257 F. 411 | 8th Cir. | 1919
This is an appeal by the International Pla-rvester Company from a decree denying it relief in a foreclosure suit upon notes and a mortgage given by defendant Patterson. The interest of defendant Miner is unimportant, and further reference to her may be omitted. The defenses appear from the findings of the trial court, which may be briefly summarized as follows: (1) That defendant Patterson was incapable of exercising a deliberate judgment, because of mental and physical weakness, though not lacking contractual capacity; (2) that he was imposed upon in the sense that he was overpersuaded against his own interest; (3) that his guaranty of certain prior notes, in part renewal of which the notes and mortgage in suit were given, was without consideration, therefore the latter were likewise without consideration; and (4) the notes and mortgage sued on were obtained by a false and fraudulent representation.
Defendant was a rancher, and had been fairly well to do before becoming involved in a mercantile venture by a corporation named Con
“In Brooks v. Haigh, 10 Ad. & E. 309, 323, tho court held that a surrender b.v the guarantee of a former guaranty, even if it was not of itself binding upon the guarantor, was a sufficient consideration to take the case out of the statute of frauds and to sustain a promise made on the footing thereof.”
The individual notes in suit are upon the footing of the prior guaranty which was surrendered by the plaintiff.
Finally, it is urged that an agent of plaintiff induced defendant to execute the notes and mortgage by falsely representing that his (defendant’s) attorney said it was the best thing he could do. We think this defense is an afterthought. The preponderance of the testimony of witnesses is against it, and is confirmed by defendant’s conduct before and after the transaction.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded, for a decree in favor of the plaintiff.