Sheean v. Walden

1927 OK 442, 265 P. 141, 130 Okla. 51, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 1927
Docket17505
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1927 OK 442 (Sheean v. Walden) 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
Sheean v. Walden, 1927 OK 442, 265 P. 141, 130 Okla. 51, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 518 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

TEEHEE, O.

In this appeal the parties appear as they appeared in the trial court. On January 30, 1924, plaintiff, as transferee and holder in due course, sued defendants as makers on a promissory note for $4,000, and for foreclosure of a real estate mortgage gijyen. to security thereof. These instruments bore date of November 3, 1921. The maturity date of the note was November 1, 1926. Nonpayment of any interest coupon matured the principal. Default of interest due November -1, 1|923, was alleged. The paper was purchased from the Conservative Loan & Trust Company, the original payee, on or about January 4, 1922.

Defendants answered by general denial, but admitted execution of the note and mortgage, and that if plaintiff in fact was the holder thereof, she purchased same in bad faith by reason of knowledge of fact and circumstances sufficient to charge her with notice that such paper was without consideration. Plaintiff, by replication, traversed the new matter contained in the answer. There was a jury verdict and judgment thereon for defendants.

Of the judgment plaintiff complains under three propositions: First, erroneous admission of certain testimony; second, refusal of an instructed verdict for plaintiff; and, third, failure 'Of the court to properly instruct the jury.

The nature of the questions to be determined renders it necessary to first notice the vital points admitted or tended to be established by the evidence. The negotiations in the transaction were conducted by correspondence by plaintiff’s agent, Frank T. Sheean, of Galena, Ill., with the loan company at its office at Shawnee, Okla.

Plaintiff’s agent furnished all the evidence concerning the transfer. It was admitted that he at all times had possession and control of the papers in the case, until they were delivered to plaijntiff’sl attorney for the purpose of this suit. His evidence was given by deposition. He had for a longtime handled commercial paper of the character here involved aggregating in par value several hundred thousand dollars for the loan company which he had disposed of to clients and other investors. Those transactions arose generally upon his own motion by correspondence, and sometimes on the motion of the loan company, either in like manner or in person through one of its officers who would seek disposal of commercial paper through Sheean’s office at Galena.

Plaintiff was the owner of one, of such loans for $4,000 known as the Mary Douglas Loan, which matured January 1, 1922. At *52 about that elate plaintiff’s agent forwarded this to the Conservative Loan & Trust Company, original payee and transferor, for collection. Without previous proposal of purchase by plaintiff, the loan company, on January 5, 1922 by letter, offered to plaintiff’s agent the Walden loan, the basis of this suit, as in substitution for the Douglas loan. With the letter there were enclosed the Walden, note and mortgage, the loan application, assignment executed in blame, and the guarantee of the loan company.

Plaintiff’s agent, by letter dated January 23, '1922, advised the loan company that the proposed substitution would be satisfactory “provided the abstract shows good title,” and requested delivery of abstract as early as possible in order to advise his principal that the papers in the loan were complete, gome time after the receipt of the Walden papers, plaintiff’s agent filled in the name of the plaintiff in the assignment. The loan company paid the first interest coupon which matured on November 1, T922. I.n April, 1923, plaintiff’s agent visited the office of the loan company, and conversed with both the president and one of the vice presidents about the loan business generally, but thought there was no discussion of the Walden loan. On May S, 1923, the loan company by letter advised plaintiff’s agent that the title to the security in the Walden loan could not be perfected .and proposed to substitute two other loans aggregating the Walden loan.

Plaintiff's' agent, on May 24, 1923, by letter rejected the proposal and demanded of the loan company the amount involved, but retained the Walden papers.

There were no further negotiations relative thereto. Plaintiff’s agent did not regard the transaction complete until he had examined the abstract of title. No abstract in this case was furnished. It was his custom in dealing in real estate loans, never to place an assignment of record until he had checked the abstract of title. The assignment in this case was not placed of record. In June, 1923, the loan company became insolvent. Plaintiff’s agent did not learn of this until the following month. Defendants had no notice that their paper hail been transferred, by the loan company until summons was served on them in this cause. They had dismissed the matter upon rejection of title by the loan company. When John L. Walden, one of defendants, sought plaintiff for the purpose of taking her deposition,.'he was informed by plaintiff’s agent and her local attorney, John A. Shee-an, that her whereabouts was unknown. At the trial this attorney testified than she was too ill to appear and testify in the cause.

Hirst. Under plaintiff’s first proposition complaint is made of the admission of certain parts of the detailed evidence brought out on cross-examination of plaintiff’s agent concerning the vital points tended to be thus established. The first evidence complained of was in relation to the letters of May 8, and May 24, 1923, containing advice by the loan company that the abstract of title could not be completed, and, recalling the loan in controversy and proposal of substitution, and rejection of the proposal by plaintiff’s agent and his demand upon the loan company for remittance of the amount involved; and also as to the method of handling loans by plaintiff’s agent. This evidence tended, to show that neither the original transaction nor the alleged purchase had in fact been completed, of which facts plaintiff had notice under a rule now too well established as the law of the land to here reiterate, as disclosed by the letters exchanged between plaintiff’s agent and the loan company, and. that the transaction of the case in hand was not handled in the usual and customary manner of handling such transactions as testified to by plaintiff’s agent. In our view, the challenged testimony was material to the issues raised by defendants’ answer as in impeachment of the good faith of plaintiff’s purchase, if, in fact, the same may be considered as having been effected, under the record, and thus were circumstances tending to establish that plaintiff was not a holder in due course within the meaning of the law, or that plaintiff was a stranger thereto.

In this class of cases, where there is nothing on the face of a note to cast suspicion upon its character, the rule is well settled' that it can only be impeached, in the hands of a holder for value before maturity, by evidence that he took it under circumstanoés which rendered him guijlty of bad faith, and that such evidence is always admissible. Goodrich v. McDonald, 77 Mich. 486; McPherrin v. Tittle, 36 Okla. 510, 129 Pac. 721, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 396; Lambre v. Smith, 53 Okla. 606, 175 Pac. 909, 18 A. L. R. 1; Glasco v. Wall, 99 Okla. 253, 226 Pac. 572; Commercial National Bank v. Ahrens, 117 Okla. 65, 245 Pac. 557. Clearly under these authorities the evidence complained of was admissible for the "purpose it was intended to serve.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 442, 265 P. 141, 130 Okla. 51, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheean-v-walden-okla-1927.