Roper v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.

37 P.2d 812, 98 Mont. 76, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 120
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1934
DocketNo. 7,245.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 P.2d 812 (Roper v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roper v. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 37 P.2d 812, 98 Mont. 76, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 120 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE STEWART

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Hill county. The action is predicated upon an undertaking given in a claim and delivery suit previously instituted by the Caterpillar Tractor Company against C. C. Roper, respondent here.

Roper is a rancher residing near Havre. In the years 1929, 1930, and 1931, he farmed extensive acreages in grain. His wife, Mrs. E. L. Roper, resided in the city of Havre, where she operated an office for the handling of real estate, insurance, bonds, and loans. Many of the business transactions between her husband and the Caterpillar Tractor Company, hereinafter designated tractor company, were conducted by her. The essential facts of the case are as follows:

On April 6, 1929, the Havre Tractor & Equipment Company, a dealer for the Caterpillar Tractor Company, sold a 1929 model 30 caterpillar tractor to Roper for the sum of $2,575. *82 A cash payment of $858.33 was made, and two notes were given for the unpaid balance. One of the notes was due October 1, 1929, and was in the amount of $858.34; the other note was due October 1, 1930, and was in the amount of $858.33. The Havre Company sold the second note of the series to the tractor company and assigned the contract to it. The latter company owned and held that note and the contract on the due date thereof — October 1, 1930 — and at all times from the date of the assignment until the note was paid. It was over this note that the controversy arose. The note is by plaintiff alleged to have been a negotiable instrument.

The note due on October 1, 1929, passed into the hands of a third party; it appears that only $500 had been paid thereon at the time of the trial of the instant action, but that matter is of no importance here.

On September 18, 1930, thirteen days prior to the maturity date of the note held by the tractor company, Mrs. Boper, who was acting as agent for her husband, wrote that company that on account of crop failure they were without sufficient funds for living expenses from that source, and that the tractor company was at liberty to take the tractor if it could not extend the time of payment of the note until the following fall. There is nothing to indicate that the tractor company made any response to this ultimatum. At a somewhat later date, however, John J. O’Connor, collector for the tractor company, came to Montana and had several interviews with the Bopers. He met with Boper and Mr. Daggett, of the Havre Company, at the Fair Hotel in Havre about the middle of January, 1931. He made demand for payment, but Boper advised him that he could not pay; whereupon O’Connor asked for further security, which Boper refused. He testified that Boper said, “I am unable to pay,” and that he refused to give security; that he further said, “It is not my custom to give security to anyone. If you don’t like it, you can take the tractor.”

O’Connor talked to Mrs. Boper about the middle of April at her office in Havre. He testified that she explained that although they had no money to pay the note at that time, they *83 wanted to pay it and were endeavoring to get the money by means of a bond issue then pending, and that they would finally pay the note from the proceeds of the bond issue. He further testified that she said, “Well, if you cannot wait that length of time, there is nothing else to do except take the tractor.”

On March 31, 1931, Mrs. Roper wrote the Havre Company that it was impossible to make payment on the note, and explained the progress of the contemplated bond issue. She advised that unless further extension could be made, they should go and take the tractor.

About the middle of April, O’Connor had a conversation with Mrs. Roper, and she explained to him the details of the bond transaction, submitting to him a financial statement of the Ropers. This financial statement was prepared for use in floating the bond issue. It contained a prospectus of the project and a full statement of the financial holdings of the Ropers. Shortly before the 1st of June, O’Connor again talked to Mrs. Roper, who advised him that the bonding company had sixty days in which to sell the bonds. Upon that assurance and in the belief that the bonds would be sold, 0 ’Connor agreed to extend the payment sixty days, or until July 25.

On July 25 O’Connor met Mrs. Roper and inquired as to the success of the bond issue. She advised him that the bond issue had failed, and that if the company must take the tractor back, it would have to do so. That afternoon O’Connor went to the Roper ranch and talked to Roper himself. Considerable conversation occurred at that time between the parties. Although they do not agree as to the statements made, it is apparent that some kind of demand for payment of the note was made and refused. O’Connor then demanded possession of the tractor. Roper advised him that he would not let him take the tractor without an officer. O’Connor proceeded to Havre and got the sheriff to return to the Roper ranch with him that afternoon. The sheriff had a certified copy of the conditional sale contract and made a formal demand for the *84 tractor. Refusing to acquiesce, Roper said that he would not give the tractor up without court papers.

Roper testified that he went to Havre that night and made arrangements with one Anderson, who was a witness in the case, to borrow money to pay the note. The 25th of July, 1931, was Saturday. On the next Monday morning — -July 27 —O’Connor had a conversation with Mrs. Roper. The participants in this conversation do not agree as to what was said. O’Connor testified that Mrs. Roper offered $200 cash, $200 to be paid in October, and the balance the following year. He further testified that “at that time I told her how much of a payment I wanted her to make. I set the minimum at $400, and she refused to pay that.”

Mrs. Roper testified that O’Connor demanded payment of the note with interest; that she finally told him she would pay it; that she asked him how much the interest figured up; that while he did some figuring, she started to write out a check; that she asked him if he had the note, and he said he did not have it; and that then “I asked him if the note was in the bank and he said it was not, it was in Peoria, Illinois, and I told him I couldn’t pay him until the note was surrendered.” She further testified that O’Connor became quite angry; that he said he would give her a receipt for the money, and that she responded that she did not want a receipt, that she wanted the note; that she then asked him to write for the note — that she had the money and he could have it when the note came. She also testified that she offered to put the money in the bank in Havre to be turned over on receipt of the note, and that O ’Connor refused to allow that to be done.

O’Connor testified that he told Mrs. Roper that while he did not have the note, she could either pay it to him and take a receipt, or pay the money into court, or that she could pay it to Mr. Ilauge, attorney for the tractor company. No payment was made, and no agreement reached. On the same day the tractor company, through its agent O’Connor and its attorney, instituted a claim and delivery action for the possession of the tractor. A telegram was introduced in evi

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Peter Fox Brewing Co. v. Collins
177 F.2d 1008 (Tenth Circuit, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P.2d 812, 98 Mont. 76, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roper-v-caterpillar-tractor-co-mont-1934.