142 Ky. 76 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion or the Court by
Affirming.
. Appellant, Anthony Caruso, brought this action against appellee, John B. Brown, to recover on the following note:
“$2,500.00. Cincinnati, Ohio, March 10th, 1908.
“On or before sixty days after date we promise to pay to the order of John B. Brown................... Twenty-five Hundred and no 100..............Dollars payable at The Citizens National Bank of Danville, Ky., ...... Value received with interest at 6 per cent.
“No. 1........Due........
“Danville, Columbia, Scottsville Railroad Company.
“By J. F. Allen, President.”
Said note was indorsed as follows: .
*77 “Cincinnati, 0., Meh. 10th, 1908.
“For value received, I do hereby sell, transfer, and deliver the within note to Anthony Caruso and hereby guarantee the prompt payment of this note when due.
“John B. Brown,
“Liberty Township,
“Casey County, Ky.”
After setting forth the execution of the note, the petition charged that appellee Brown had signed and transferred the note in question to appellant and had guaranteed the payment thereof. The petition concludes with an allegation to the effect that, after the maturity of the note, it was duly presented at the Citizens National Bank, of Danville, Kentucky, during banking hours, and payment thereof refused.
To the petition appellee filed an answer interposing several defenses. In the first paragraph he denied the allegations of the petition. In the second paragraph he charged that the obligation sued on was simply an obligation of the Danville, Columbia and Scottsville Bail-road Company, and was known by appellant to be such,, as well as accepted by him as such. Then follows an allegation that the note had been paid by the acceptance by appellant of certain shares of stock. Paragraph three contained a plea of fraud, and charged that by the fraud of appellant and his attorney, he was induced to indorse the note in the belief that he was acting in his official capacity as treasurer of the railroad company and it was necessary for him to indorse the note in order to bind that company; that he signed the note without knowing that he became bound in his individual capacity, and would not have signed it except for the fraud of appellant and his attorney. By paragraph four appellee pleaded that the sum of $833.33 1-3 was paid on said note on or about March 24th, 1908, and that appellant accepted same in full discharge of any obligation he had against appellee. It will not be necessary to consider paragraph five, as a demurrer was sustained to it. Other-pleadings were filed, completing the issues. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for appellee. From the judgment based thereon, this appeal is prosecuted.
The facts in brief are as follows: Appellee and a man by the- name of Allen were incorporators of the Danville, Columbia and Scottsville Bailroad Company. Money was needed for the purpose of building the railroad. Allen induced appellant to come to Danville and
The improbability of Caruso making the proposed loan to the railroad, which had no assets, without taking security of some kind, tends to support the testimony of him and his attorney, that there was no fraud of any kind practiced upon appellee. However, the question was one for the jury and was submitted in instructions which are not complained of, and, while the jury might properly have found for appellant, we can not say that its finding is flagrantly against the evidence.
Indeed, the only two grounds relied upon for reversal are (1) the failure of the court to require appellee to elect which of the defenses set out in his answer he would rely upon, and (2) holding that appellee had the burden of proof.
Under the rule now in force, very great latitude is allowed a defendant in the number and character of defenses he may interpose to an action. For the purpose of determining whether defenses are inconsistent or not, the law divides them into two classes: First, those which are inconsistent and contradictory in point of fact; second, those which are merely technically inconsistent by
Nor is there any inconsistency between paragraph one and paragraph three. Paragraph three makes paragraph one a part thereof. Paragraph one, in effect, denies that the note sued on was appellee’s individual obligation, while paragraph three makes plain Why this allegation was made; that is, it shows that appellee indorsed the note upon the assurance that he was simply being bound in his official capacity. The effect of the two-paragraphs, therefore, is to show that he was bound only in his official capacity, and not in his individual capacity..
There is no inconsistency- in fact between paragraph two and paragraph four. Paragraph two contains really a plea of payment, while paragraph four attempts to-make a plea of accord and satisfaction.
Our conclusion, then, is that where it is attempted to charge a person with liability on a note in his individual' capacity, he may deny the execution of the note in that, capacity and may also plead payment, fraud, and accord' and satisfaction, and that none of these pleas would be so-inconsistent in fact that the proof of one would tend to-disprove the other.
The next contention concerns the propriety of the-court’s action in placing the burden of proof on appellee..
Finding no error in the record prejudicial to the substantial rights of appellant, it follows that the judgment must he affirmed; and it is so ordered.