Rancidity isn't necessarily easy to detect with the nose. If you feel comfortable to do so, you could just eat a bit of either oil. With refined oils, bitter, cheesy, tart, acrid-adstingent (like EVOO), or otherwise weird taste suggests rancidity, or at least inferior quality.
You cannot look into the manufacturing process. Oils are deodorised to sell them as industrial/cosmetic ingredients when they are of too low quality to meet food standards. They also might have been inadequately stored at the manufacturer or your supplier's warehouse.
This thread isn't about rancidity, but OP had other quality issues with palm oil, that vanished with changing the supply.
ad HP recipe: There is no hard rule how long to cook HP soap, the rule is “as long as it needs to finish saponifying”. But given you only use quick tracing oils, I guess you are well above the needed time (longer cook doesn't hurt, except when you're losing too much water to evaporation and/or the soap burns). But thanks for clarifying, so we can exclude this
Okay, that is a good idea about testing the oil by tasting it. I have bought my oils from this company a few times and never had an issue( crafters choice). However, today I went out and bought from another place I have used in the past( soapers choice). I am at such a loss. I think it might be the humidity or where I am curing them causing the issue. During the winter it did not matter because it was SO dry already in the house. Maybe because it is spring, it is more humid and that is causing the soap to go rancid?