Skogsberg v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINGMAN, KAN.

1968 OK 26, 439 P.2d 957, 1968 Okla. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 27, 1968
Docket41587
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1968 OK 26 (Skogsberg v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINGMAN, KAN.) 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
Skogsberg v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINGMAN, KAN., 1968 OK 26, 439 P.2d 957, 1968 Okla. LEXIS 303 (Okla. 1968).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

In the trial court, the plaintiff, the First National Bank of Kingman, Kansas, sued the defendant, Marie Skogsberg, to recover $20,000 plus interest allegedly due upon a promissory note executed by the defendant on February 14, 1962.

In her fourth amended answer, defendant admitted the execution of the note and pleaded the affirmative defenses of failure •of consideration and fraud. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff and defendant ■appeals.

Plaintiff and defendant were both creditors of Mr. Fred Watts, an oil lease operator and promoter who was later forced into bankruptcy in the United States District Court in Oklahoma City. The money which Mrs. Skogsberg borrowed from the plaintiff bank she immediately loaned to Mr. Watts. He is not a party to this case, and no charge of fraud, or conspiracy to commit fraud, is leveled against him. As a matter of fact, he was produced by Mrs. Skogsberg as her witness, and testified for her, in the trial court.

The fraud upon which Mrs. Skogsberg relies as a defense was allegedly committed by Mr. James Wood, executive vice president of the plaintiff bank. It consisted generally of allegations that he concealed from her the fact that he owned an over-riding royalty interest in some of the Watts Oil leases; that she was misled by Wood as to the nature and extent of Watts’ financial difficulties and what would be done with the money she loaned him; that she was told by Wood that the Watts Oil leases were worth about $3,000,000; that she would never be held liable on the note, which would be renewed in 90 days in the name of Watts; and that she would be lending only her “name and credit rating” to Watts in order to enable the bank to make a $20,000 loan it could not otherwise make.

On appeal, defendant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict but argues only questions of law. However, an understanding of the arguments requires a statement of the evidence. Since a verdict in an action of legal cognizance based on conflicting evidence will not be reversed (Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Reese, Okl., 425 P.2d 465) in the summary which follows all conflicts are resolved in plaintiff’s favor.

The controversy had its background in the efforts of Watts to extricate himself from severe financial difficulties, and the efforts of Mrs. Skogsberg, a woman of some means and business experience, to help him. Watts owned several operating oil leases in Kansas. He met Wood in July, 1961, at which time he sold him an overriding royalty interest in some of the leases. Thereafter he did his banking business with the plaintiff bank, borrowing money from it on several occasions.

Late in 1961 Watts was in financial straits and sold an interest in some of the leases to a man named Grable, taking his check for about $14,000.00. The check was deposited in the Kingman bank and Watts wrote checks against it. Ninteen days later the Grable check was returned unpaid, and *959 Watts was in an overdraft position at the bank. To cover the overdraft he executed a demand note to the bank on February 10, 1962.

Watts met Mrs. Skogsberg in December, 1961. At that time he was called to the office of Mr. S., Mrs. Skogsberg’s “tax man”. Mrs. Skogsberg arrived after he got there and discussions were had as to a possible sale of a 49% working interest in the leases to Mrs. Skogsberg for $150,-000.00. An oral agreement was reached and a contract was drafted but never signed. Negotiations between Watts and Mrs. Skogsberg continued thereafter and culminated in a trip to Kingman on February 14, 1962, when Mrs. Skogsberg borrowed $20,-000 from the plaintiff bank and loaned it to Watts. She gave the noté sued on to the bank and took one, secured by a mortgage, from Watts.

Watts testified in a deposition that during these negotiations, “I told her about the check that got stopped on me and I didn’t have the money that I needed to clear this thing up at the bank and the bank insisted that I do and I said if she would buy the property at a lesser figure and pay me the money at once, I could go ahead and pay the obligations and get this thing all straightened up at one time and she then, in turn, said that right at the minute she wasn’t able to do that, but that she would help me make a loan if I wanted to put the property up and she would help me and she could pay it back with the contract”. There was also undisputed testimony that Mr. Watts told Mrs. Skogsberg before they went to Kingman that some of his creditors were threatening to file liens against the leases and foreclose them.

There is also evidence that on February 13, 1962, and before Mrs. Skogsberg ever met Mr. Wood, an instrument was drafted in the office of Mrs. Skogsberg’s tax man, Mr. S., a Certified Public Accountant, captioned “Substance of Agreement By and Between Mrs. Marie R. Skogsberg and Fred Watts in Connection with Loan of $20,000”. This instrument, which was signed by Mrs. Skogsberg either that day in Oklahoma City, or the next day in Kingman, recited that Watts would give Mrs. Skogsberg an option covering a 49% working interest in the Hughes Lease, the Griffith #1 Lease and the Griffith #2 Lease, the purchase price to be $100,000, and the option to remain in force as long as the “note hereinafter mentioned” remained unpaid. Watts agreed to pay the interest on “said note”. The only specific description of a note in this instrument was contained in the following language: “Skogsberg agrees to sign note at Ki-ngman, Kansas, to the First National Bank of Kingman in the amount of $20,000 for a term of 90 days * * * This memorandum of agreement purports to be the substance of an oral agreement already made, drafted, and possibly signed by Mrs. Skogsberg, the day before Mr. Wood allegedly made the fraudulent representations which induced her to sign the 90-day note sued on.

Of the $20,000 which Mrs. Skogsberg borrowed from the bank and loaned to Watts, about $14,000 was used by Watts to pay the demand note he had signed to cover his overdraft at the bank. Watts testified at the trial, as a witness for Mrs. Skogsberg, that he was “surprised” when Wood insisted that the note be paid; he said he thought Wood would let him use all of the $20,000 to pay the creditors who were threatening to file liens. His earlier testimony by deposition was that he had told Mrs. Skogsberg about “the check that got stopped on me” and the bank’s insistence that he “clear this thing up at the bank”.

Wood and Mrs. Skogsberg had never met, or had any contact with each other, before the conference in the bank in King-man on February 14, 1962, when the note was executed. Before that time, Watts had tried unsuccessfully to raise money on his leases at three different banks in Oklahoma City. The evidence justifies the conclusion that Mrs. Skogsberg knew about these efforts. She testified that one of the banks called her about Watts, and she could not remember whether the other two *960 did or not. After these unsuccessful efforts, she told Watts that she would help him if he could find a Kansas bank that would handle the transaction. Watts then made arrangements with Wood for the conference of February 14, 1962. He gave Wood the names of the three banks in Oklahoma City and Wood “checked on” Mrs. Skogsberg’s credit rating with these banks.

Mrs. Skogsberg and her tax man, Mr. S., went to Kingman together, Mr.

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1968 OK 26, 439 P.2d 957, 1968 Okla. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skogsberg-v-first-national-bank-of-kingman-kan-okla-1968.