Osage Oil & Refining Co. v. Union Nat. Bank

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Osage Oil & Refining Co. v. Union Nat. Bank, 233 P. 1066 (Okla. 1925)
106 Okla. 275; 1925 OK 180; 1925 Okla. LEXIS 80
Max'ey

Osage Oil & Refining Co. v. Union Nat. Bank

Opinion of the Court

Opinion by

MAX'EY, C.

This is an action on a promissory note executed by the Osage Oil & Refining Company and J. E. Whitehead to George F. Geiger on the 10th day of March, 1921, for (he sum of $1,626, with interest at the) rate of 10 per cent, and the usual provisions for attorneys’ fees, which said note was afterwards assigned by George F. Geiger to th,e plaintiff, Union National Bank of Bartlesville. Suit was instituted on said note by- the Union National Bank on -Hie 24tk day of September, 1921, and -a trial of the case was had on the 22md day of December, 19-21, before the court and a jury, resulting in -a verdict and judgment for tint plaintiff. The principal contention of counsel for plaintiffs in error for reversal is the overruling of the defendants’ motion 'to suppress the deposition of R, L. Beatty,, the president of the Union National Bank, thej plaintiff. We regard this motion and ihe argument in support of same as highly technical and counsel have devoted almost their entire brief to a discussion of this assignment of error, and have cited many authorities from the courts of other states and from the federal courts, but in our judgment none of these authorities apply to the situation here presented, as the vital point here presented is: Did the court cjrr in permitting counisel for plaintiff to withdraw the deposition after it had been returned by the notary and published? After the deposition was- published, it w-as discovered by defendants’ attorneys that the date of the taking of the deposition! was given in the notary’s" certtifi- *276 cate as November 9th and the date for taking the deposition in the notice was November 14th. Counsel for defendants filed a motion to suppress the deposition on account of this variance. The grounds of ((he motion to suppress are as follows:

“1. The notice Cor the 'taking of such deposition is indefinite and insufficient as to the place of taking.
“2. The notice for taking said deposition is sta!ed as November 14th, and the certificate attached ito said deposition shows that same was taken on November 9th, 1922, and th,e envelope enclosing said deposition does not show that the same were] taken by or before any person as the law directs.”

On the hearing of this motion, the court intimalled that it thought the second ground of the motion was -good. Whereupon counsel for plaintiff asked in open court leave of court to withdraw the deposition and return it to the notary for the correction <.f the date, so as to express ilhe truth. Leave was granted to return it to the notary and upon inquiring of the court as to how the deposition should be sent to the notary, the comil indicated that it would be all right for (he attorneys to send it, direct to the.' oficer talcing same, and 'ask him to correct the certificate to conform to the facts, and Ubis Was done and the notary corrected the date in the certificate and returned it to the attorney and he took it to the clerk’s office and put it in the files of the case. Counsel for defendants Ithen added a third ground to their motion to suppress as fob lows:

“3.i The envelopes enclosing' said deposition does not show that the same was taken by or before any person as the law directs and since the .same hag attempted to be so ■amended said deposition, has not been enclosed in a new envelope addressed to the clerk ol' Ibis court nor filed herein as (he law directs.”

The matter then came up before the court and after some wrangling among counsel, the court said:

“The Court: How did these depositions get back here in the clerk’s office, or have they been here since? A. Yes, sir. The Court: How did thcSy get there? A. I brought llhem back myself, took them out under leave of court and returned them. The Court: You just — did you put them h; that envelope when you brought, them back? A. Yes, sir; in the jacket. The Court: And you didn’t, seal the envelope, that is what I am trying to get at? A. No, sir. The Court:' I am just wonderin'* if there is anything in that point or not. The deposition was taken out by leave of court? A. Yes. Thej Court: As X understand from your statement when it came back to you from the no (ary that wi-lh the date appearing, everything appearing on the 14-th as appears here now and that you then brought ic up lo ilhe eterk’s office and filed it there in the original envelope? A. Yes, sir. The Court: The motion is overruled. The motion to suppress the deposition is overruled.”

