Seibold v. Ruble

1913 OK 748, 137 P. 696, 137 P. 697, 41 Okla. 267, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1913
Docket3037
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1913 OK 748 (Seibold v. Ruble) 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
Seibold v. Ruble, 1913 OK 748, 137 P. 696, 137 P. 697, 41 Okla. 267, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 96 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHARP, C.

On July 28, 1903, James Abernathie executed to the defendant Winne & Winne his promissory *269 note in the sum of $720, payable "ten years after date. To said note were attached eleven interest coupons, of which the first was for $8.41, due October 1, 1903, nine for $50.40, due October 1st of each succeeding year thereafter, and one for $41.59, due July 28, 1913. The note and interest coupons were secured by a real estate mortgage on a quarter section of land in Custer county. On June' 18, 1904, James Abernathie sold said land to J. E. Lamb, wlm assumed the payment of the Winne & Winne mortgage indebtedness. On the 4th day of December, 1906, the land so mortgaged was sold by Lamb to the defendant in error, Ruble, who likewise assumed the payment of said mortgage indebtedness. July 12, 1907, defendant in error, Ruble, made application to the Union Central Life Insurance Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, for a loan of $1,200 on said land, naming the defendant Winne & Winne as his agent for that purpose. A loan of $1,100 was thereafter made, and the proceeds thereof paid to the order of Winne & Winne by the insurance company. The payee of the $720 note, Winne & Winne, on August 5, 1903, executed an assignment of the mortgage given to secure the same to the plaintiff in error, W. E. Seibold, which assignment, however, was not placed of record in Custer county until April 13, 1908. On August 8, 1903, defendant Seibold claims to have purchased said note and mortgage, paying therefor the face of the note. An indorsement in blank was written upon the back of the principal note, assigning without recourse both it and the attached coupons, and, together with the written assignment of the mortgage, they were on said last-mentioned day delivered to defendant at his. home in Danbury, Iowa. On October 9, 1907, Winne & Winne, claiming to be the owner of said original mortgage, executed a release thereof, which was duly recorded in Custer county on October 14th following. This, according to the record, perfected the title in Ruble, and made his mortgage of July 25, 1907, to the Union Central Life Insurance Company, a first lien on said land.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, Ruble, who claims to have paid to Winne .& Winne, the payee of the original note, the amount thereof out of the proceeds of the loan obtained 'from *270 the Union Central Life Insurance Company, and seeks to cancel the assignment of the mortgage and indebtedness secured thereby, made by defendant Winne & Winne to the codefendant, W. E. Seibold, it being charged that the assignment of said mortgage, appearing of record, constitutes a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to the land. Defendant Seibold in his answer seeks to recover a judgment on the indebtedness assigned him, and foreclosure of the original mortgage.

It is said by counsel for plaintiff in error in his brief that there is but one question involved in the case, namely, that of agency, and, if it be found that Winne & Winne was Ruble’s agent to procure the loan from the insurance company, then that the former’s embezzlement or wrongful application of the proceeds would be an act for which the principal, Ruble, must suffer.. This is the single issue upon which plaintiff in error seeks a reversal.

The first question necessary to determine is that of the negotiability of the Abernathie note, given Winne & Winne July 28, 1903, for $720. We do not understand it is seriously urged that the note is negotiable. Under the decisions of this court construing sections 4626 and 4627, Comp. Laws 1909 (which must control and determine its character), on account of the provisions of said note, obviously it is nonnegotiable. Dickerson v. Higgins et al., 15 Okla. 588, 82 Pac. 649; Clevinger v. Lewis, 20 Okla. 837, 95 Pac. 230, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 410, 16 Ann. Cas. 56; Clowers et al. v. Snowden et al., 21 Okla. 476, 96 Pac. 596; Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. McCoy & Spivey Bros., 32 Okla. 277, 122 Pac. 125, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 177; Bell v. Riggs, 34 Okla. 834, 127 Pac. 427, 41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1111; Citizens’ Savings Bank v. Landis et al., 37 Okla. 530, 132 Pac. 1101.

Being nonnegotiable, the rights of the transferee would be governed by the rule announced by this court in Randall Co. v. Glendenning et al., 19 Okla. 475, 92 Pac. 158, in a very similar case:

. “That where a nonnegotiable note is transferred to another, although that party is an innocent purchaser, and the transfer *271 is made before maturity and for a valuable consideration, yet if made without notice, either actual or constructive, to the makers thereof, it is subject to all the legal defenses which might be interposed against the note in the hands of the original payee.”

There was no evidence .that either Abernathie, Lamb, or Ruble had any knowledge of the assignment of the note by Winne & Winne to Seibold, but, on the other hand, each of these witnesses testified they had no such notice, while the defendant Seibold made no attempt to show that either of the respective owners of the land had any notice whatever of the assignment of the note and mortgage, except that, at the time of delivery to him, Winne & Winne had said that Abernathie would be notified of the assignment. Although, as already seen, the assignment of the mortgage was executed at Wichita, Kan., on August 5, 1903, and delivered to defendant at Danbury, Iowa, on August 8th following, it was not placed of record in the county where the land was situated until April 13, 1908. While the defendant Seibold, in his deposition given in the narrative form (at the taking of which it does not appear the plaintiff was represented), stated that he had had continuous possession of the note and mortgage from the time of his purchase until sent by him to his attorney in the preparation of the defense in the trial court, yet it appears from the uncontradicted evidence of Abernathie that he paid the first coupon to Winne & Winne, and received a notice (presumably from Winne & Winne), the following fall, of the maturity of the second coupon. Lamb testified that he paid two coupon notés to Winne & Winne, from whom he received letters accompanying the canceled coupons. The letter inclosing coupon number two, which matured October 1, 1904, was addressed to' James Abernathie; while that inclosing coupon number three, which matured October 1, 1905, was addressed to J. E. Lamb; and both of these letters were signed by Winne & Winne. The evidence is somewhat confusing about coupon number four, which, while offered in evidence by plaintiff, does not appear in the record, which fact, however, in no wise affects the issues. Clearly it is made to appear that Seibold intrusted Winne & Winne to collect for him the maturing interest coupons, as he admits he intrusted *272 them to notify the maker of the assignment. Neither of the coupons in evidence appears to have been indorsed, and defendant’s answer charges the assignment to have been made by an indorsement in writing on the back of the principal note.

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Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 748, 137 P. 696, 137 P. 697, 41 Okla. 267, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seibold-v-ruble-okla-1913.