195 Iowa 447 | Iowa | 1923
I. Appellee has filed a motion to dismiss the
(1) That Pearson paid the judgment entered against him into the clerk’s hands, and that the plaintiff accepted the same and receipted to the clerk therefor.
(2) That the plaintiff paid the costs taxed against it.
There was no controversy over Pearson’s liability upon the one note. Tie was coneededly liable therefor. His liability, therefore, could not be affected by this pending appeal. There is no plausible reason suggested why the plaintiff should allow the proceeds thus paid in to remain in the hands of the clerk until the determination of this appeal; nor does appellee suggest how such a course could subserve any purpose of this appeal. Clearly, this ground of the motion is not well taken. Indeed, we have so held repeatedly. Upton Mfg. Co. v. Huiske, 69 Iowa 557; Lytle Inv. Co. v. McMorris, 189 Iowa 1355.
As to the second ground, the fact appearing is that the clerk paid to the plaintiff only such amount as remained in his hands after discharging therefrom the costs taxed against the plaintiff. In the absence of a supersedeas, the clerk had a right to make this application. The ultimate right of the plaintiff, pursuant to his appeal, was in no manner affected by such action by the clerk. Only a voluntary and perhaps affirmative payment by the plaintiff of a judgment against it could operate as a waiver of its appeal. The motion to dismiss is, therefore, overruled.
II. Though several grounds of reversal are specified by appellant, all such grounds are reducible to the broad proposition that, under the pleadings and under the evidence, the plaintiff was entitled to a directed verdict on both notes. The first contention of appellant xx jg that tbe fraud alleged by defendant was badly pleaded, and that, therefore, the allegation of fraud should have been disregarded by the court, and a verdict directed accordingly. Though the fraud was badly pleaded, it was pleaded. The plaintiff recognized the pleadings as a charge of fraudulent representations in obtaining the signature, and
We pass, therefore, to the contention that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict.
The facts disclosed are somewhat peculiar and unusual. The two notes in suit are designated in the record as Exhibit A and Exhibit B. Each note was air exact duplicate of the other, except as to date. Exhibit B bore date March 25, 1918. Exhibit A bore date April 18, 1919. Each note was drawn due on demand. Each note was given in renewal of a previous note. According to plaintiff’s claim, each note was the last in a series of renewal notes, and each represented a different original indebtedness. According to Pearson, he became surety for Pace upon a $500 note November 25, 1911, and thereafter executed renewal notes for the same debt; and in the period intervening between November 25, 1911, to and including April 18, 1919, he executed five successive renewal notes, and each renewal note was intended as a discharge of the preceding note. The time intervening between these renewals was ordinarily about one year. Every renewal note signed by Pearson subsequent to the year 1913 was drawn due on demand; so that all the renewal notes signed by Pearson as surety for Pace throughout the period of about eight years were complete duplicates of each other, except as to the date of execution. Such was the case from the viewpoint of Pearson.
It appears, however, as a fact (though Pearson did not know it, as he claims), that, in 1911, Pace, the principal debtor, became indebted to the plaintiff bank upon two notes for $500 each. One of these notes bore the date July 17, 1911, and the
It is urged, however, that Pearson was negligent in failing to read the note, and that, therefore, he is not entitled to relief. But there was nothing for him to learn by reading the note, more than he already knew. He knew that he had signed the
It will be seen at this point that the defendant could have interposed a different defense from that which he did; and that is that the execution and delivery of the last renewal note by him was an extinction of all previous notes signed by him for the same and only debt for which he was surety. This would involve a concession of liability on the note Exhibit A. (rather than Exhibit B), as being the last note signed by him, and a plea that the execution and delivery of such final note were intended to and did work a discharge of all preceding renewal notes. Such a defense would doubtless involve a waiver of the fraud as a ground of defense. There is a sense in which it could properly be said that, inasmuch as the last note signed by him was in every respect appropriate in form as a renewal of his conceded previous obligation, there was no actionable fraud in inducing its execution. Nevertheless, if the cashier obtained the execution of any note, intending at that time to use it as a renewal of a note of like form to which Pearson was not a party, and knowing that Pearson intended the note for a different purpose, then the execution of the note was obtained by such cashier with fraudulent purpose.
We do not assume to pass upon the weight of this conflicting testimony, nor to put our own judgment of the facts into the balance. We do hold that the testimony of Pearson had the corroboration of persuasive circumstances, and that it was quite abundant to go to the jury. The judgment below is, accordingly, —Affirmed.