Whitman v. Brett

1925 OK 98, 233 P. 195, 106 Okla. 96, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 3, 1925
Docket15141
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1925 OK 98 (Whitman v. Brett) 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
Whitman v. Brett, 1925 OK 98, 233 P. 195, 106 Okla. 96, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 32 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

MAXEY, -0.

This case grows out of the following transaction: On the Hth day of April, 1917, the defendant was doing business at Ponca City as George H. Brett Implement Company; and that on said date the Southwestern Manufacturing Company sold to the defendant a certain new and untried kind of threshing separator, with the oral agreement and understanding between the said Brett and the Southwestern Manufacturing Company that the same was to be tried out by said Brett, and that he was to determine whether it would properly and satisfactorily thresh wheat, oats, kaffir corn, and other grain, and if so he was to pay the note sued on in this case, and was to place the separator or thresher on the market in connection with his implement business, and that if it would not so thresh said grains, that the same was to be taken back by the Southwestern Manufacturing Company, and said note was to be returned to the defendant, Brett; that soon after the receipt of said threshing separator, which was in the summer of 1917, the said George H.v Brett gavej the same a thorough and complete trial, and found that it would not thresh grain, and was wholly unfitted for the purpose of threshing grain, and worthless for such purpose; that said defendant at once notified the Southwestern Manufacturing Company that said machine would not thresh grain, and requested them to advise him as to what disposition they wanted him to make of it; that he declined to accept the same, and requested ithe return of his note; and has at all times since held said thresher for the Southwestern Manufacturing Company, and is now ready to return the same to the Southwestern Manufacturing Company, or its assignees or to the plaintiff in this case upon the return and cancellation of his note. All of these matters were set up in paragraph S of defendant’s answer. Plaintiff filed a reply to said answer in ithe nature of a general denial, and as to paragraph 3, the plaintiff replied as follows: “Plaintiff neither affirms nor denies the allegation set forth in paragraph 3 of said answer.” A trial was after-wards had to the court and a jury and resulted-in a verdict for the defendant, Brett, and judgment was entered accordingly. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled by ithe court, and the case has been duly appealed to this court.

The note sued on was executed at the ¡time of the purchase of the threshing machine, and was a few days thereafter assigned by the Southwestern Manufacturing Company to the plaintiff, K. M. Whitman, who resided in Chicago. It appears from the testimony that Mr. H. G. Garrett, president of the Southwestern Manufacturing Company, had known the plaintiff, K. M. Whitman, for 20 years, and was in the habit of discounting his notes to Whitman; and a few days thereafter, 'and during the mohth of April, 1917, said note was assigned to the plaintiff: No particular effort was made to collect this note until after the Southwestern Manufacturing 'Company went into bankruptcy, and suit was then filed on the note by the plaintiff on the 7th day of January, 1922, nearly five years after it was given.

Plaintiff in error in his brief says:

“The one and only question which plaintiff in error cares to call to the attention of this Honorable Court is that covered by the fourth assignment of error in plaintiff's motion for a new trial, and is as follolwe: ‘Error of the court in refusing to allow plaintiff to introduce relevant, competent, and material testimony which was material to the substantial rights of the plaintiff.’ ”

The plaintiff’s deposition was taken at Los Angeles, Cal., after this suit was brought. After the plaintiff had testified to his residence and his acquaintance with Mr. Garrett of the/Southwestern Manufacturing. Company, and .the purchase of the note in question, in which he testified that he paid $300 for the note, he was asked the following question: “Did you have any notice of any defects in the title of the Southwestern Manufacturing Company to said note?” To this question, the defendant objected on ithe ground that it wlas incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and calling for a conclusion from the witness. The court ¡sustained this objection and the plaintiff excepted, and the sole question presented to this court is whether the sustaining of said objection to the question was such prejudicial error as vill justify a reversal of the ease. Counsel *98 for plaintiff in error relies upon section 7722, Comp. Stat. 1921, which is as follows:

“A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: First. That it is complete and regular upon its face; Second. That he became the holder -of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact; Third. That he took it in good faith and for vialue; Fourth. That at ithe time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the (title of the person negotiating it.” ,

And he also cited the case of First National Bank of Hayes City v. Robinson et al., 93 Kan. 464, 144 Pac. 1019, in which the court says:

“The cashier was asked who was the holder of the note, and an objection on the ground that the question called for a conclusion of the -witness was sustained. A similar rule was made ¡touching questions as to who was the owner and whether the note Iwlas' a part of the assets- of the plaintiff bank. Bnit finally -the latter question was permitted to be answered. The modern notion of the admissibility of evidence is that it is more important to get the truth than to quibble over impractical distinctions. While in a very strict sense it may be -giving a conclusion for the owner to say that he. is the owner of a chattel or chose in action surely he ought to know and if he is mi&taken it may be shown on cross-examination. Almost any answer might, vlhen dissected with the scalpel of precise mental philosophy, be deemed wholly or partly a conclusion. The first stock question usually is ‘where do you reside?’ And the courts have not yet found that a reply giving the location indicates only the witnesses conclusion as to his habitation, and y.et no more perplexing question can arise ¡than that of residence in some cases.”

Counsel also cites the case of Jantzen v. Emanuel German Baptist Church, 27 Okla. 473, 112 Pac. 1127. In the fourth paragraph of ¡the syllabus of this case, the court lays down the following rule:

“Ownership of personal property is ordinarily a simple fact to which a witness having the requisite knowledge can testify directly ; and, in an action of replevin, a question as to who is ¡the owner of the property involved, where such question involves a fact clearly within the knowledge of the-witness and- not ¡the expression of an opinion upon facts proven, is admissible.’’

Other cases are cited by plaintiff, -but the foregoing .are sufficient to show the contention of plaintiff in error. The defendant, in. error relies on sections 7725 and 7729, Comp. Stat. 1921, which are as follows:

“When title is defective.

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Related

Phelps v. Malone
1943 OK 372 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Dematte v. Clark
1935 OK 1007 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 98, 233 P. 195, 106 Okla. 96, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitman-v-brett-okla-1925.