12 S.D. 108 | S.D. | 1899
This is an action upon five promissory notes, each drawn for the sum of $25, and payable to the Lake Madison Chautauqua Association of South Dakota. The plaintiff was the assignee of these notes, and they, with one other, were given in consideration of one share of the stock of the association and a 99-year lease to a lot of ground belonging to the association. The complaint was in the usual form, and to this the defendant interposed an answer as follows: “That on or about July 18, 1893, this defendant and the Lake Madison
Before proceeding to discuss the merits of the case, it becomes necessary to dispose of a motion made by the appellant to strike out the respondent’s additional abstract, made upon the grounds (1) that the matters and things therein set forth are not in this case and are not authenticated; and (2) because the matters and things therein set forth are not contained in the bill of exceptions, and are not a part of the record herein.
We are of the opinion the motion must be denied. The additional abstract purports to set out certain proceedings had qn the trial on the 23rd of May, 1898, to amend the complaint and judgment. The record of these proceedings consisted of a notice of motion to amend pilaintiff’s complaint by striking out the last cause of action — being upon the last note — -reducing the amount of the judgment, the affidavit upon which the mo
On the trial the plaintiff introduced in evidence the notes sued on, proved its incorporation, and rested. Thereupon the defendant Spear moved the court for the direction of a verdict against the plaintiff, for the reason that the plaintiff had failed to prove a cause of action against the defendant under the pleadings; the notes being nonnegotiable, and plaintiff not having shown that the payee had performed conditions precedent to recover under its contract shown by the pleadings. The motion was denied, and the ruling of the court in so denying the motion is assigned as error. We are of the opinion that the ruling of the court was correct, as the production of the notes in evidence made out a prima Vacie case for the plaintiff. The contract alleged on the part of the defendant Spear, and in effect admitted in the reply, was a matter of defense.
Defendant Spear thereupon introduced in evidence a memorandum receipt signed by the Lake Madison Chautauqua Association, by J. L. Jones, its agent, by which the association acknowledged the receipt of six promissory notes, dated July 18, 1893, for $25 each, and giving the several dates of pay,ment, in full payment oí one share of stock in the Lake Madison Chautauqua Association of South Dakota, and in which was the following stipulation: "It is hereby agreed by and between the Lake Madison Chautauqua Association of South Dakota and the maker of the above notes that, upon the full payment of the above notes, he shall receive a ninety-nine year
The respondent insists that the association had. substantially complied with its agreement by entering the name of Spear as a stockholder upon the books of the association, and that the certificate of stock was only evidence that he was such a stockholder; and it further insists that the agreement to execute the lease was an independent agreement, and not a condition precedent to the right of respondent to recover It will be noticed in this case that the notes are non-negotiable, and were executed as separate and distinct instruments from the