Thomas v. Bank of Commerce

1928 OK 403, 271 P. 233, 133 Okla. 46, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 988
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1928
Docket17394
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1928 OK 403 (Thomas v. Bank of Commerce) 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
Thomas v. Bank of Commerce, 1928 OK 403, 271 P. 233, 133 Okla. 46, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 988 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

DIFFENDAFFER, C.

The parties will be referred to herein as in the court below, and where the plaintiff in error herein is referred to as defendant, Roy W. Thomas is intended.

This is an action brought on two causes of action, the one on a promissory note and the other for money loaned the Sapulpa Printing Company, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage executed by Sapulpa Printing Company to recover said indebtedness, and also for personal judgment against A. L. Thomas, La Rue Thomas, and Roy W. Thomas. The ease was dismissed as to La Rue Thomas. The Sapulpa Printing Company and A. L. Thomas made no defense, and judgment was rendered against them by default.

The petition is in the usual form, and in the first cause of action pleads the note of Sapulpa Printing Company, dated the 18th day of December, 1924, for $4,114.15, due 90 days after date. The note is signed, “Sa-pulpa Printing Company by A. L. Thomas, President” ; attested by A. M. Cook, secretary. It is not signed or indorsed by either La Rue Thomas or Roy W. Thomas.

The second cause of action is for $2,534, and is for money advanced from time to time after the date of the note and mortgage.

The chattel mortgage is in the usual form, a copy thereof being attached to the petition as an exhibit and made a part thereof. It contains a clause providing that it shall also secure any additional indebtedness that may exist between the mortgagor and mortgagee during the term of the mortgage.

The petition contains a third cause of action, setting out ground for and asking that a receiver be appointed. A receiver was appointed and during the pendency of the suit, the mortgaged property was sold, by agreement of the parties, and the proceeds thereof, and a personal judgment against defendant Roy W. Thomas, is the matter in controversy in this appeal.

The petition describes the mortgaged property as described in the mortgage, and with reference to defendant Roy W. Thomas and his . claims against the property, alleges:

“Plaintiff further alleges that the defendant Roy W. Thomas claims some right, title and interest in and to the property described in plaintiff’s mortgage, and alleges that he is informed and believes that he claims the same by virtue of a purported chattel mortgage given by the said Sapulpa Printing Company to the said Roy W. Thomas on or about the 4th day of December, 1924, for the sum of $5,400.
“Tour plaintiff further alleges that if the said Roy W. Thomas does claim any right, title or interest in and to the property by virtue of said purported mortgage, that the same is junior and inferior to the right, title and interest of this plaintiff as above set out and as hereinafter set out in the mortgage above mentioned.”

The above quoted from the petition is the first that defendant Roy W. Thomas is mentioned. The petition then, as a basis for a personal judgment against Roy W. Thomas on the note, alleges:

“That long prior to the execution of the purported mortgage given by the Sapulpa Printing Company to Roy W. Thomas, the said A. L. Thomas, president and general manager of said defendant corporation, had repeatedly promised said plaintiff that upon' the advancement of certain amounts of money, which money was advanced prior to the time of the execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage, that he would deliver to the plaintiff a good and valid first mortgage upon the property above described.
“That relying upon said promise the plaintiff advanced from time to time prior to December, 1924, the amount of money as shown by the note and mortgage of the plaintiff as above set out, and that on or about the 4th day of December, 1924, A. L. Thomas, La Rue Thomas and Roy W. Thomas, conspiring together and acting for the purpose of defrauding this plaintiff, called a meeting of the stockholders of the Sapulpa Printing Company, a corporation, and voted to give to said Roy W. Thomas the purported mortgage above mentioned, and that at the time said action was taken it was agreed and understood between the said Roy W. Thomas, and one of the officers of the plaintiff company, that the claim of the plaintiffs would be protected by him per *48 sonally, and gave tlie said plaintiff officer to understand that the lien of the plaintiff would be prior to the lien of the said Hoy W. Thomas, if any lien the said Roy W. Thomas might have.”

These are all the allegations in the first cause of action with reference to Roy W. Thomas or his mortgage.

The allegation of the petition as to the second cause of action is as follows:

“Comes now the plaintiff and for its second cause of action against the defendants hereby make a part of this, his second cause of action, all the allegations alleged in its first cause of action as fully as if set out herein.
“For a further cause of action the plaintiff alleges that at various times since the execution of the note and mortgage set out in the first cause of action that he has advanced to these defendants the sum of $2,-534, that under and by virtue of the terms of tlie mortgage that the same became a lien upon the property described in said mortgage and that said amount last above named is long past due and wholly unpaid and that he is entitled to have the same declared a first and prior lien as superior to all other liens and claims against the property described in tlie first cause of action, and is entitled to have said property sold as provided by law, and for tlie reasons set out in the first cause of action herein and hereafter set out in the third cause of action shall entitle the receiver to take charge of said property pending this litigation.”

The prayer is that plaintiff have judgment against each of the defendants, and that its mortgage be declared a first lien on .the proxi-erty, and that all other liens upon said property be declared junior and inferior to the lien of plaintiff, for foreclosure of the mortgage lien, sale of the property, and that the proceeds be applied first to the payment of plaintiff’s claim.

Defendant Roy W. Thomas answers by general denial, and by cross-action. His cross-petition contains two causes of action. The first is based np'in a promissory note for $5,400, dated the 4th day of December, 1924, executed by the Sapulpa Printing Company, due December 4, 1925, and a chattel mortgage of the same date covering the same property in plaintiff’s mortgage, given to secure said note. A copy of the mortgage is attached to and made a part of the answer and cross-petition. It shows that it was filed for record on the 5th day of December, 1924, 13 days before the date of plaintiff’s mortgage. The mortgage is in the ordinary form, and does not contain the clause providing that it shall be security for any other indebtedness that may exist between the mortgagor and mortgagee. A copy of the note is attached to and ¿made a part of the cross-petition.

The second cause of action is based, like the second cause of action of plaintiff, on money advanced to Sapulpa Printing Company after the date of his mortgage, and is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 403, 271 P. 233, 133 Okla. 46, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-bank-of-commerce-okla-1928.