Wilson v. Federal Tax Co.

1935 OK 1141, 54 P.2d 363, 176 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 943
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1935
DocketNo. 23350.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1141 (Wilson v. Federal Tax Co.) 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
Wilson v. Federal Tax Co., 1935 OK 1141, 54 P.2d 363, 176 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 943 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will, be referred to in this opinion as they appeared in the court below. Plaintiff instituted its action in the district court of Oklahoma county, wherein it sought judgment against the defendants on a promissory note executed by the defendants Anna E. Wilson and James Alexander Wilson on January 24, 1929, said note being originally made payable to the defendant Atlas Mortgage & Bond Company, and assigned to the plaintiff on March 19, 1929. Plaintiff also sought a foreclosure of a mortgage securing said note executed by the defendants Anna E. Wilson and her husband, said mortgage covering certain lands in Oklahoma county.

Default judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants. Said judgment thereafter became final as to the defendants James Alexander Wilson and Atlas Mortgage & Bond Company, and no appeal therefrom was prosecuted by said defendants. At a later date, however, said judgment was vacated as to the defendant Anna E. Wilson, and she fi’ed her answer and cross-petition, which will be referred to hereinafter. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Anna E. Wilson for the amount *91 sued for and a further decree of foreclosure of the mortgage. Motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and the case comes regularly on for review by this court.

Certain facts are disclosed without conflict by the pleadings of the parties and the undisputed evidence. The note executed by the defendant acknowledged the receipt of the principal sum, in consideration of which the defendant promised to pay the sum of $23.19, the same being principal payment on ‘•Secured Investment Certificates” of Atlas Mortgage & Bond Company, the payee of the note, and the further sum of $29.61, representing interest at 4 per cent, per an-inum on the principal amount loaned and “insurance premiums,” all of said items aggregating the sum of $52.80 per month, which was to be paid “according to the face of said certificates” on the 5th of each and every month until said certificates should be matured according to the terms thereof, or until said loan should be otherwise sooner canceled or discharged. Said note further recited that it was secured by a real estate mortgage of the same date, and by assignment of said secured investment certificates.

By the terms of the mortgage, the Atlas Company was given a lien to secure the payment of this promissory note upon certain real estate and upon the two secured investment certificates. According' to its terms, it was given in consideration of the principal sum, and for the purpose of securing the payment thereof. The obligation of the/ mortgagors as therein set out was to pay the sum of $52.80 per month until the certificates should be matured, and contained other usual conditions of real estate mortgages. The note, mortgage, secured investment certificates, and all rights thereunder were assigned to the plaintiff by the Atlas Company as collateral security for a loan, made by the plaintiff to the Atlas Company.

The secured investment certificates were ¡introduced in evidence and are set out in the record. One of these certificates was issued to Anna E. Wilson, and the other to her husband, James Alexander Wilson. Certificate No. 101 recited in part as follows:

“In consideration of three hundred seven and 20/100 dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and of the payment of the sum of $25 on or before the 5'th day of each month hereafter for the period, of one hundred and twenty months (1200 consecutively, the Atlas Mortgage and ‘Bond Company (hereinafter called the Company) ¡promises to pay at its Home Office in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the sum of three thousand four hundred sixty-eight Dollars, less any indebtedness on account of this certificate to Mrs. Anna E. Wilson (hereinafter called the Investor) ; and to perform during the life of this certificate the further covenants and agreements hereinafter contained.”

Said certificate contained further provisions that the Atlas Company, during the life of the contract and so long as it should be kept in force by the payments of the installments as agreed, would pay the life insurance premiums to become due under a ¡policy of life insurance on the life of Anna E. Wilson in the sum of $2,000. During the life of the certificate and so long as the same was kept in force by the payment of the monthly sums agreed upon, the certificate was to have a cash value available to the investor according to a table contained in the certificate. This cash value was available to the investor upon his exercising one of three options set out in the certificate. It would seem useless to set out these option provisions in full detail, since the evidence in this case does not show that either of them was ever exercised, and, therefore, the investor was never entitled to the cash value of these certificates, either in cash, as a credit on her indebtedness, or otherwise. The Atlas Company also had various options to call in and redeem said certificate, which the evidence does not show that it ever exercised.

• Certificate- No. 102, issued to James Alexander Wilson, was in the same form except that the monthly payments thereon were in ’the sum of $27.20, and the value of said certificate at maturity was scheduled at the sum of $3,742.

Construing all these instruments together, therefore, it appears that the defendants, Wil-sons, borrowed from the Atlas Company the sum of $4,000. This sum was not to be paid back directly, but through the medium of the secured investment certificates. The mortgagors were to pay 4 per cent, interest) on the amount borrowed, but the balance of their payments were to be paid on the secured investment certificates and as life insurance premiums. It was apparently contemplated that when the value of the secured investment certificates was equal to the amount due on the note and mortgage, the certificates would be canceled and their proceeds applied on the loan. It appears, however, from the undisputed evidence, that the sum of $633.60 was retained from the proceeds of the loan and credited on the certificates as the initial payments on said c©r- *92 tificates. Thereafter the defendant paid the sum of $28.19 on the principal of said certificates, the sum of $14.80 as interest, and the sum of $14.81 as insurance premium for 13 months, the last payment being made in March, 1930.

The answer of the defendant Anna E.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1141, 54 P.2d 363, 176 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-federal-tax-co-okla-1935.