Vose v. U.S. Cities Corporation

1931 OK 610, 7 P.2d 132, 152 Okla. 295, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 13, 1931
Docket20697
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1931 OK 610 (Vose v. U.S. Cities Corporation) 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
Vose v. U.S. Cities Corporation, 1931 OK 610, 7 P.2d 132, 152 Okla. 295, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 715 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Creek county. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial co^jrt: R. A. Vose, plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, and U. S. Cities Corporation, defendant in error, as defendant.

This action was originally filed in the office of the court clerk of Creek county on May 10, 1927, to recover a judgment in the Sum of $57,920.70, upon a series of promissory notes past due and to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the same upon an undivided one-half interest in certain oil and gas leaseholds on producing oil lands in Creek county, Okla. Said notes and mortgage! were executed on April 27, 1925, in the amount of '$130,000; the notes being made payable by defendant corporation to “Ourselves” and indorsed on the back thereof by defendant corporation and the plaintiff and delivered to the First National Bank of Oklahoma City.

Plaintiff after accounting for the oil runs from said leases, which were applied on said notes, sought to foreclose his lien thereon for the balance due on said notes.

The defendant, U. S. Cities Corporation, by its answer and cross-petition, admitted the execution of said notes and mortgage. In avoidance of its liability on said notes said defendant alleged that the, same were executed in pursuance of a conspiracy on the part of the officers of the defendant corporation, the American National Bank of Oklahoma City, the First National Bank of Oklahoma City, and the plaintiff to obtain and retain illegal and unlawful usury, arising out of an original loan in the sum of $300,000 made on June 4, 1923, and a renewal of the balance due on said original loan made on March 31,1924, and contending that by said conspiracy said defendant did not receive all of the proceeds of said loan of $130,000', but that the proceeds of said loan were disbursed by plaintiff illegally and fraudulently without authority from the defendant corporation, and that out of said loan of $130,000 the aforesaid usury was unlawfully paid by plaintiff.

The plaintiff in his reply, among other things, pleaded settlement and compromise of the alleged usurious action set up by defendant in its cross-action; that defendant was estopped from making a plea of usury by reason of a previous settlement; and that the defendant’s action for usury was barred by the two years’ statute of limitation.

The case was tried before a jury and the verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant for $28,246.78. Motion for judgment notwithstanding 'the verdict and, motion for new trial were filed. The same were overruled and an appeal was properly lodged in this court.

From the record it appears that, in April or May, 1923, the defendant, the U. S. Cities Corporation, purchased an undivided one-half interest in two oil and gas leases known as the Deere and Barney leases in Creek county from the Roland Oil Company. W. E. Brown at that time was president of said *297 defendant corporation and received from tire said Roland Oil Company tlie sum of $25,-000, as a commission for negotiating the sale of said leases to the defendant corporation. At this time the American National Bank of Oklahoma City owned certain worthless bonds of the Great American Refining Company, which amounted at that time to $32,493.36. W. E. Brown had sold these bonds to said American National Bank and indorsed the same with recourse on him. W. E. Brown at that time was insolvent and afterwards adjudged a bankrupt.

To finance the sale of said leases from the Roland Oil Company, the defendant corporation, on May 31, 1923, negotiated with the said American National Bank a loan of $300,-000 through said W. E. Brown acting for the defendant corporation, and executed the notes heretofore referred to and secured the same by an assignment of said leases, which assignment was also in the nature of a mortgage. The American National Bank, in addition to the eight per cent, interest charged in said fiotes, retained from the proceeds of said loan the sum of $17,506.64 as discount and the sum of $32,493.36 to pay said bonds of the Great American Refining Company, being a total sum of $50,000, as a condition precedent to the making of said loan. The bank received the oil runs from the leases and the payments on the note® were reduced from time to time until, on March 31, 1924, the renewal notes were executed in the sum of $190,000 for the balance due. This sum includes an additional bonus of $9,500 received by the American National Bank. The notes continued to be liquidated until on or about April 27, 1925, when the American National Bank claimed a balance due on said notes of approximately $55,000, and had placed the same in the hands of its attorney for collection. The record also shows that it was about this time that the defendant corporation, through its attorneys, prepared a suit against said bank to be filed in the United States District Court of the Western District of Oklahoma to recover usurious interest charges made by said bank on said $300,000 loan and the attorneys for defendant corporation took the matter up with the bank and its attorney.

As a result of this negotiation, said suit was not filed, but an agreement was entered into with the defendant corporation and the American National Bank regarding a new loan. Under this arrangement a loan was negotiated for $130,000. The bank referred the defendant corporation to R. A. Vose, the plaintiff herein, and it appears that R. A. Vose entered into a written contract with the officers of the defendant corporation to represent said defendant as its agent in negotiating said loan and in the sale of its notes issued therein, and also agreed to indorse and guarantee the payment of said notes, although defendant contends that the officers of defendant corporation, the American National Bank, the American National Company, and plaintiff knew that there was no sum due the holders of said notes, and 'that the then officers of said defendant corporation conspired with the holders of said notes and with plaintiff to make this new loan of $130,000 with the corrupt knowledge of the inclusion in said notes of a sum of money not due -or owing by said defendant corporation to the holders of said notes in the sum of approximately $55,000. However, under said contract there was paid toi plaintiff $3,900 for his services. This commission was' divided with Frank P. Johnson, president of the American National Bank, and the defendant corporation executed its notes totaling the sum of $130,000 payable to “Ourselves.” These notes were indorsed by the defendant corporation and by R. A. Yose, and the loan of $130,000 was obtained from the First National Bank of Oklahoma City, and as security for the payment of same plaintiff took a mortgage or assignment of said oil and gas mining leases and other securities.

Before the loan was concluded, the defendant corporation entered into a contract with the American National Bank, and the American National Company, a subsidiary of the American National Bank, by which said defendant corporation acknowledged satisfaction of all of its claims against said American National Bank arising from the disbursement and disposition of the proceeds of said loan of $300,000, and said defendant corporation furnished a resolution of itó board of directors authorizing the making of said contract. Defendant contends that R. A.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 610, 7 P.2d 132, 152 Okla. 295, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vose-v-us-cities-corporation-okla-1931.