Winter v. Harvell

1935 OK 1213, 52 P.2d 717, 175 Okla. 315, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 881
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 22910.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1213 (Winter v. Harvell) 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
Winter v. Harvell, 1935 OK 1213, 52 P.2d 717, 175 Okla. 315, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 881 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This was an action by Dorothy M. Harvell, as plaintiff, against Anna M. Winter, on a promissory note for $1,- *316 200, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage on certain hotel furnishings. Shortly prior to the institution of said suit 'defendant Winter had stored the furnishings with defendant storage company and for this reason said storage company was made a party defendant.

The plaintiff and defendant wiil be referred to as they appeared in the trial court, and the defendant Federal Storage & Van Company as storage company.

Plaintiff’s petition consists of three causes of actionFirst, an ordinary action in re-plevin ; second, a count on a promissory note in the sum of $1,200; and, third, to foreclo ;e a chattel mortgage given to secure said note. Copies of said note and mortgage were attached to plaintiff’s petition. The petition also contained a clause for damages, but this was abandoned on the trial.

Defendant Winter filed answer and cross-petition, in which she admitted the execution of the note 'and mortgage, but attacking same, alleged failure of adequate consideration, fraudulent representations, and further 'alleges that she, being inexperienced in the hotel business, was overreached by plaintiff, who in .fact traded her an assignation house instead of a hotel; that the agreed price of the property involved was $3,000, $1,800 of which was paid by a conveyance to plaintiff of a house ,and lot owned by defendant Winter, and the note and chattel mortgage sued on. The prayer of the cross-petition asked for the cancellation of the note and mortgage, and that the property, both real and personal, be returned to the respective parties and that all transactions be rescinded.

Defendant storage company filed answer, containing only a general denial, and cross-petition alleging the storage of the goods and chattels with it as a warehouseman, and that its lien was superior to that of plaintiff.

Plaintiff filed answer to cross-petition of defendant. Winter, in which she denied all the allegations of said cross-petition, and charged defendant Winter with having surrendered the lease on the building in which the furniture was located, and the storage of the furniture with defendant: storage company, thereby rendering it impossible to restore same if rescission should be decreed.

Defendant Winter assumed the burden of proof and was called as a witness in her own behalf. She testified, in substance, that she was a trained nurse and without experience in the hotel business; that she saw an advertisement in a Tulsa paper offering to trade hotel furnishings for a house and lot; that having ,a house and lot she desired to trade, she got in communication with the party offering the trade, it being plaintiff herein. Defendant Winter immediately went to the hotel of plaintiff, which adjoined that offered to trade. Both parties seemed anxious to close the deal. Defendant testified that plaintiff showed her two or three of the rooms, and falsely represented to her that the other rooms, which were locked, were similar to those shown her, but they were occupied and she could not afford to disturb the occupants, and that such statements were false and the other rooms were not as represented, and were not occupied by guests. She further testified that; on the next d'ay she returned to the hotel she was trading for, where she met the plaintiff, and at whose suggestion she and the plaintiff went to the office of plaintiff’s attorney for the purpose of having the transfers prepared and the title to her house and lot examined; that while they were in this attorney’s office, plaintiff suggested that the building in which the furnishings were located was owned by a man who lived at Collinsville, and as her lease expired on December 31st following, they should drive over and see him while the papers were being prepared; that plaintiff and Mrs. Winter then drove to Collinsville, where they saw the owner of the building, where defendant Winter arranged to assume the lease for the remainder of the year, but that she did not at that time secure a lease for the next year, but some weeks later she did lease the building for the succeeding year; that when the parties returned from Collinsville, they went to the attorney’s office and signed the necessary conveyances, whereupon plaintiff suggested that they return to the hotel so that she could turn the hotel over to her; that when they reached the hotel, plaintiff introduced her to two women who were guests or occupants of the hotel; that plaintiff then left, after which one of the women asked the defendant if they two could continue to stay there, and upon defendant asking them why the request, she was informed that she had traded for an “assignation house.” According' to her testimony, defendant then asked the two women to take charge of the place until she could get some one to operate it; that two days later, she had her son to come over from Earlshcro and take charge; that the *317 note she had given as part of the purchase price of the hotel was payable' in installments of $40 each month, and when the October payment came due, plaintiff called her; over the telephone and demanded payment, and defendant told her that she did not have the money, but defendant made no complaint as to the character of the hotel, nor the condition of the furniture.

That on the SOth day of October, 1930, she caused a notice demanding rescission to be served on the plaintiff. The defendant offered witness, Gleasor, who testified that he was working íot the defendant storage company, and gave evidence as to the condition of the furniture when it was stored, which was on November 13, 1930. On cross-examination by defendant storage company, he testified that he did not see the plaintiff about the hotel at the time the furniture was being moved. This is mentioned here as the plaintiff testified she was present and objected to the removal of the property.

G. B. Hogins, an employee of the defendant storage company, was called by defendant Winter, and testified both on direct and cross-examination as the preceding witness.

This is a sufficient statement of the evidence to enable us to pass upon the question! raised in the case. At the close of defendant’s evidence, the plaintiff demurred thereto, and after an extended argument between the court and defendant Winter’s counsel, the demurrer was sustained.

During the controversy plaintiff asked permission to introduce the plaintiff as a witness, who testified she was present at the time the furniture was removed by the storage company, and that she objected to the same being moved. While she was being-cross-examined by the attorney for the storage company, the court interrupted the proceedings and stated that he was going to discharge the jury. The attorney for the storage company insisted that he was not through with his cross-examination and would insist that the question of fact raised by him as to the plaintiff having waived her priority under the mortgage be submitted to the jury; the court thereupon discharged the jury, over the objection of the defendant storage company, and notified the parties to return at 1:30, and that he would hear them on the law questions involved.

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Related

Holbird v. Harris
1946 OK 307 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)
Riddle v. Bishop
1938 OK 306 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1213, 52 P.2d 717, 175 Okla. 315, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winter-v-harvell-okla-1935.