Whitney v. Low

278 P. 1096, 137 Okla. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 30, 1929
Docket18029
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 278 P. 1096 (Whitney v. Low) 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
Whitney v. Low, 278 P. 1096, 137 Okla. 1 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

*2 ANDREWS, J.

The parties appear here in the same order as in the trial court.

Plaintiff was executor of the estate, of Jennie A. Clark, deceased. He brought a suit on a certain promissory note made by Shed Low and Nellie Low to th'e Conservative Loan Company on the 15th day of April, 1915. The note, became due on the 1st day of May, 1925, and annual interest coupons were attached thereto. The note contained an acceleration clause.

It was alleged that Jennie A. Clark purchased thei note for value in due cours'e and that the same was indorsed and delivered to her with an assignment of the mortgage prior to maturity. Default was made in that the inter'est coupon due November 1, 1923, was not paid, by which the principal note became due. Defendants purchased the land on April 22, 1916. Their amended answer consisted of a general denial, a denial of ownership of the note by the plaintiff, an allegation of the sale of the land by the mortgagors to defendants, and that:

“* * * These defendants paid the note sued upon in full to the Conservative Loan Company, at Shawnee, Okla., who was at that time either th’e owner of said note, or otherwise, was the agent of the owner for the purpose of collection of said note and the interest due thereon, and was the agent of Jennie A. Clark for the purpose of the collection of the inter'est maturing on said note and principal thereof, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff herein now has no claim against the lands covered toy said note.”

The prayer was that the plaintiff take nothing and that defendants have judgment against the plaintiff canceling the. mortgage claim.

Trial was had to a jury, a verdict was rendered' for the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed to this court. At the trial plaintiff offered in evidence the note, interest coupons, and the mortgage. The note was payable to the order of the Conservative Loan Company at its office in Shawnee, Okla., and bore on its back the following:

“For value received, the within note with coupons attached is her'eby assigned to Janie A. Clark without recourse.”

The mortgage provided:

“That the parties of the first part will pay said principal and interest at the time when the same fall due, and at the place and in the manner provided in said note and will pay all taxes. * * *”

There is nothing in the mortgage other than this statement to show where the note was payable.

The defendant offered evidence that the interest coupons had been paid by the Conservative Loan Company and Che Conservative Loan & Trust Company to George M. Christner & Company, but had not been collected from the borrower; and that George M. Christner & Company was a brokerage office belonging to the Conservative Loan & Trust Company. One of the defendants testified that he and his partner purchased th'e land from t’he mortgagors; thereafter he paid one interest coupon and afterwards paid the loan off in the. office of the Conservative Loan Company at Shawnee to the “cashier or treasurer, whoever he was”; that he asked for a release and the person to whom he made the payment told him that the release would follow later; that he never heard of Miss Clark and knew nothing of her address; before he made the payment he examined th'e county records in his county and found no assignment from the Conservative Loan Company; that he had no information that anyone else held the papers, and for that reason he paid the Conservative Loan Company. He testified:

• “Q. You did not know who held this mortgage — did you make any effort to find out who held that note and mortgage? A. I did not. I was sure that the Conservative Loan Company held the note and mortgage and went there and paid it. Q. B'ecause they made the mortgage loan? A. They the ones I knew to go and pay. Q. Who told you to pay them? A. I don’t know that. I went by the record.”

The plaintiff offered the testimony of George E. Curtis that he was the manager of George M. Christner & Company; that he sold the note and mortgage to Jennie A. Clark and she paid ther'efor $500 on the 1st day of May, 1915; that there was no notice or information that there was any defense to th'e documents; that the papers were delivei-ed by him to the purchaser and relied upon by her; that neither the Conservative Loan Company nor the Conservative. Loan & Trust Company had any authority to receive any money upon the note and mortgage as agent of Jennie A. Clark, and that the inter'est was always forwarded to him as the agent and manager of George M. Christner & Company.

It is contended by defendants that their amended answer constituted an allegation that the Conservative Loan Company was the agent of the plaintiff and that the veri- *3 fieation of plaintiff’s reply was not sufficient under the statute (Sections 287 and 293, C. O. S. 1921) to raise an issue as to this agency.

The authorities cited by defendants are not in point. They are cases where verification was necessary to support the denial. Under the facts in this case no verification in support of the denial was necessary.

Section 287, supra, was adopted by the Oklahoma Territory from the Kansas Code. Johnson v. Douglass Glass Co., 8 Okla. 594, 58 Pac. 743. In construing that section in that ease that court said:

“In either case the requirement was the same, to wit: a denial under oath, and in either case it was a right which the party could waive; and we take it that this construction of the statute having been made prior to the time of the adoption by the Legislature of this territory of the statute in question, and being the recognized construction of that statute by the Supreme Court of Kansas at the time of its adoption, it is binding upon the court, as we think the facts in the case at bar and the ease cited in the Pacific Reporter are, in principle, identical”

—and

“The plaintiff introduced evidence tending not only to prove the purchase and delivery of the goods in question, and to substantiate and sustain this account, but also introduced proof tending to prove the existence of the partnership between the defendants, Harding and Johnson. By introducing evidence to prove facts and circumstances from which a partnership between the defendants might be legally implied, it is clearly shown that it was not the intention of the plaintiff to rely upon the fact that defendant had not legally denied the allegation of partnership contained in the bill of particulars.”

This section was adopted by the state of Oklahoma from the territory of Oklahoma. Schedule 2 of the Constitution. This court in Doughty v. Funk, 24 Okla. 312, 103 Pac. 634, said:

“An objection for that reason should be taken by motion to strike, or it will be considered waived. 8 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 206, says: ‘An objection to a want of verification of a pleading is properly taken by motion to strike out’ - citing Warner v. Warner, 11 Kan. 121; Gilmore v. Hempstead, 4 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 153; Fritz v. Barnes, 6 Neb. 436; Webb v. Clark, 2 Sandf. (N. Y.) 647; Indianapolis, etc., Ry. Co. v. Summers, 28 Ind. 521; Vail v. Rinehart, 105 Ind. 6, 4 N. E. 218; Payne v. Flournoy, 29 Ark. 500.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P. 1096, 137 Okla. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-low-okla-1929.