Tradesmens Nat. Bank v. Harris

1930 OK 153, 291 P. 38, 145 Okla. 54, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 1, 1930
Docket19115
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1930 OK 153 (Tradesmens Nat. Bank v. Harris) 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
Tradesmens Nat. Bank v. Harris, 1930 OK 153, 291 P. 38, 145 Okla. 54, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 154 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

EAGLETON, O.

The First National Bank of Coalgate was closed by the Comptroller of Currency of the 'United States. A. P. Harris, its receiver, brought suit against the Tradesmens National Bank of Oklahoma City for the recovery of certain securities held by the defendant bank. He alleged that the securities were owned by the First National Bank of Coalgate and were placed in the Tradesmens National Bank as security for two certain notes; that there was a balance due on the obligations of the *55 First National Bank to the Tradesmens National Bank a certain sum which had theretofore been tendered to the Trades-mens National Bank and by the Tradesmens National Bank refused. The plaintiff alleged further that the board of county commissioners of Coal county was asserting a claim to a portion of said warrants, the exact nature of which claim was to the plaintiff unknown, and asked that the board of county commissioners be required to as-construed together as a whole, and when sert whatever right, title, or interest it had in and to the securities. The Tradesmens National Bank answered by denying the authority of the plaintiff to bring this suit and by admitting possession of the securities, hut alleging that said securities were pledged to the Tradesmens National Bank as security for all obligations of the First National Bank of Coalgate to the Trades-mens National Bank, and that there were other and additional obligations due from the First National Bank to the Tradesmens National Bank, that there was one note executed by T. M. (Tom) Mitcham, president of the First National Bank, and another note executed by C. H. Smith, vice president of the First National Bank, which obligations were negotiated and made by said individual officers of the First National Bank for and on behalf of the First National Bank and as obligations for the First National Bank, and that there- was due and unpaid from the First National Bank to the Tradesmens National Bank a sum in excess of the total value of the securities pledged. The board of county commissioners filed answer asserting prior lien or claim in and to a certain portion of the securities involved. All these claims having been traversed by pleading, the cause went to trial. The court .instructed a verdict in favor of the board of county commissioners in case the verdict was found for the plaintiff and against the board of county commissioners in case the verdict was rendered for the Tradesmens National Bank. Verdict was returned and judgment entered for the plaintiff and against the Tradesmens National Bank and for the board of county commissioners for a portion of the securities recovered. The Tradesmens National Bank appealed. For convenience the Trades-mens National Bank will be referred to as the bank. The plaintiff will be referred to as the receiver. The hoard of county commissioners will be referred to as the board.

The bank complains that the court instructed the jury that the defendant bank must sustain by a preponderance of evidence its affirmative defense, that the court erred in placing the burden on defendant bank to establish by a preponderance of proof that the notes individually signed by Mitcham and Smith for $48,000 and $25,-150.58, respectively, were not individual obligations of the signers, but were executed for and on behalf of and as obligations for the First National Bank. .The bank in this complaint overlooks the fact that the bank, as an affirmative defense, set up and contended in its answer that these two notes, though apparently the obligations of the individual signers thereof (C. O. S. secs. 7666 and 7688), were in fact the direct obligations of the First National Bank, and that one who asserts affirmatively a fact on which he relies, either to recover or defend, has the burden of sustaining such averment by a preponderance of proof. The bank in making this affirmative defense had the burden to establish by a preponderance of proof its contention. 10 R. C. L. 898, 900; Fifth Avenue Library Society v. Phillips, 39 Okla. 799, 136 Pac. 1076; Cavitt v. Robertson, 42 Okla. 619, 142 Pac. 299; Kapp v. Levyson, 58 Okla. 651, 160 Pac. 457; Midland Valley Ry. Co. v. Cox, 69 Okla. 123, 170 Pac. 485; Congdon v. McAlester Carriage & Wagon Factory, 56 Okla. 201, 155 Pac. 597; Foster Oil Co. v. Rogers, 111 Okla. 103, 238 Pac. 435; Willoughby, Receiver, v. Ball, 18 Okla. 535, 90 Pac. 1017; Youngblood v. Boake, 124 Okla. 84, 253 Pac. 1017.

Though, under the rules of this court, as expressed in Stumpf v. Montgomery, 101 Okla. 257, 226 Pac. 65, 32 A. L. R. 1490, a presumption of law must disappear in the face of positive proof controverting the presumed fact, yet the defendant has the burden of proof of affirmative defensive matter, and this court will not reverse a cause because of a technical inaccuracy of statement made by the trial court in his instruction. The instruction properly placed the burden of sustaining the affirmative allegations of the bank on the bank. The reason therefor given by the court, even if not legally accurate, is harmless. As was said in Midland Valley Ry. Co. v. Cox, supra:

“Instructions, as a general rule, should be construed together as a whole, and, when so construed, if they properly state the law, they will not be objectionable, although some of them or portions thereof, standing alone, might be misleading: or may be technically inaccurate.”

To the same effect is First Nat. Bank of Tishomingo v. Ingle, 37 Okla. 284, 132 Pac. 895, and authorities therein cited.

*56 The court instructed the jury that the plaintiff had the burden of proof of his cause to sustain all the material allegations of his petition by a preponderance of proof, as well as instructing the jury that the bank, in establishing its defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action, was required to establish its affirmative defense by a preponderance of proof. The plaintiff in all causes of action must sustain his cause of action. The defendant may by negation disprove such contentions, or may, by an affirmative defense, establish a different state of facts which would relieve the defendant of the obligations which would follow under the facts alleged and proved by the plaintiff, but, in establishing such affirmative defense, the defendant becomes the proponent and has the burden to bear, has the onus of proof as in a new cause of action. The defendant having met that burden of proof by competent evidence, the burden again becomes that of the plaintiff to sustain his contention. So- it was in this cause. The court properly so instructed the jury. The jury found that the plaintiff had sustained his burden throughout by a preponderance of proof.

. The bank next complains that the court erroneously refused to admit in evidence for all purposes a letter written by Tom Mitcham, president of the First National Bank to the Tradesmens National Bank. The court instructed the jury it should be considered “for the sole and only purpose of throwing light upon the question of whether or not the notes executed by Mitch-am and Smith were obligations of the First National Bank of Coalgate, Okla.” There was no other purpose for which this letter could have been considered under the issues joined by pleading and evidence. But the bank complains in this instruction the court also said: “A national bank is not permitted to enter into a guaranty of the obligations of any other corporation or person.” We find no error in restricting the purpose for which this letter was allowed to be introduced in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 153, 291 P. 38, 145 Okla. 54, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tradesmens-nat-bank-v-harris-okla-1930.