94 P. 798 | Kan. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In an action brought by the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Leonardville, Kansas, to recover on a promissory note executed by Otto Kurth and ten others, the bank in its petition set out the following copy of the instrument:
“$600. Riley, Kan., December 15, 1904.
“Jan. 1, 1906, after date, for value received, we jointly and severally promise to pay Robert Burgess and Thos. Lukyn, or bearer, six hundred dollars at the-, with interest at six per cent, per annum, interest payable annually, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount.
Otto Kurth, Gustav Kurth,
Bernhard Pollman, Richard Meyer,
H. F. Fosha, T. E. Pierce,
P. A. Johnson, Henry Stonge,
William Keith, M. Swart.”
Edward Kieninger,
The note was indorsed on the back as follows:
“By cash T. E. Pierce, $5, five dollars.
By cash Hy. Stonge, $5, five dollars.
By cash M. Swart, $5, five dollars.
By cash Wm. Keith, $10, ten dollars.
Without recourse.
Robt. Burgess & Lukyn.
" Robert Burgess & Thos. Lukyn.!’
The defendants’ answer was, first, a general denial; second, an averment that before the note was executed and delivered the payees caused to be indorsed on the back of the note the following indorsements:
“By cash T. E. Pierce, $50.
“ “ Henry Stonge, $50.
“ “ M. Swart, $50.
“ “ Wm. Keith, $100.”
At the opening of the trial it was admitted that each of the defendants signed the note in suit; and after proof had been offered by the. bank tending to show that it" purchased the note before maturity and without notice of any defenses, and that the note then bore the indorsements that are on it at present, the bank rested its case. The defendants then proposed to show that the indorsements had been altered, and that at the time Pierce, Stonge and Swart signed the note there were indorsements written on it crediting each of them with the payment of $50 and that when Keith signed it he was credited with the payment of $100. This testimony was refused,, the court ruling that the verification of the count denying the execution of the note was not a verified denial of the allegation of the execution' of the indorsements on the back of the note. The defendants then asked leave to amend their answer by verifying the count relating to the alteration of the indorsements, but the court held that it was not warranted in allowing the amendment, because of the lateness of the application and for the reason that the amendment would introduce a new defense. Exceptions to these rulings were taken and error is predicated on them.
Were the allegations as to the execution of the indorsements put in issue by the verified denial of the
“Generally speaking, every indorsement or memorandum attached to a writing, with the knowledge of the parties, at the time of its execution, is as much a part of such writing as .if it had been contained in the body of the instrument. Hence where a note has a memorandum or contract of this kind, which qualifies*479 its terms, written upon or attached to it, the obliteration or severance of such memorandum or contract is a material alteration of the note.” (2 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 228.)
The force’ of words and memoranda on commercial paper is not to be determined by the part of the instrument upon which they may chance to be written. Daniel in his work on Negotiable Instruments says:
“It seems that the purport of the instrument is not only to be collected from ‘the four corners/ but from ‘the eight comers/ a memorandum on the back, affecting its operation, -being regarded the same as if written on its face.” (1 Dan. Neg.-Inst., 5th ed., § 151.)
The code provision affecting the question is that “in all actions, allegations of the execution of written instruments and indorsements thereon . . . shall be taken as true unless the denial of the same be verified by the affidavit of the party, his agent or attorney.” (Civ. Code, § 108; Gen. Stat: 1901, § 4542.) The fact that the code mentions written instruments and the indorsements thereon separately, and the further fact that the memoranda in question were in form indorsements, is not controlling. Even if the entries on the note might have been treated as indorsements under the code provision, still, if in fact they are a part of the instrument itself, a denial of the execution of the instrument puts every part of the instrument, including the indorsements, in issue. If the memoranda on the back of the note were made when the note was made, and if they.limited its consideration and affected its operation and were intended as a part of the contract, they must be regarded as a substantive part of the note, and hence the testimony offered for the purpose of proving the alteration of these indorsements should have been received.
This is the conclusion of the court, but the writer is of the opinion that a specific denial of the indorsements was necessary to put their execution in issue. The ordinary meaning of the term “indorsement” is
The court, however, in view of the averment that the indorsements were made contemporaneously with the execution of the note and before its delivery, deems them to be a part of the note, and therefore concludes that the denial of the execution of the note put the indorsements in issue.
The judgment of the district court is therefore reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.