The trial was then, had, and the plaintiff introduced in evidence the deposition of It. L. Beatty, the president .of the plaintiff bank, to which was attached a copy of the note sued on and a number of letters, from the defendant J. E. Whitehead, active vice president of the Osage Oil & Refining Company, in which letters Whitehead was begging for an extension of time on said note and offering to pay the interest up to dale, and did send a check to cover the interest. Thej defendant Geiger, the indorsee of the note, consented to an extension, but it does not appear that the other defendants did consent, but brought this suit to collect same. This deposition of R. L. Beatty, with the exhibits thereto, was all the testimony offered by plaintiff, and Ithe defendants put D. S. Levy, an attorney at law of Oklahoma City, on the stand,, who testified as to the handwriting of the signatures to the exhibits to the depositions. He testified that he was a practicing lawyer and that in his profession he received a gi‘.eat many letters and was familiar with comparing signatures, and that in his opinion three of the signatures wer^ not signed by the same person as the firslt three, and as to the other one, he could not say. This testimony, if proper, is very unsatisfactory and .sheds very little light on this controversy. The plaintiff also introduced thes original note. At the close of the testimony, both parties moved for an instructed verdict. The motion of the defendants was overruled by the court and the defendants excepted and Hie motion of the plainltiff was sustained, and the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount sued for and defendants excepted. The defendants filed a timely motion for new trial, which was overruled and defendants excepted and have brought 'thq case to this court by petition in .error, with case-made attached.

The authorities cited by plaintiffs in error are from Ithe different stat^ courts and federal courts, but none of them pass on the exact question here presented. It will be observed from the foregoing statement that everything was done in open court, and there was n'o objection made ito the manner suggested by the court of transmitting the deposition to the notary and his return, of *277 the deposition after being corrected. It is shown that the change which was made in the deposition was changing the date from the 9th of Nov.embe;r to the 14th of November, which it is conceded was the date given in the notice to take depositions. Counsel have cited several sections of our statutes on the taking of depositions and insist that they are «mandatory and any deviation from the statutes is fatal and insist because the deposition was returned to the notary and by him returned to ithe attorney for plaintiff and by him refiled in the clerk’s office 'that thait fact invalidates the deposition, anti it was improperly admitted. The sections of our statutes referred to by plaintiffs in error in their brief are the proper guide to taking of depositions and returning same to the clerk of the court, so that they cannot be tampered with. In this ease, there is no contention but what the depositions were¡ properly returned as required by statute to the clerk im the first instance and were open and published and examined by counsel for defendants, and the error in the. date discovered. There is no contention by counsel for plaintiffs in error, that anything was changed in the deposition, exceipt the date as above stated. There is no contention that the deposition was in any way tampered with, but that it was in the same condition when it was returned except the correcting of the date from November 9th to the 14th. There is but one case cited by counsel m ilh^ir briefs from our own court on this particular point, and that i,s the case of Eldridge v. Compton, 30 Okla. 170, 119 Pac. 1120, and the quotation from this case goes to show that this court has adopted very libieral views dn¡ regard to taki|»g depositions :

“A deposition should not he suppressed b.eoausq th^ officer faking it does not certify that he is not related to either of (he parties, unless there .is some affirmative showing of such relationship; the presumption being thait thel officer is qualified.”

In .this case, there is nil absence of any showing that the deposition was tampered with, and we do not think the motion to suppress should have been sustained, and think the court was right in overruling same. The plaintiff’s in error insist 'that the motion to make more definite and certain directed against^ plaintiff’s petition should have been sustained and based the million on thq alleged fact that Geiger was the only one of (he defendants who agreed to the extension. We think the letters attached to Mr. Beauty’s deposition are sufficient to show that thert other defendants not only consented but were persistent in urging the extension, for these letters with ilhe name of J. E. Whitehead, president of the Osage Oil & Refining Company, or J. E. Whitehead individually was signed to them; and exhibit “A” is the note sued on, “B” is a letter from Whitehead as president, and is begging for lime and offering to pay the interest, “0” is a letter from Whitehead saying Ifhat it is impossible 'to take care of the obligation at this time, and incloses ehejeik for the interest, and asks that it be. credited on the note, “D” is begging for time and pleading of ha,rd times generally, “K” is fo the same effect and asking them to lie patient and (Extend the time, “F” is begging for co-operation and an extension. While ¡Mr. Levy did not lliink ail of the signatures were made by the same person, tbe letters are all of if he same tenor and effect. Mr. Whitehead was present at the trial as one of the attorneys. He did not take the stand to deny a single letter or his signailure to them, so we do not think there is any error in the court's ruling on this matter. The last error assigned is directed to th<rt court’s sustaining a directed verdict. Both parties ask for an instructed \erdict, and ffhe rule, ns me understand it, is that when both parties ask for an instructed verdict that this is equivalent to saying to the court tihnt tingre is northing to submit to the jury, and in this case we think the court was right in denying defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, and was also right in sustaining the plaintiff’s motion. It must be remembered that the) defendants did not offe,r any testimony whatever cn the merits of the case, but satisfied themselves with the technical questions that they had raised during the trial. On the whole case, we think the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

By the Court; It is so ordered.

Reference

Full Case Name
OSAGE OIL & REFINING CO. Et Al. v. UNION NAT. BANK
Status
Published