Stebbins v. RH SIEGFRIED COMPANY

1958 OK 161, 327 P.2d 447, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1958
Docket37920
StatusPublished

This text of 1958 OK 161 (Stebbins v. RH SIEGFRIED COMPANY) 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
Stebbins v. RH SIEGFRIED COMPANY, 1958 OK 161, 327 P.2d 447, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 511 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Justice.

R. H. Siegfried Company brought an action against the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, to recover a money judgment based upon an alleged contract of June 25, 1954, by the terms of which the plaintiff paid off certain indebtedness owed by the defendants in the amount of $98,427.73 and had taken title to all of the equipment of the defendants for an alleged figure of $68,-765, leaving an alleged balance due plaintiff of $26,291.85. That one item paid by plaintiff for defendants was for $62,750 due the First National Bank and Trust Company of Tulsa. This bank had secured from the defendants an assignment of moneys due from a certain government contract. After the bank was paid by the plaintiff, they in turn assigned this claim to the plaintiff, which assignment the defendants claim was void under 31 U.S.C.A. § 203.

Prior to this action the government issued a check made payable to Stebbins Construction Company for $23,721.94, which was the sum due on the assigned contract, but delivered it to their attorneys of record, which attorneys were made parties defendant, and they delivered the check into court and claimed an attorneys’ fee. The matter of attorneys’ fees was settled and is not now an issue in this case.

*449 The record shows that in March, 1954, the defendants began to move dirt from a location known as the Sheridan Industrial Sites, which was owned by the plaintiff. This is admitted.

However, in this connection the plaintiff contended that in this dirt removal project it was to pay the expenses plus a small living allowance for the defendant, Barney Harrell, up until June 25, 1954, after which time Harrell was to receive a salary until September 20, 1954, when a separate corporation was formed to continue the dirt removal project and other contracts, at which time he was made the salaried manager of the newly formed corporation. The defendants contend that they were to be paid the regular and customary ownership rate for the use of their equipment and for the engineering services and supervision of Barney Harrell. It was further contended by the defendants that the agreement of June 25, 1954, was a continuing arrangement by its terms which was entered into for the convenience of the plaintiff for income tax purposes; that the amount of $68,765 was filled in by the plaintiff or its agent after the execution of the contract and did not represent a fair market value of the equipment; that the intention of the parties was to permit Stebbins Construction Company to redeem the equipment and continue in business.

The issues were joined on this basis with the defendants seeking a judgment on their cross-petition of $78,284.44, and further praying for the release to them of the government voucher impounded by the court.

A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $26,291.85 with six percent interest from October 5, 1954.

Defendants’ motion for a new trial was overruled, resulting in this appeal.

Assignments of error are presented under three propositions which, in substance, are that the judgment was not responsive to the court’s instructions, was contrary to the law and evidence, and that the assignment of the government contract was null and void.

An examination of the record clearly demonstrates to us that the verdict and judgment is responsive to the court’s instructions, and that the instructions, when considered as a whole, fairly presented the issues to the jury and, therefore, this contention is without merit. But in this circumstance, it is asserted by defendants that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $26,291.85 based upon the contract of June 25, 1954, as set forth in the court’s instruction No. 1, paragraphs 4, 5 and 6.

This instruction reads as follows:
“4. The Court has heard all of the evidence relating to the contract of June 25, 1954, and tells you that as a matter of law that is a binding contract; that the defendants’ evidence is insufficient to set aside that contract and that it is immaterial so far as a decision of this case is concerned as to whether this equipment was worth $68,775., as set forth in the contract, or the greater sum as contended by Stebbins. This is a solemn written agreement and contract entered into by the parties and cannot be lightly set aside. So, the rights of the parties as of June 25, 1954 were fixed and determined by this contract.
“5. By the terms of the contract the defendants agreed in writing that they were indebted to the plaintiff, Siegfried Company, in the sum of $29,-652.73. The plaintiffs admit that defendants are entitled to a credit in the sum of $3,360.88, represented by the sale of a TD 24 International Tractor made on or about October 5, 1954, reducing the amount owing by the Stebbins people to the Siegfried people by virtue of this contract to the sum of $26,291.85, with interest thereon at the rate of six percent per an-num from October 5, 1944 (1954).
“6. In other words, I am taking away from your consideration this item *450 entirely and telling you that as a matter of law that the plaintiff is entitled to recover on its petition under this contract the sum of $26,291.85.”

The record discloses that the answer, cross-petition and the testimony of the defendants admitted the indebtedness.

The contract signed by the defendants recited that the value of the equipment was $68,775. The promissory note signed by Harrell as president of Cosmo (the new corporation) was for $68,775.

Defendants attempted to prove that the value of the equipment was $95,969.88 on June 25, 1954 (the time that the contract selling the equipment to plaintiff was entered into) by a witness who had inventoried and appraised the equipment, but when the witness testified that there was no true market value of the equipment the court told him, “I don’t see how you can testify then.”

There was no other testimony as to the value of the equipment, other than defendant Harrell, who testified that he talked to Mr. Siegfried about the $68,755 figure in the contract; that Mr. Siegfried asked him if he had seen the appraisal, and he told him that he (Harrell) had and that it was for $95,000, and that he (Siegfried) asked him (Harrell) what he thought it was worth and he (Harrell) told him (Siegfried) about $107,000 for somebody who needed it and was in the contracting business, “and that was all that was said about it.”

Mr. Siegfried testified in substance that he did not want to go into the contracting business, and that all he wanted was his money, and that if the defendants would pay him what was due him that he would return the equipment and business to them.

The next issue is whether there is any merit to the contention of defendants that they and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 161, 327 P.2d 447, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stebbins-v-rh-siegfried-company-okla-1958.