56 Neb. 336 | Neb. | 1898
In this action the plaintiff declared upon two promissory notes executed and delivered to one A.- T. McLaughlin, by whom they were sold and transferred to plaintiff. This is the second, appearance of the case in this court. In the opinion rendered on its former hearing it was determined: “(1.) In pleading fraud it is necessary to set out the facts relied upon for relief. Mere epithets or conclusions of fraud, without any statement of the facts upon which such charge is predicated, are insufficient. (2.) Answer examined, - and held to charge a failure of consideration only and not fraud in the inception of the notes sued upon. (3.) Where the only defense alleged in an action by the indorsee of a promissory note is the failure of consideration, the burden is upon the defendant to overcome the presumption that such note was transferred before due, for value, in the usual course of business.” (Crosby v. Ritchey, 47 Neb. 924.) The cause was' then remanded to the district court for further proceedings, and was there again tried on the issues that the plaintiff was not a bona fide purchaser of the notes, coupled with a failure of the consideration which had moved their execution and delivery: A portion of the
In the trial of the cause the defendant was allowed to open and close in the introduction of evidence, etc., for the reason that the burden was on him to maintain the issues, presented. As we have seen, this was settled in the prior decision herein, and had there been no evidence introduced the plaintiff would have been entitled to a verdict and judgment because of the force and weight of the presumption of the law which would have prevailed that he was a good-faith purchaser; hence it was error for the court to refer the jury to the evidence for a basis for a verdict in favor of plaintiff and further tell that body that it must appear from the evidence that the plaintiff was a good-faith purchaser to warrant a finding in his favor. This wholly ignored the presumption to which he was entitled and required something necessarily elemental of a finding for him which was not requisite by law. It is true that there were other paragraphs of the charge in which were contained correct general statements of the rules of law applicable in this same connection, but there was thus produced a direct conflict or contradiction in the instructions which was calculated to confuse the jury and leave it at a loss as to which portion of the charge should be followed, and we cannot now determine with any degree of certainty which view did assume the most force. (11 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 145-148; Wasson v. Palmer, 13 Neb. 376; School District of Chadron v. Foster, 31 Neb. 501; Fitzgerald v. Meyer, 25 Neb. 77; Ballard v. State, 19 Neb. 619; Richardson v.
The instructions given were general in statements, and there were several presented on behalf of the plaintiff and requested to be incorporated in the charge, some of which were with the purpose of placing before the jury definite and explicit information on the subjects relative to which there were in the charge as we have just stated but general declarations. These were: refused and the action as to each has been assigned as error. One of such assignments is of the refusal to give an instruction numbered five, which was as follows: “The notes sued on in this case are negotiable instruments, the execution of which is admitted' by the defendant. You are instructed that a holder of negotiable paper who takes it before maturity, for a valuable consideration, in the usual course of trade, without kno wledge of facts which impeach its validity between antecedent parties, holds it by a good title. To defeat his recovery thereon, it is not sufficient to show that he took it under circumstances which ought to excite suspicion in the mind of a prudent man. To have that effect, it must-be shown that he took the paper under circumstances showing bad faith or want of honesty on his part. The burden is on the defendant to establish, by a preponderance of evidence, that plaintiff is not a bona fide holder of the note sued on, as defined in this instruction.” The matter of this instruction was entirely pertinent and applicable to the theory on which the case was tried and the issues as developed in the evidence and, as the point to which it was directed was not specifically covered in the instructions given, its refusal was error; Whether this alone would have been sufficient to call for a reversal of the judgment we need not determine, as such action must ensue by reason of the first error herein noticed.
We deem a discussion of other assignments of error unnecessary. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.