198 Iowa 1345 | Iowa | 1924
— This is the-second appeal in this ease. The first was by the defendant from a judgment against him for the amount due on the note. The case was reversed. 194 Iowa 1090. Upon the second trial, the case was submitted to the jury under instructions which are not objected to. The verdict was for the defendant.
The action was upon a note which was executed by appellee to the appellant bank, and which was a second renewal of a note given by appellee to the Midland Packing' Company for stock of the company, sold to appellee by one Chance, an agent of the company. The pleaded defense on the second trial was that the original note was procured by fraud, in that Chance represented that the note was only to be put up as collateral, and agreed that the stock would be resold within four months; and that the note was executed and delivered upon a condition precedent that it should not become effective unless such resale agreement should be fulfilled. The appellant denied the fraud, and pleaded that it was a holder of the original note in due course; that appellee, by twice renewing the note, was estopped to claim fraud in its inception; that, at the time it purchased the original note, it gave its certificate of deposit for the' amount, which it paid at maturity to the Midland Packing Company without knowledge of any fraud practiced upon the maker in the procurement of the original note; and that thereby appellee was estopped from setting up fraud in the inception of the note.
II.Complaint is made that a letter written by an officer of the packing company to a brother of appellee’s was read to the jury. At the time the letter was offered, the court overruled the objection to it, but later sustained it. There is some dispute as to ■whether the letter was read to the jury. Be that as it may, there was no prejudicial error; the letter was excluded, and the jury must have so understood.
III.The court permitted witnesses to testify to representations made by Chance to them in the effort to induce them to buy stock in the packing company at about the time the stock was sold to appellee. The testimony was admissible. Newton v. Young, 197 Iowa 1143; Henderson v. Ball, 193 Iowa 812, and cases cited.
IV. A witness for appellee testified, on cross-examination, that he had been defeated in a suit brought by appellant against him on a note given to the packing company, and on redirect examination was permitted .to say that the court had directed a verdict for the plaintiff in that case. The original inquiry was only competent for its bearing on the interest of the witness, and it wTas immaterial how the result in that case was brought about; but we see no possible prejudice to appellant in the fact shown that the witness did not get to the jury with his defense.
V. Appellant, at the close of all the evidence, moved for a directed verdict, and assigns error upon the overruling of the motion. It is urged in argument that 'the motion should. have been sustained because appellee neither alleged nor proved that he had rescinded the contract for the purchase of the stock. The question was not raised by the motion to direct a
VI. It is also urged that the motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained: (1) because appellant had established that it was a holder in due course of the original note; (2) because the renewal note was given with knowledge on the part of appellee of the alleged fraud in the original note; (3) because appellee failed to inform appellant of such fraud before appellant paid1 to the packing company the certificate of deposit issued for the note, and is thereby estopped; (4) because there was a failure to establish the fraud pleaded.
Appellee testified that, when he bought the stock and executed the original note, on March 2, 1919, Chance showed him a letter signed by Mr. Heidelberg, the president of the appellant bank, stating that Chance was honest, and would do as he agreed, and that it was a good investment; that his agreement with Chance was that the note was to be left in the Anthon State Bank until the stock was sold, and that Chance would come and resell it within four months, and if he did not, the note was to be given back to appellee; that Chance gave him a written agreement to that effect, as follows:
“March 21-19
“I agree to sell for J. M. Bernard 100 shares of Midland Packing Co. stock for $125.00 per share net to above, same to be sold within 4 mo. from date. If not sold as above all notes to be returned to above.
“W. M. Chance, Financial Agt.,
“Midland Packing Co.”
The original note was, on the same day, negotiated by Chance to the appellant. Appellant’s certificate of deposit due in six months was issued to the packing company for the note.
