 15 Okla. 263, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1905 OK 33 (Richardson v. South Western Cotton Seed Oil Co.) 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
Richardson v. South Western Cotton Seed Oil Co., 1905 OK 33, 81 P. 781, 15 Okla. 263, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 34 (Okla. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Irwin, J.:

A careful examination of the pleadings, instructions, verdict and journal entry in the case of Bank of Stroud against the parties in this case, as introduced in evidence by the defendants in this case, will show that the contention in that case was that the Bank of Stroud had advanced money to operate a gin at Davenport, on which the plaintiff in this case held a mortgage-; that it was agreed that the seed from this gin should be shipped by Eichardson to the oil mill, and that the oil mill or oil mill company, which is the plaintiff in this case, should retain out of the proceeds of the cotton seed so shipped to them by Eichardson, the sum <ff five dollars per ton, and remit the balance to the Bank of Strou'd; and that in the event that Eichardson, at the end of the season, had paid the Bank of Stroud in full, the oil company should then remit this five dollars per ton and apply it on Bichardson’s indebtedness, but if Eichardson had not paid the bank in full, then the oil company should pay over this five dollars per ton to the Bank of Stroud. The evidence on the trial of the Bank of Stroud case, showed that the five dollars per ton held by the oil company was between four hundred and six hundred dollars, and the jury returned a verdict against the oil company for five hundred dollars, being the amount in defendant’s hands which was to be applied on Bichardson’s debts, in the event it did not go to the Bank of Stroud. Eichardson claimed in that case that the *266 agreement was practically that as stated by tbe Bank of. Stroud, witb the exception that he denied that the five dollars per ton was to be paid by the oil company to the Bank of Stroud on any shortage or indebtedness of his, but claimed that it was in any event to be applied on his mortgage indebtedness. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the Bank of Slrornl, and against the oil company for five hundred dollars, thus sustaining the contention of the Bank of Stroud as to the agreement under which the oil companjr retained this five dollars per ton on the price of the seed. The judgment of the court was in accordance with the verdict of the jury. From this judgment the oil company appealed to the supreme court of the Territory, and the case was affirmed, whereupon the oil company paid the judgment. Now we take it that when the defendants in this case voluntarily introduced as evidence to sustain their defense of payment, the record in the case of the Bank of Stroud against Richardson and the oil company, that they vouched for the authenticity, competency, and credibility of that record, and that they cannot now be heard to question the correctness of the judgment in that case. An examination of the record will show that in the reply of the Bank of Stroud contained at page 41 of the record, this statement is made:

“That the amount reserved by defendant Southwestern Cotton Seed Oil Company of $5 per ton on the market price of said cotton seed should first be applied to whatever balance, if any, was due plaintiff on account of money so advanced and the said interest thereon, and if the said amount so reserved by said defendant Southwestern Cotton Seed Oil Company should be insufficient to pay said balance, then defendants were to pay same out of other funds; and if there should be no balance due to said plaintiff upon the said final settle *267 ment. then said defendant Southwestern Cotton Seed Oil Company should retain the amount so reserved by it, and apply the same on the mortgage indebtedness owing by the said J. S'. Richardson to the said Southwestern Cotton Seed Oil Company/’

This statement being in the pleadings in that ease, and being denied by the defendants in that case, was one of the issues to be tried by the jury, and when the defendants in this case introduced that record and the findings of that jury, which have become final by,being affirmed by the,supreme court, we think they are estopped from denying that that was the agreement between the parties. While it is true that this statement is contained in the reply of the plaintiff, and is not a pleading drawn or authorized by the defendants in this case, nevertheless, it is a part of the evidence voluntarily introduced by defendants in this ease, to sustain their defense. There is no claim in the pleadings, or in the evidence in this ease that any payment of this mortgage or any part of it was made by the defendants in any other manner than that described in the record in the case of the Bank of Stroud. That is, that the payment made by them was by the amount retained in that ease by the Cotton Seed Oil Company for cotton seed furnished them by Richardson and retained by them in making their remittances to the Bank of Stroud under the arrangement described in the pleadings in that ease. Now it seems to us the whole question is: Was this credit, which was apparently in the hands of the Cotton Seed Oil Company in the account of Richardson with them, an absolute payment upon this mortgage, or was it dependent upon thé outcome of the litigation between the defendants and the Bank of Stroud? It seems to us that the defendant Richardson has *268 introduced tbe evidence which clearly supports the contention oí the Cotton Seed Oil Company, that this credit was to be applied only upon condition that the litigation then pending between the Bank of Stroud and these defendants should determine that nothing was due from Richardson to the Bank of Stroud: and we think that the assignment of error that the court excluded the oral testimony of Richardson as to what the agreement was between him and the Cotton Seed Oil Company, as to the balance in their hands was not well taken, for the reason that the pleadings in the case of the Bank of Stroud el early sets up what the contention of the different parties was as to this matter; and the verdict of the jury and the decision of the court, when affirmed by the supreme court on appeal, was conclusive, and that the court was correct in excluding any evidence on the part of Richardson tending to impeach, vary, or contradict that record as introduced by him. Then again, we find in this record that several letters written by the plaintiff to Richardson were introduced by the defendant. A quotation from one of these letters so introduced by Richardson is as follows:

“You understand of course, that this credit of $614.40 is involved in the litigation with the Bank of Stroud, and we will, of course expect to be protected on that.” (Record page 16.)

The date of this letter was December 21st 1900. And again on the same page of the record we find the following from a letter dated July 30, 1902, from the Oil Mill Company to Richardson:

“You will remember that in our effort to befriend you we became entangled in a lawsuit over this matter, and that there is now a judgment of $500 against us. With your knowledge *269 and consent tbe money received out of tbat season's business has been held to await the result of this lawsuit, and we will, of course, expect you to pay whatever our losses may be on that account, all of which you have understood all the time. I therefore don’t think you should want the mortgage releasee! until the indebtedness has been finally discharged. As you knew at the time, no credit was made on the mortgage indebtedness, owing to the pendency of the lawsuit.

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Related

Buell v. Hall
1934 OK 590 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Knight v. Cecil
1925 OK 157 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1905 OK 33, 81 P. 781, 15 Okla. 263, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-south-western-cotton-seed-oil-co-okla-1905.