Tax/Investments Concepts, Inc. v. McLaughlin

1982 OK 134, 670 P.2d 981, 1982 Okla. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 16, 1982
Docket52466
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1982 OK 134 (Tax/Investments Concepts, Inc. v. McLaughlin) 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
Tax/Investments Concepts, Inc. v. McLaughlin, 1982 OK 134, 670 P.2d 981, 1982 Okla. LEXIS 344 (Okla. 1982).

Opinions

LAVENDER, Justice:

For convenience, the appellants, Thomas and Amanda McLaughlin, will be referred to as the McLaughlins or appellants. Ap-pellee, Tax/Investments Concepts, Inc., will be referred to as TIC or appellee. Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland will be referred to as Fidelity or surety.

TIC filed suit against the McLaughlins to recover the unpaid balance on a promissory note executed by McLaughlins to TIC on November 17, 1975, in the principal sum of $8500, with interest at the rate of 15% per year, and for possession of certain personal property of the McLaughlins pledged as security for the loan evidenced by the note. McLaughlins admitted executing the note but asserted the loan obligation was void and unenforceable against them because the loan was a “supervised loan” within the meaning of 14A O.S.1971, § 3-501(1), made by a corporation, TIC, which did not have legal authority to make supervised loans and that TIC failed to comply with disclosure requirements of the Oklahoma Uniform Consumer Credit Code (UCCC). TIC does not seriously contend that it was qualified to make a “supervised loan,” or that it complied with the disclosure requirements of UCCC, but rather asserts that the loan was not a “consumer loan” within the meaning of 14A O.S.1971, § 3-104 in that it was not incurred primarily “for a personal, family, household or agricultural purpose” and thus does not fall within the purview of the Oklahoma Uniform Consumer Credit Code (UCCC). Therefore, TIC maintains that since McLaughlins’ defense to its action and McLaughlins’ counter-claim for relief by reason of TIC’s failure to comply with UCCC are predicated upon the indebtedness being a “consumer loan,” the findings and judgment of the trial court must be sustained.

[983]*983Our first consideration is to determine the gravamen of the petition and counter-claim, whether it be in law or in equity. If the action be at law, the findings of the trial court are as binding on appeal as the verdict of a jury and, consequently, if there is any competent evidence to support the findings, they will not be disturbed on appeal.1

TIC’s petition is for judgment on a note and for possession of personal property in which it claims a security interest. The first cause of action of McLaughlins’ counter-claim is for relief under UCCC; the second cause of action is against Fidelity for recovery upon its attachment bond; and the third for damages against TIC for wrongful attachment. These are actions at law, triable to a jury.2

We next turn to the issue of whether there is any competent evidence in the record to support the finding of the trial court that the loan in question was not a “consumer loan” in that it was not “incurred primarily for a personal, family, household or agricultural purpose” and therefore outside the protection of UCCC.

Merriam-Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary defines the word “primarily” as being an adverb meaning “for the most part; chiefly.” Our area for judicial review is then directed toward whether there is any competent evidence in the record before us that the McLaughlins’ loan was incurred for the most part, or chiefly, for a business or commercial purpose as distinguished from a personal, family, or household purpose, there being no claim that the loan was for an agricultural purpose.3

A perusal of the record convinces us that there is more than sufficient competent evidence to support the findings of the court below, some of which is as follows: Thomas McLaughlin, one of the defendants (the other defendant is his wife), who was trained and qualified as a physicians’ assistant and who had served as such both in Alaska and in his home state of Maryland, contacted an employee of Corporate Recruiters, Inc., an employment agency, concerning possible employment in Oklahoma as a physicians’ assistant in Oklahoma, and was placed in contact with two osteopaths in Jenks, Oklahoma, by whom he was subsequently employed as a physicians’ assistant. Corporate Recruiters, Inc. advanced McLaughlin the sum of $500 to enable him to move to his Oklahoma employment site. Shortly thereafter, TIC advanced the sum of $3500 to the McLaughlins, taking their note secured by personal property consisting of a piano, washer and dryer, refrigerator, furniture, woodworking tools, a lawn mower, and two automobiles. The proceeds from this loan were disbursed to various of the McLaugh-lins’ creditors for such things as moving expenses, repayment of Corporate Recruiters, Inc. for its loan, payment of various debts, and the balance of the proceeds going to McLaughlin directly for living expenses. After a few weeks, McLaughlin’s employment in Jenks was terminated. Again with the help of Corporate Recruiters, Inc. McLaughlin was able to obtain employment as a physicians’ assistant with a doctor in Láveme, Oklahoma.

[984]*984On November 17, 1975, the McLaughlins executed and delivered to TIC the note sued upon in this case, again collateralizing the same with the same personal property. The loan agreement discloses how the loan proceeds were to be used: to repay two doctor employers for living expenses advanced to McLaughlin in anticipation of fees he would earn, for living and moving expenses in connection with the change of employment and residence from Jenks to Laverne, and to repay the two prior loans with interest.

McLaughlin formed a professional corporation under the laws of the State of Oklahoma some time after executing the first note, but all loan transactions were with the McLaughlins individually. In connection with McLaughlin’s employment, he was engaged as an independent contractor in his professional capacity and paid accordingly.

While under the evidence the loan transaction and the factual circumstances preceding it have some of the characteristics of personal, family, and household financing, the pervading purpose and motivation surrounding each loan, including the loan upon which suit here had been brought, was to finance Thomas McLaughlin in the establishment of his business and profession as a physicians’ assistant, and only incidentally to provide family living expenses, and to consolidate his debt payments. A substantial portion of the loan went to pay for his moving expenses to his new employments and to pay for the services of the employment agency which secured the professional placement prospects. We therefore hold that there is competent evidence in the record sufficient to support the findings of the trial court that the note was not governed by the provisions of the UCCC.

McLaughlins next urge error on the part of the trial judge in awarding to TIC possession of the McLaughlin personal property in which TIC had a security interest as a part of the judgment in TIC’s foreclosure suit, for the reason that TIC, having previously in another lawsuit obtained an attachment order and having actually levied upon the collateral because of said attachment, waived its contractually created security in the attached property. In support of its position, McLaughlins cite Rooney v. McPherson, 38 Okl. 410, 133 P. 212 (1913), Evans v. McMillan, 111 Okl. 253, 239 P. 449 (1925), Crismon v. Barse Livestock Commission Co., 17 Okl. 117, 87 P. 876 (1906), Boston & Kansas City Cattle Loan Co. v. Dickson, 11 Okl. 680, 69 P. 889 (1902), and Doughty v. Laubach, 172 Okl. 42, 44 P.2d 105 (1935).

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Tax/Investments Concepts, Inc. v. McLaughlin
1982 OK 134 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
1982 OK 134, 670 P.2d 981, 1982 Okla. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taxinvestments-concepts-inc-v-mclaughlin-okla-1982.