Appellee testified further that the profits of the resale of the stock were to be divided; that Chance said he was to divide the profits with the Anthon State Bank; that, about a week after he signed the note, he showed Heidelberg a copy of the contract Chance gave him, and Heidelberg said, “That is the copy all right, — that is the agreement all right;” that he told Heidelberg the way the profit was to be divided, and the latter said, “That is right, — 9 per cent goes to me, and that makes 15 per cent, — that is good;” and that he advised appellee to go and see the officers of the packing company, if he did not believe it.
If the president of the appellant bank, at the time he took the note from Chance, had knowledge that it had been executed and delivered upon an agreement to return it if the stock was not sold within four months; that the packing company’s title was defective, and it was being negotiated in breach of faith,— it is plain that the bank was not a holder in due course. Sections 3060-a55 and 3060-a52, Code Supplement, 1913 (Sections 9515 and 9512, Code of 1924); Home State Bank v. Martin, 196 Iowa 1092; Todd v. State Bank, 182 Iowa 276; Louisa County Nat. Bank v. Burr, 198 Iowa 4.
Furthermore, it is an admitted fact that the bank’s certificate of deposit given for the note was not paid- until the September following, before which time, according to the testimony of appellee, he had shown a copy of the contract of re
We have not set out all the testimony, but sufficient to show that it was clearly not improper to submit to the jury the question whether appellant was a holder in due course.
It was also held on the former appeal that the giving of the renewal notes was not, as a matter of law, a waiver by appellee of his defense of fraud in the inception of the original note. The doctrine there announced has not b'een followed in our later decisions, where the renewal was with knowledge on the part of the
maker of the fraud practiced upon him, and has been expressly overruled. Farmers and Merchants Sav. Bank v. Jones, 196 Iowa 1071; Grimes Sav. Bank v. McHarg, 197 Iowa 1393; Sullivan v. Gaul, 198 Iowa 630. Nevertheless, the rule announced by this court on the former appeal became the law of the case, and binding on the trial court and this court. Pfarr v. Standard Oil Co., 176 Iowa 577; Kenyon v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 187 Iowa 277; Bolton v. Hey, 168 Pa. 418 (31 Atl. 1097); Heller v. Dailey, 34 Ind. App. 424 (70 N. E. 821); Cain v. Union Cent. L. Ins. Co., 123 Ky. 59 (93 S. W. 622).
In the case of Barton v. Thompson, 56 Iowa 571, we said:
“Upon the trial of this case the court instructed, in harmony with the rule adopted upon the former appeal, # * *. It is the established doctrine of the courts that a decision once made in a ease constitutes the law of the particular case, and will not, upon a subsequent appeal in the same case, be overruled or examined, however well satisfied this court 'may be that it is erroneous. Adams County v. B. & M. R. Co., 55 Iowa 94, and authorities cited. As the court below followed the rule originally adopted in this case, Ave Avould not feel justified, under the authorities above referred to, in adopting a different*1351 rule upon this appeal, which would lead to a reversal of the case. ’ ’
The statement has peculiar applicability to the situation here presented.
The claim of estoppel arising from appellant’s payment of the certificate of deposit was also one to be submitted to the jury. If the bank paid the certificate with knowledge of the fraud, or that the note for which it was paying was not to effective unless the stock was sold, and that no resale had been made, no estoppel could be claimed. Where the facts are known to both parties, there can be no estoppel. Wingert v. City of Tipton, 134 Iowa 97; Logan v. Davis, 147 Iowa 441. As we have seen, there was testimony, not only that the bank had knowledge of the resale contract before the certificate was paid, but that it was to participate in the profits of the resale. There was other testimony as to the bank’s relation to the whole scheme, from which it might have been found that it had knowledge that the stock had not been resold. The question of the bank’s knowledge was one of fact, to be determined upon conflicting evidence and inferences that might properly be drawn from established facts.
It follows from what has been said that-the verdict cannot be disturbed because contrary to an instruction on the question of estoppel, to the effect that appellee would be estopped from setting up the fraud claimed if the bank paid the certificate without knowledge or information of the fraud in the making of the original note. There was evidence to take to the jury the question of fraud in the inception of the original note.
We find no reversible error, and the judgment is — Affirmed.