96 Neb. 142 | Neb. | 1914
' August 9,1909, defendant Tate bought from G. L. Smith 640 acres of land in Cheyenne county, for the agreed price of $15 an acre, which would be $9,600. Tate prepared a contract for execution, which recited the consideration named, and provided that he should pay $1,000 in cash and the balance, $8,600, March 1, 1910. He signed the contract so written and passed it over to Smith for signature. Smith thought that $1,000 was hardly a sufficient cash payment upon so large a transaction. Tate then proposed to give him his note for $2,000, payable on the same date that the contract would mature, stating that, if he (Tate) then failed to make good his contract by paying the balance of the agreed consideration, Smith would have $1,000 in cash and Tate’s promissory note for $2,000. This was satisfactory to Smith, and he thereupon executed the contract. The contract was executed in duplicate and each of the parties took a copy thereof. Subsequently, and before the maturity of the note and contract, Smith assigned the note to the plaintiff bank, of which he was president and a director. Four days before the maturity of the note and contract Smith visited Fremont, the home of Tate, and, Tate being absent from the state on an extended visit to California, represented to Tate’s business associate, Mr. Ehrhardt, that he (Smith) would like to have the deal closed up a few days in advance, of the date named in the contract, so as to enable him to close some other deals which he had maturing on March 1. Ehrhardt took Tate’s copy of the contract, and met Smith in the office of the cashier of Tate’s bank in Fremont. There, in the presence of the cashier, Mr. Knapp, Mr. Ehrhardt called the
The only question of law we deem it necessary to consider is the one raised by the special appearance of Smith;
The fact that the contract of sale was set out in the cross-petition and introduced in evidence cuts no figure in this case, except as evidence offered by defendant Tate to corroborate his testimony as to the facts and circumstances which led to his giving Smith the note in suit. If the purchase price of the land bought by Tate from Smith was $9,600 and the note in controversy was given as part of the consideration for that purchase, it matters not whether the note was given at or subsequent to the time the contract was actually signed and delivered, or whether or not it was indorsed upon the contract as a payment thereon. That it was so given is established by the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence. We are not surprised that the trial court so found. It could not have found otherwise. The question as to whether on February 25, 1910, the contract belonged to Tate individually or to the “Tate-Erhardt Land Company” is immaterial, so far
The judgment of the district court is in all things
Affirmed.