29 Neb. 69 | Neb. | 1890
The plaintiff in the court below brought suit on the following note:
“$150.- Madison, Nebr., Nov. 32, 1887.
“On the first day of March, 1888, we promise to pay Thos. E. Hall, or order, one hundred and fifty dollars at
A. J. Haggland.
“Witnessed by— J. A. Haggland.
“T. E. Darlington.”
And alleged that on November 20, 1887, Hall sold and delivered and indorsed the note to plaintiff, and that the same is due and unpaid.
The defendants answered, admitting the execution and delivery of the note, and the indorsement and delivery to the plaintiff, and setting up:
“2d. The sole and only consideration of the note sued upon was the sale to the defendants of the territory of the precincts of Union Creek, Battle Creek, and Warnerville, in Madison county, Nebraska, or the right to sell a hydrocarbon burner attachment to or for a stove, said by the payee of the note sued upon to be patented and manufactured by Hall & Co., of Kansas City, Missouri, and the said note purported to be for royalties, or in part payment for royalties, upon the burner sold by these defendants; and the said Thos. E. Hall, the payee of said note, and the person who took the same from these defendants, and who represented himself to the defendants to be the agent and attorney of Hall & Co., agreed that within thirty days from the time of the execution and delivery of said note that Hall & Co. would ship to the address of the defendants, at Madison, Nebraska, a sample burner, with which they could canvass, and from which these defendants might be able to manufacture said burners; and with said express agreement and understanding by these defendants with said Thomas E. Hall, they signed and delivered ihe note sued upon, and would not have so signed and deliv
“3d. At the time the plaintiff purchased the note in suit, these defendants were reputed to be, and were and now are, solvent and able to pay the said note, and the same could be collected from them by law, and it was worth in the market more than $140.
“4th. The plaintiff did not purchase said note in the usual course of his trade as business as a banker, or as an investment, but purchased it at a greatly reduced price, at a large discount, for the purpose of speculation, and without having the same transferred and indorsed directly to him, or the payment thereof guaranteed.
“5th. The plaintiff is a banker at Madison, Madison county, Nebraska, and it is his custom, and the custom of all the banks in said town of Madison, to buy notes at a discount, and it is the usual custom of said banker, and was so at the time of the purchase of the note sued upon by the plaintiff, to require the payee or person from whom they purchased notes to transfer the same to them direct and indorse and guarantee the payment thereof; that the usual discount of notes in and at the banks in Madison, in November, 1887, was not to exceed twenty to thirty per cent, by the year, of notes purchased in the usual course of trade; that plaintiff purchased the note in suit of the person with whom the defendants dealt, and to whom they gave it, about the same day it was given, and the payee indorsed it in blank; that plaintiff purchased it for a much, less sum than '$140, and for about the sum of $100, well knowing at the time he purchased it that these defendants were solvent and able to pay the same.
“6th. That the note sued upon, together with other notes to the same payee, were offered for sale at a large discount at the different banks in Madison on or about the
The plaintiff’s reply denied each and every affirmative allegation in the defendants’ answer contained, except those of the third paragraph, which are admitted.
A jury having been impaneled for the trial of the cause, and the court having held that the burden of proof was upon the defendants, the defendants offered a witness, whereupon the plaintiff objected to the introduction of any testimony on the part of the defendants, alleging as the grounds of such objection that the answer admits the execution and purchase of the note and its genuineness, and that the facts pleaded in the answer do not constitute any defense to the action; that it is not alleged in the answer that the plaintiff took the note in suit with any knowledge or notice of the alleged fraud between the antecedent parties, nor that he acted under such circumstances as show bad faith or lack of honesty on his part, which objection was sustained. Whereupon, on motion of the plaintiff, the court, over the objection of the defendants, charged and directed the jury to bring in a verdict for the plaintiff, for the amount of the note sued on; whereupon the jury returned their verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $167.65.
Defendants’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The^cause is brought to this court on error.
I have searched the Code, as well as the reports, in vain for authority to justify the trial court in the practice pur
It is alleged in the answer that the sole and only consideration for the note sued on was the sale to the defendants of the territory of the precincts of Union Creek, Battle Creek, and "Warnerville, in Madison county, Nebraska, or the right to sell a hydro-carbon burner attachment to or for a stove, said by the payee of the note sued on to be patented and manufactured by Hall & Co., of Kansas City, Mo.; and the said note purported to be for royalties, qr in payment for royalties, upon the burners sold by these defendants; and the said Thomas E. Hall, the payee of said note and the person who took the same from the defendants, and who represented himself to the defendants to be the agent and attorney of Hall & Co., agreed that within thirty days from the time of the execution and delivery of said note that Hall & Co. would ship to the address of these defendants, at Madison, Nebraska, a sample burner with which they could canvass, and from which defendants might be able to manufacture said burners, and, with said express agreement and undertaking by the defendants with said Thomas E. Hall, they signed and delivered the note sued on, and would not have so signed and delivered it had they not been induced to do so through and by the representations aforesaid, and that all of the representations made as aforesaid by the said Thomas E. Hall, the payee of said note, were false and untrue in every particular, etc.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.