16 S.D. 292 | S.D. | 1902
This action is upon three promissory notes. The complaint contains three counts, all substantially the same, except as to dates and amounts. It is alleged in the first count: {!) That on December 6, 1892, defendants executed and delivered to one E. Cooper their certain promissory note, and thereby promised to pay said Cooper, or order, $600, on March 1, 1894, with interest at 8 per cent, from date, payable annually; (2) that thereafter, and before the maturity of said note, the payee named therein, in the due course of business, and for a valuable consideration, soid, transferred,' and delivered said note to the plaintiff, and indorsed the same, and that the plaintiff became, and now is, the owner and holder thereof; (3) that the said note is past due, and that no part of it has been paid, except §100, paid thereon December 7, 1892; and (4) that there is due and owing to the plaintiff upon said note $740, with interest. Defendants answered the first cause of action as follows: “(1) Admit the execution and delivery of the promissory note mentioned and described in paragraph 1 in said complaint by defendants. (2) Deny that before the maturity of said note the said E. Cooper, for a valuable consideration, or for any consideration, sold, transferred, and delivered the same to the plaintiff herein. (3) Upon information and belief defendants deny that said Samuel Baker, the plaintiff, is now the owner and holder of said note, but allege that the same is the property of said E. Cooper, the payee named therein. And defendants deny that there is now due and owing to plaintiff from defendants, upon said note, the sum of §740, with in
It is contended that the court erred in receiving the three notes sued upon in evidence, for the reason that it was not shown that the indorsement purporting to have been made by the payee was in his handwriting, and that the court erred in not directing a verdict in favor of the defendants, for the reason that there, was no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was the owner of the notes in suit. Counsel for respondent concede there is no evidence in the record to the effect that the indorsements were in the handwriting of the payee, They do not dispute the proposition that in a suit upon a note payable to a person therein named, or to his order, where the answer denies the execution of the indorsement, the signature of the indorser must be proven. Their position, in the language of their brief, is ‘ ‘that under the pleadings in this case it was not incumbent upon respondent to prove the signature of Cooper, for the reason that the genuineness of the signature was not a point in issue. ” This position is, we think, untenable. It is alleged in the complaint that each of the notes was indorsed by the payee named therein. Defendants deny each and every allegation contained in the complaint and in the several causes of action alleged therein, except such as are specifically admitted in the answer. Nowhere in the answer is the indorse
The execution of the notes being admitted by the pleadings, there was no error in rejecting defendants’ offer to show, by expert witnesses, that the signing of notes at the lower left hand corner, as these in suit were signed, was unusual and irregular.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.