Stovall v. Liberty Plan of America, Inc.

1966 OK 83, 414 P.2d 242
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 3, 1966
Docket40878
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1966 OK 83 (Stovall v. Liberty Plan of America, Inc.) 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
Stovall v. Liberty Plan of America, Inc., 1966 OK 83, 414 P.2d 242 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves an action by defendant in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, to foreclose a real estate mortgage against plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to by name, or as defendants, or both.

The mortgage was signed by defendants in March, 1962, to secure payment of an installment note for $971.61 defendants gave Midwestern Advertising Corporation, Inc., (sometimes referred to simply as Midwestern Advertising” or “Midwestern”) as consideration for a “Dust Master”, or “Central”, Cleaning System said corporation sold them and installed in the home where they resided, and which said realty the mortgage purported to cover.

Plaintiff acquired the note and mortgage, through endorsement and assignment from Midwestern soon after the latter’s salesman-agent, Charles E. Johnston, had sold said vacuum cleaning system and caused it to be installed.

In connection with said salé, Midwestern through Johnston, entered into what was entitled a “Representative’s Commission Agreement” between its “Advertising Department” and the defendant, Plelen M. Council. Under the terms of said written agreement, Midwestern’s advertising department would pay Mrs. Council $50.00 for each name of a qualified (home-owning) prospective purchaser for a central cleaning system that she furnished Midwestern, if the prospect later purchased one of said systems. After Midwestern sold plaintiff the note and mortgage above referred to, and before Mrs. Council had submitted any names of prospective purchasers for such cleaning systems to Midwestern, or its advertising department, said corporation went out of business.

After plaintiff instituted this foreclosure action (asking no judgment on the note) in May, 1962, defendants caused Midwestern and its president, Gordon Cooper, to be made party defendants to the action; and then filed their answer and cross petition, with a copy of the above mentioned Representative’s Commission Agreement attached, alleging, among other things in substance, that they allowed the vacuum sweeper, or central cleaning system, to be installed upon the representation, made on behalf of Midwestern, that it could be paid for by submitting the names of other prospective purchasers of such systems at^the Fifty Dollars each Midwestern was to pay for such names; that they signed the note for the purpose (merely) of showing the amount they were to pay for the cleaning system out of those commissions; that they signed the instrument sued upon in blank, without knowing its true character, and upon the representation that it was a receipt for the installation of the system; and that it was never the parties’ intention that it was to become a mortgage, or to be filed for record.

Defendants Stovall and Council further alleged that, after their signing of the purported mortgage, plaintiff acted pursuant to a conspiracy with Midwestern to defraud them when its officer, Cooper, as a Notary Public, and as its agent, fraudulently and unlawfully executed an acknowledgment on said instrument, without being present when it was signed by defendants. Defendants further alleged, in substance, that they were deprived of “their part” of the contract with Midwestern by the latter’s ceasing to do business in Oklahoma; that they would not have signed the mortgage had they known it to be one, nor would they have executed *245 the note, except upon the representation of Midwestern’s agents, servants and employees, that it could be paid with commissions under said contract. Said defendants further alleged that Midwestern’s fraudulent contracts and acts were known to plaintiff and its agent, Cooper. They further alleged that upon discovering said fraud, they tendered back to plaintiff and Midwestern “ * * * all that they had received and demanded the cancellation of said note and mortgage, which said tender and demand was wrongfully and unlawfully refused * * * Defendants’ answer prayed the court to cancel these instruments, and, in a cross petition accompanying the answer, they adopted its allegations, and further alleged, among other things, that in April, 1962, they had made a demand upon Midwestern to release the subject mortgage, had tendered both to it, and to plaintiff, the expense of filing and recording such release, and that, during the same month, they had tendered the vacuum system back to plaintiff, along with “all other considerations received by them in the transaction.” Defendants’ cross petition prayed for a total of $1250.00 in actual damages against plaintiff and the defendants, Midwestern and ■Cooper, and also for “statutory damages” of $9.71 per day for each day after May 10, 1962, that the mortgage remained unreleased of record.

Pending trial of the cause, the depositions of both Mr. Cooper and Mrs. Council were taken and later used in interrogating them as witnesses at the trial before the court without a jury. It was established by Cooper’s testimony, and other evidence, both oral and documentary, that when defendants’ note and mortgage were delivered by Midwestern to plaintiff, the space provided on the mortgage form, for the legal description of the real estate involved, remained blank. Mr. Cooper testified that the procedure, when Midwestern applied to his employer (the plaintiff) to buy such paper, was for one of Midwestern’s representatives to furnish such descriptions, and they were then typed into the mortgage forms in plaintiff’s office, but were verified through a “lien check” made by plaintiff’s attorney, before plaintiff purchased them and the notes secured thereby. Mr. Cooper admitted that when he executed the acknowledgment on such mortgages, the mortgagors did not bodily appear before him to acknowledge their signatures, but, he testified that he “confirmed” their signatures by telephoning at least one of the signers.

When Mrs. Council, who was the only one of the two alleged mortgagors to testify, was confronted, as a witness, with the subject mortgage, she admitted that she signed it, and rather falteringly admitted that she saw her co-defendant sign it. At one place in her testimony, however, she testified as follows:

“Q Mrs. Council, did you authorize anyone to fill in that instrument in the way it appears as a mortgage?
“A No, sir, I had no knowledge that it was a second mortgage on our house, none whatsoever. It was supposed to be a credit reference.”

At the close of the evidence, and, after arguments by respective counsel, the court took the case under advisement and thereafter entered judgment for plaintiff on its cause of action against the defendants, Stovall and Council, and also for it and the defendant, Cooper, on the causes of action sought to be asserted against them in Stov-all’s and Council’s cross petition. After the overruling of their motion for a new trial, defendants perfected the present appeal. Our continued use of the word “defendants” will apply only to plaintiffs in error.

Defendants’ arguments for reversal are advanced under three propositions. Under their first one, they concede that according to the rule they quote from 59 C.J.S. Mortgages § 122, p. 166, if plaintiff caused the legal description of the home involved to be typed into the blank space provided therefor in the subject mortgage form, under defendants’ authorization and with their consent, it was a valid mortgage and binding on them; but they contend that there is no evidence in the record of any such

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hinds v. Johnston
2009 OK CIV APP 54 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2009)
Arnold v. Leader Federal Bank for Savings
2001 OK CIV APP 139 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2001)
Orr v. Edens
1993 OK CIV APP 104 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1993)
Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Vivian, Louisiana v. Tomlin
1993 OK CIV APP 51 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1993)
Dixon v. Roberts
1993 OK CIV APP 15 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1993)
Gainer Bank v. Cosmopolitan National Bank of Chicago
577 N.E.2d 992 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1991)
Shuler v. Barnes
1990 OK CIV APP 37 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1990)
Carpenter v. Carpenter
1982 OK 38 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1982)
Perkins v. Factory Point National Bank
409 A.2d 578 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 83, 414 P.2d 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stovall-v-liberty-plan-of-america-inc-okla-1966.