85 Neb. 760 | Neb. | 1910
This action was commenced in the district court for Lancaster county upon five promissory notes, dated June 10, 1903, signed jointly by all three defendants. The defendants each filed a separate answer. Defendant Silvers alleged that “before this action was brought, and after the giving of the several promissory notes mentioned and described in said petition, to wit, on or about August 17, 1903, the said plaintiff for a good and valuable consideration, to wit, the purchase by this answering defendant from the said plaintiff on or about said date one sixteenliorsepower Huber traction engine, and one Huber steam thresher, and other property, released and discharged this answering defendant from the claims and cause of action set forth in its petition filed herein, and thereby this answering defendant was discharged by said plaintiff from the payment of the debts, or notes, mentioned in said petition.” Further, “that the several promissory notes mentioned and described in the petition were given by the defendants herein for the purchase by these defendants from said plaintiff of one of the plaintiff’s rigs, to wit, one Huber steam thresher separator; and this defendant further avers that the following is a copy of the said release heretofore mentioned and described, to wit: “The undersigned of this order is to be released without recourse hereafter on the Go’s Rig signed by Silvers, Britt and McKenney upon the approval of this order.’” Defendant further averred that lie gave plaintiff, on or about August 17, 1903, a .written order for the threshing outfit first above set out, and that thereafter the said order was accepted and approved by plaintiff under and in pursuance of said order given by defendant to the company; that plaintiff furnished and delivered to him the tliresiling outfit above mentioned; “that in pursuance of the said stipulation in said written order above set forth, and the approval thereof by said plaintiff as above set forth, this
The defendants Britt and McKenney, in their separate answers, each alleged that the notes set ont in plaintiff’s petition were executed by the three defendants as joint makers, and that the consideration therefor was the joint obligation of all the defendants; “that on or about August 17, 1903, the plaintiff for a good and valuable consideration, and without the knowledge and acquiescence, permission or consent of this answering defendant, released and discharged the codefendant John C. Silvers from all liability on the notes set forth in plaintiff’s petition and the consideration for which the same was given; that said release was absolute and unconditional, and that by reason thereof this answering defendant has been and is released and discharged from all liability upon said notes.”
The reply alleged that the notes were joint and several notes, and were executed by the defendants to plaintiff for a threshing machine outfit; that on or about August 17, 1903, defendant Silvers came to plaintiff, and represented to plaintiff that he had sold his interest in said threshing outfit to his codefendants Britt and McKenney, and that they had assumed and agreed to pay the notes and debt sued upon, and at that time offered to purchase, or wanted to purchase, of plaintiff another threshing outfit; that plaintiff, relying upon what he said, and believing his statements to be true, and from his statements believing that he had sold his interest in the outfit for which the notes in suit were given, and believing that the defendants Britt and McKenney had agreed with him to assume’ and pay the notes in suit, “solely relying upon said representations and believing them to be true, sold to him another outfit, and in the order signed by said defendant Silvers for said outfit entered a release in the following language, to wit (the release above quoted); that thereafter the plaintiff was notified by some or all of the defendants that the defendant Silvers had not sold his in-
There was a trial to the court and a jury. When plaintiff had rested, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants, and judgment was rendered thereon, from which plaintiff appeals.
Numerous questions of law are discussed as to what could be proved under the reply in this case, etc., but it could serve no good purpose to enter into a discussion of those questions here, for the reason that, under the undisputed evidence, there is no theory upon which plaintiff can recover. There is no dispute but that the notes in suit were signed by all of the defendants as part of the purchase price of a threshing outfit which they had jointly
The judgment of the district court is therefore
Affirmed.