Straughan v. Cooper

1914 OK 100, 139 P. 265, 41 Okla. 515, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 28, 1914
Docket3085
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1914 OK 100 (Straughan v. Cooper) 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
Straughan v. Cooper, 1914 OK 100, 139 P. 265, 41 Okla. 515, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 172 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

THACKER, C.

Plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, on April 1, 1910, sued defendant in error, as defendant, upon a note dated May 23, 1907, due one year after date, for the principal sum of $475, bearing interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum from .its date, and purporting to have been executed by defendant to plaintiff at Arkansas City, Kan.; and defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial and also of allegations as follows:

“Defendant specifically denies the execution of said note, and alleges that if at any time he signed the said note, he was in such an intoxicated condition that he has nb recollection or ■knowledge of having signed it, and at the time was entirely dethroned of reason, and specificalfy alleges that there was no consideration for the signing of the same at the date it was alleged tO' have been signed, and that the same is wholly without consideration, and never was executed by the defendant.”

These allegations were denied by plaintiff’s reply, and, upon the issues thus formed, a trial was had on December 14, 1910.

There was undisputed evidence to the effect that defendant signed the note sued on (and, according to plaintiff’s testimony, this was in plaintiff’s office with only himself and defendant present), and at the same time gave his personal check to the plaintiff for $200, which check was paid. It further appears that there was no consideration for the same other than the then past-due indebtedness of the defendant to plaintiff’s firm, known as Straughan Bros., evidenced by fifteen smaller notes made in 1901-3 for the aggregate principal sum of $339.75 (on which $58 interest had accrued) of which nine such notes in the aggregate principal sum of $264.75 (on which $26.09 interest had accrued) were then more than five years past due and, if not theretofore actually discharged, were subject to the bar of the statute of limitations, and six other such smaller notes in the aggregate principal sum of $75 (on which $31.91 interest had accrued) were not subject to such defense; but the plaintiff testified he did not remember the number of notes nor the denomination of any of them, nor what notes were surrendered in consideration of the note now sued on and the $200 check, as he or his firm had had so many transactions *517 with defendant, and had held other notes against him; and plaintiff was not more specific than herein stated as to such transactions. The defendant testified that on the occasion when he must have signed the note and check he spent two or three days in Arkansas City on a drunk, and did not remember when or where he signed them, nor any fact relating thereto, except that on his return home he found he had in his pocket the fifteen smaller notes mentioned, which, although he had made several prior payments, were all the notes ever surrendered to him; also that he was,drunk at the time of signing some of these fifteen notes, and did not remember it. In answer to question as to what he was doing there, defendant testified he was trying to drink up all the whisky there, he “reckoned” ; that that was all he remembered doing.

Joseph James testified that he accompanied defendant to Arkansas City on the occasion when it appears he signed the note sued on the check; that witness was with defendant during all his stay there, except about three-quarters of an hour, when he was getting his team in preparation for their return home, and defendant got drunk within half hour after arrival, and remained drunk during all the time he was there; that when he went for the team he left defendant at a store, and when he returned found him on the street at another place and helped him into the buggy, and left with him for home; that defendant was drunk enough to stagger and to require assistance to get into the buggy, and soon after they started home fell asleep and slept “for four or five miles,” and while en route exhibited to witness a bundle of papers which witness then supposed was money, although the trial court did not permit this to stand as evidence; but this witness testified only in general terms as to being with defendant, and as to the fact that he was drunk before he was taken into the buggy for the start home, and was not questioned as to the transaction in which the note sued on and the check were signed.

The plaintiff further testified lie went to defendant’s home several times, specifying two such times, after the note sued on matured, and attempted to collect the indebtedness of the defendant; but defendant denied any such attempt, except that on one *518 occasion plaintiff and his brother came to his home, and the following conversation occurred:

“He says: 'Bill, have you got any money for me?’ And I said, ‘No,’ and his brother was with him, and his brother said something to me; he says, ‘If you had money,’ he says, ‘you would give it to somebody else, wouldn’t you?’ ‘Well,’ I says, T don’t know as I would.’ I says, T don’t know as I owe you anything,’ I said to his brother, and that is about the only conversation we had there that day.”

At the time the fifteen smaller notes were taken by Straughan Bros., this firm was engaged in selling “stock” and loaning money, and plaintiff, who was engaged in the banking business at the time of the trial in the court below, also was part owner of the Eagle . Jewelry Store in Arkansas City, where Straughan Bros, then had their office, from which, together with his well-worded testimony and appearance on the witness stand, we cannot say but that it may have been inferred by the jury that he was a capable business man; and we cannot sa}' but that it may have appeared to the jury that defendant, who was a resident of the Kaw Reservation, and could neither read nor write, except to write his name, was a very illiterate and incapable man in respect to busines transactions. Fraud was not alleged against plaintiff; and no instruction was requested or given on the theory of either fraud or failure of consideration.

In considering this case, we must, in deference to the verdict and judgment in the trial court, assume as true every fact which the evidence for defendant reasonably tends to prove, including every reasonable inference deducible therefrom, in his favor, disregarding as not true all evidence for the plaintiff which is in conflict therewith; but, after doing this, the evidence seems barely sufficient to sustain the judgment. However, we cannot quite say that the judgment is without the support of any evidence in any essential particular. See Swan v. Talbot, 152 Cal. 143, 94 Pac. 238, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1066.

Assuming that the jury found that the note and check were signed during the three-quarters of an hour when Joseph James left the defendant alone just before the start home; that the nine smaller notes had been paid or otherwise discharged before they became subject to the bar of the statute of limitation, though left *519

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 100, 139 P. 265, 41 Okla. 515, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straughan-v-cooper-okla-1914.