Scott v. Bennett

1929 OK 144, 281 P. 251, 138 Okla. 272, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 551
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 26, 1929
Docket18590
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1929 OK 144 (Scott v. Bennett) 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
Scott v. Bennett, 1929 OK 144, 281 P. 251, 138 Okla. 272, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 551 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

The parties to this suit appear here in the inverse order in which they appear in the trial court. They will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant in the order in which they appeared in the said court.

W. E. Bennett is the owner of a promissory note for $658 due June 23, 1923, and executed by J. Winfield Scott, and the said Bennett claims also that he was at one time the legal and equitable owner and holder of certain collateral to said note, to-wit, a certain promissory note for $4,000 made by R. P. Bowles and wife, Hattie M. Bowles, to John W. Scott. This collateral note was executed March 6, 1918, and was payable about five years later and secured by real estate mortgage covering certain property in Durant, Bryan county, Okla.

This suit was brought in the district court of Bryan county, Okla., by plaintiff against John W. Scott and the personal .representatives and heirs at law of R. P. Bowles and Hattie M. Bowles, both of whom are dead, Hattie M. dying before and R. P. Bowles dying after having been made a party to this suit.

Plaintiff in his petition alleges the ownership of the smaller note hereinbefore referred to, together with the fact that he at one time held the larger note and mortgage as collateral thereto pledged to him by J. Winfield Scott; that John W. Scott, the original payee, made an assignment of said collateral note and mortgage to J. Winfield Scott July 16, 1918; that the mortgage and such assignment thereof are duly recorded in the office of the county clerk of Bryan county, and copies of the same are attached to and made part of plaintiff’s petition, and that J. Winfield Scott assigned and delivered the note last named and the mortgage securing same to plaintiff as collateral to secure the prompt and certain payment to plaintiff of the $658 note referred to above, and that plaintiff is now the owner and holder thereof.

It is also alleged that J. Winfield Scott is now dead, but that John W. Scott has taken charge of the estate of said decedent, and has appropriated the same to his own individual use; and that after transferring and delivering the Bowles note and mortgage to J. Winfield Scott, the said John W. Scott wrongfully released of record the said note-and mortgage and‘took a renewal thereof from the makers in his own name.

It would serve no useful purpose to set out the pleadings in detail, nor the issues formed thereby, except to say that they *273 piresent properly the crucial issue in this case, which is : Did J. Winfield Scott, ,as the owner and holder, pledge to the plaintiff the $4,000 note and real estate mortgage securing the same as collateral and security to the note due by the said J. Winfield Scott to plaintiff?

The parties tried the case in the court below upon the theory that this was the controlling issue therein, and on this vital issue the evidence was in more or less sharp conflict.

It will be observed that the plaintiff is not suing to foreclose the collateral mortgage, but his action is in the nature of one for conversion charging John W. Scott with having wrongfully taken over and converted to his own use and benefit and released of record a note and the mortgage securing the same which belonged to said plaintiff as collateral, and asking that the said Scott account to plaintiff for the value of such collateral security taken and disposed of to the extent of the amount of the note held by plaintiff and for the security of which the collateral note was pledged to him. There is attached to the petition a copy of the $4,000 mortgage, a copy of the assignment of said mortgage alleged to have been made by John W. Scott to J. Winfield Sec;' f. together wi:'.i the indorsements thereon and perhaps other papers. The unverified answer of defendant, John AV. Scott, in substance, is that J. Winfield Scott was never the owner nor in possession of the Bowles note and mortgage, and that the same had never been transferred or assigned to him for any purpose whatsoever. The cause was submitted to a jury who by their verdict found for the plaintiff, and a judgment was rendered on such verdict in favor of plaintiff and against John W. Scott from which he alone appeals. For reversal he presents three propositions:

First. Error of the court in permitting plaintiff, W. F. Bennett, to testify with respect to certain communications and transactions had with J. Winfield Scott as follows:

“Q. After that note became due, did you have any deal with Mr. J. Winfield Scott? By Mr. MacDonald: Object to him testifying about any deal with Winfield Scott. By the Court: Sustained.- * * * By the Court: And you are now suing John W. Scott for conversion? By Mr. Hayes: Yes, sir. By the Court: Winfield Scott is dead as everybody agrees ? By Mr. Hayes: Yes, sir. * * * Q. Did J. Winfield Scott leave a wife and some children? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know how many children? A. Two, I think. Might be three. Q. When that note became due, did you go and see Mr. J. Winfield Scott about collecting it? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did he give you any security for it? By Mr. MacDonald: Objected to as incompetent, irrelevent and immaterial, and in violation of the statute. Testifying to a transaction with a dead man. By the Court: Overruled. By Mr. MacDonald. Ex-(epfion. A. Yes, sir, he gave me collateral about the fourth time I went to see him. It (had) been renewed once. Q. What collateral did he give you? A. He put up a transfer — By Mr. MacDonald. Object to the witness using the word transfer. By the Court: Sustained. Q. The note and transfer, that is what he put up the Bowles note. By Mr. MacDonald: 1 object — * * * Q. When you went to see him, did he have a note that he offered to you as collateral, and if so, what note? By Mr. MacDonald: Object to —I am to have the same objection unless he sold the note. A. Yes, sir, he sold me the note. Q. What note was that? A. $4,000 on the R. P. Bowles and Hattie Bowles property. Q. You remember the date of that note? A. No, sir, I don’t remember now. Q. Did he proceed (pretend) to have an assignment of that particular note and mortgage from his father? A. He did. Q. I will ask you if that is the assignment? A. Yes, sir, it is. Q. Did he write the name on the back there and 'deliver it to you? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you take the assignment away from there — what was done with the assignment? A. We agreed that he keep the note and all the papers as he was fixing to foreclose the mortgage. He said he would keep them there and foreclose the mortgage. By Mr. MacDonald: Objection — t am objecting- to every statement the dead man made. By the Court: Yes, sir. A. —he stated that he was getting ready to foreclose the Bowles note. He said, ‘You take the transfer and leave the note with him,’ and said, ‘I will represent you and myself,’ and said ‘It will not cost you a cent.’ He says, ‘Take care of the transfer as he might need it,’ but said he didn’t think he would. I took the transfer and left the note with him.”

It is contended first by the plaintiff that this objection to the competency of the witness under the statute is not properly made. This argument is not without force, and authorities are referred to in the brief which tend to sustain the point, but, without determining that matter, we pass on to the merits of the objection upon the assumption that the objection itself was aptly and properly made. The defendant, as a basis for this contention that the evidence is not admissible, relies solely upon section 588, C. O. S. 1921, which reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 144, 281 P. 251, 138 Okla. 272, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-bennett-okla-1929.