Young v. Hembree

Decision Date09 November 1937
Docket NumberCase Number: 27401
Citation181 Okla. 202,1937 OK 654,73 P.2d 393
PartiesYOUNG et al. v. HEMBREE
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court
Syllabus

¶0 1. BILLS AND NOTES - Negotiable Instrument Payable to Order - Rights of Transferee Where no Indorsement by Payee.

A negotiable instrument, payable to order of a person named, although not indorsed by the payee, may be transferred by delivery, and the transferee takes such title as the transferor had and may sue in his own name, subject to all the equities existing between the original parties.

2. SAME - Necessity for Indorsement by Payee to Make Transferee Holder in Due Course.

In order to be a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument, where it is payable "to order," the transferee must plead and prove that the check was indorsed by the payee.

3. SAME - Indorsement of Check Held Insufficient to Make Transferee Holder in Due Course.

Where a check is payable to "Horn & Faulkner Oil Trust" and indorsed "Horn & Faulkner, by L.H. Horn." and there is no evidence to show that they are one and the same firm or legal entity, held, the indorsement is not that of the payee and the transferee is not a holder in due course, but takes subject to the defenses that could have been interposed against the payee.

4. BANKS AND BANKING - Nature of Check - Right to Stop Payment.

A check is merely an order on the bank to pay money, and the maker has the right to stop payment at any time before acceptance.

Appeal from Court of Common Pleas, Oklahoma County; J.B. Barnett, Judge.

Action by Jess Hembree against I.W. Young et al. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant named appeals. Reversed.

Sid White, for plaintiffs in error.

O.E. Siler, for defendant in error.

HURST, J.

¶1 This is a suit on a check. Defendant orally agreed to loan Horn and Faulkner a sum of money to "help them out in some oil drilling," and they agreed to issue to him "some trust stock that would guarantee the repayment." Defendant then wrote a check and designated "Horn & Faulkner Oil Trust" payee as directed by them. The next day defendant stopped payment on the check before it was presented to the bank. The stock was never delivered and the drilling operations proceeded only as far as the cement foundation.

¶2 The check, without being presented for payment, was then indorsed "Horn & Faulkner, by L.H. Horn," and delivered to plaintiff in part payment for labor and materials furnished to "Horn & Faulkner Oil Trust." Plaintiff made no investigation regarding the check when he received it, but there was nothing on its face to indicate payment had been stopped. After two unsuccessful attempts to cash it, he brought this action. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and the defendant, the maker of the check, brings this appeal.

¶3 The first question is whether plaintiff is a holder in due course. In order to be a holder in due course, where the instrument is payable "to order," plaintiff must plead and prove that the check was indorsed by the payee. Where the indorsement is not proved to be that of the payee, or where there is no indorsement at all, plaintiff takes, not as an innocent purchaser, but subject to the defenses that might have been interposed against the payee. Phelps v. Womack (1917) 66 Okla. 111, 167 P. 478; Gault v. Kane (1915) 44 Okla. 763, 145 P. 1128; Hummell v. Browm (1923) 93 Okla. 256, 221 P. 738. Plaintiff does not question the correctness of this rule, but claims that there is no absolute rule as to what form the indorsement must take (8 C. J. 352, sec. 531), and that the signature "Horn & Faulkner, by L.H. Horn" is a sufficient indorsement of "Horn & Faulkner Oil Trust." But on its face, the indorsement is not that of the payee, and there is no evidence in the record to show that they are one and the same firm...

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7 cases
  • Ritter v. Moore
    • United States
    • Idaho Supreme Court
    • 3 Julio 1942
    ... ... It is necessary that an ... order instrument be indorsed and proof of indorsement by the ... payee must be made by the transferee. (Young v ... Hembree (1937), 73 P.2d 393, (Okla.); Clayton v ... Bank of East Chattanooga (1920), 85 So. 271, 204 Ala ... 64; Marvick v. Knight ... ...
  • Blackmon v. Hale
    • United States
    • California Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
    • 5 Junio 1969
    ...1965 and therefore has no direct application to this case, we think the rule it sets forth has always been good law. (Young v. Hembree, (1937), 181 Okl. 202, 73 P.2d 393.) In Scala v. Miners' & Merchants' Bank, 64 Colo. 185, 171 P. 752, the Supreme Court of Colorado held that a check payabl......
  • Mid-Central Towing Co. v. National Bank of Tulsa, MID-CENTRAL
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • 1 Diciembre 1959
    ...See First National Bank of Durant v. School District #4, Bryan County, 31 Okl. 139, 120 P. 614, 39 L.R.A.,N.S.., 655; Young v. Hembree, 181 Okl. 202, 73 P.2d 393; Brown v. Eastman National Bank of Newkirk, Okl., 291 P.2d 828, 55 A.L.R.2d Title 48 O.S.1951 § 75, provides, 'absence or failure......
  • Time Loan Service v. Bukowitz
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • 12 Enero 1954
    ... ... Young v. Hembree, 181 Okl. 202, 73 P.2d 393; Nokomis National Bank v. Hendricks, 205 Ill.App. 54 ... In other cases, it has been held that a trivial ... ...
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