The plaintiff below, Mrs. Zumbrunn, is the wife of Mr. W. F. Zumbrunn, who was her agent, and who, with
The association pleaded three defenses: (1) That the notes were given by it with Zumbrunn’s knowledge, without any consideration moving to it, for the accommodation of Charles C. Ladd, for the purpose of lending the Association’s name to Ladd to enable him to obtain credit; (2) that the notes were void, because one of the defendant’s articles of incorporation provided that its “indebtedness, other than that incurred for construction or purchasing the canal, shall not exceed two-thirds of its capital stock,” that its issued and outstanding capital stock, when it gave the notes, was 22,COO shares, of the par value of $1 each, and its indebtedness not incurred for construction or purchasing the canal was $15,000, and that Zumbrunn knew those facts; and (3) that Ladd had made a contract with the defendant to act as its colonization agent to sell lands to and locate settlers on the lands in its irrigation district, that Ladd wanted $6,500 to conduct at Kansas City, Mo., this business of selling these lands, that he went to Grand Junction, Colo., and with the aid of Zumbrunn persuaded the defendant to give the notes in suit to enable Ladd to get this $6,500, and to agree to retain the moneys it should receive from the sales of land by Ladd to pay the notes as they became due, that Zumbrunn agreed that the notes should be paid in that and in no other way, that Ladd entered upon the performance of his contract, and the defendant, with the consent of the plaintiff, paid him the commissions he earned thereunder.
The plaintiff, by her reply, denied all the averments of new matter in this answer. A jury was waived. The court tried the case, and made special findings of the facts: (1) That the notes were made by the defendant in consideration of the amounts thereof, which were received by it from the plaintiff for its own benefit, that it borrowed these amounts from the plaintiff to perform its contract with Ladd, and that, when those amounts were paid over to Ladd, that was done by its direction, to enable it to perform its contract with Ladd, and the defendant was not an accommodation maker or indorser of the notes; (2) that all the sums named in the notes as principals were paid by the plaintiff to the defendant and distributed on its orders, and that it was estopped from maintaining its plea that the execution of the notes was beyond the powers of the corporation; and (3) that the evidence entirely failed to establish that there was any agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant that the notes should be paid out of the moneys received from the sales of land by Ladd, and in no other way; and it rendered judgment against the defendant for $8,352.10, the amount of the notes and interest.
Raying aside this incompetent testimony, there was no substantial evidence at the trial in support of the third defense. The judgment below must be affirmed; and it is so ordered.