Yaffe v. Bank of Chelsea

1954 OK 131, 271 P.2d 365, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 545
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 27, 1954
Docket35997
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1954 OK 131 (Yaffe v. Bank of Chelsea) 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
Yaffe v. Bank of Chelsea, 1954 OK 131, 271 P.2d 365, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 545 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Justice.’

The Bank of Chelsea as plaintiff brought this action on a promissory note in the amount of $5,000 executed by Twin River Sales, Inc., a corporation, and endorsed by J. V. Murph and William Yaffe in the District Court of Rogers County against William Yaffe alone. The petition alleges that William Yaffe is a non-resident of the State of Oklahoma and cannot be personally served with summons in Rogers County; that on September 11, 1950, for the consideration of a loan of $5,000' Twin Rivers Sales, Inc. and J. V. Murph and defendant William Yaffe made, executed and delivered the note sued upon by the terms of which they jointly and severally agreed to pay to plaintiff said sum on November 11, 1950, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent from maturity; that .as security for said note and on the same date and at the same time and for the same consideration Twin Rivers Sales, Inc., made, executed and delivered a chattel mortgage to plaintiff upon certain property then in Rogers County consisting of TD 18 International Crawler type motor with equipment, a D4 Caterpillar tractor, an air compressor and a welding machine, which mortgage was duly filed of record; that said note was not paid on its due date and no payments of either principal or interest has been made though demand has been duly made; that involuntary bankruptcy proceedings had been theretofore instituted in the United States District Court for the Northern District against Twin Rivers Sales, Inc., in which said company was duly adjudged a bankrupt; that plaintiff duly filed and presented a claim against the bankrupt’s estate based upon the note here in question and the mortgage lien securing same and asserted the priority of its mortgage lien against all other claimants; that upon hearing plaintiff’s claim was duly allowed and the priority of its mortgage established against the air compressor and the welding machine but by the same order plaintiff was denied a lien upon the TD 18 International Crawler type tractor and in the course of the proceedings it developed that the D4 Caterpillar tractor had been disposed of by the bankrupt prior to the institution of the bankruptcy proceedings and was no longer a part of the bankrupt’s estate; that by the same order the Referee in bankruptcy adjudged that the value of plaintiff’s mortgage security was not worth the amount of the lien against it and directed the Trustee in Bankruptcy to surrender said property to plaintiff; that plaintiff is now foreclosing its mortgage against said property but the value of said property will not exceed $500 or $600; that it is highly improbable that the bankrupt’s estate will be sufficient after all prior claims are paid to pay anything on the note; that J. V. Murph, one of the signers of the note, is a non-resident of Oklahoma and has no property or assets in the state and cannot be personally served with summons in the *368 state; that defendant Yaffe has property in the state, and prayed judgment against him for the sum of $5,000 with interest together with attorney’s fees and costs. Affidavits for attachment against property of defendant situated in Rogers and No-wata County were filed and orders of attachment were issued to the sheriffs of said counties and a drag line bucket, a bank drill, and a drag line belonging to defendant were attached. Thereafter summons by publication based upon said attachments was issued against defendant.

Defendant filed a special plea objecting to the jurisdiction of the court on the grounds that the court had no jurisdiction over his person nor over the property involved herein. Hearing was had on this special plea and the evidence of the Trustee in Bankruptcy for Twin River Sales, Inc., was taken by which it developed that the property attached herein had been in the possession of the bankrupt at the time it was adjudged bankrupt and had been given into the custody of the referee; that thereafter defendant Yaffe had filed a petition in reclamation before the referee in bankruptcy claiming the property as his own; that thereafter the referee had adjudged said property to be the property of Yaffe and no part of the bankrupt’s estate and had ordered the Trustee to surrender the property to Yaffe but Yaffe had never yet called for it. Order denying special plea to the jurisdiction was entered and defendant was given additional tiine to plead. Thereafter defendant filed a motion to strike which was overruled; a motion to make more definite and certain and a general and special demurrer based on the allegations that the court had no jurisdiction of the person of defendant or of the subject matter of the action, that there was a defect of parties defendant, and that the petition did not state a cause of action. Apparently neither of these was passed on by the court. Defendant filed a motion to make additional parties defendant alleging that when the note was executed defendant became an accommodation endorser of said note without consideration for the use and benefit of plaintiff; that at that time plaintiff obtained a chattel mortgage upon a TD 18 tractor and a D4 Caterpillar tractor; that at the time the note was endorsed by defendant plaintiff informed him that plaintiff had a mortgage on said property as security for the note; that subsequent to the execution of the note plaintiff through negligence or carelessness permitted J. R. Todd and Clarence L. Boyd Co. to obtain possession of said property, thereby materially reducing the security for the payment of the note to defendant’s detriment; that in order to obtain a complete determination of the rights and liabilities between plaintiff and defendant it was necessary that said Todd and Clarence L. Boyd Co. be made parties defendant so that an adjudication could be had as to the validity and priority of the chattel mortgage lien against said property, and prayed the court to make said parties defendant and bring them into court by proper process. This motion was overruled by the court.

Thereafter defendant filed his answer which contained no general denial but consisted of specific admissions and denials of various allegations of plaintiff’s petition to the effect that defendant was not a maker of the note but an accommodation endorser for the bank; that he was informed that plaintiff would take adequate collateral security for the note and that it had a chattel mortgage on certain personal property including the TD 18 tractor and the D4 caterpillar tractor mentioned above ; that in preparing the chattel mortgage plaintiff carelessly and negligently mis-described the TD 18 tractor so that as a result the mortgage lien on said tractor was lost and defendant deprived of the benefit of such security in the amount of $9,000 and defendant has therefore become released and exonerated to the value and extent of the security so lost; that through carelessness and negligence plaintiff permitted Twin Rivers Sales, Inc., to sell or dispose of the D4 caterpillar tractor which was worth $3500 as a result of which defendant has become released and exonerated to such amount; that plaintiff had taken no steps to obtain possession of said *369 caterpillar tractor and prevent the mortgagor-from disposing of same; that plaintiff failed to sell the items upon which it foreclosed its mortgage for their true value and apply said true value to the reduction of the principal and interest on the note; that it did not advertise and sell such portion of the mortgaged chattels upon which it foreclosed according to law in that it did not send registered notice to defendant of such sale; that J. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 131, 271 P.2d 365, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yaffe-v-bank-of-chelsea-okla-1954.