29 N.Y.S. 479 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
This action was brought upon a promissory note for $100, given by the defendant, payable to W. J. Curtis or bearer, for seed grain. It is what is generally known as a Bohemian seed-grain note. The defendant concededly made the note, but claims it was obtained from him by fraudulent means, and that the plaintiffs are not bona fide holders thereof for value before maturity. The note was obtained from the defendant by an agent of a Pennsylvania seed company. It is not necessary to rehearse the means resorted to, to obtain the note. They were substantially the same ás have been stated so many times in these Bohemian note cases decided by this court. The defendant unquestionably consented to make the note, with a full and complete understanding of the scheme stated to him by the agent of the company. The agent stated to him just how it was proposed tó be operated; the defendant expected to realize a profit of $100 out of the enterprise if the seed company performed its part of the agreement. The plan did not involve the expenditure of any money or labor by him. He was disappointed for the reason that the company failed to sell his crop of oats the following year as agreed.
This court held in Watson v. Blossom, 4 N. Y. Supp. 489, upon a similar state of facts, that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to show that he was a bona fide purchaser of the note for value before maturity. The trial court so held in this case, and the plaintiffs, to show that they xvere such bona fide holders, called as a witness, the plaintiff Ettenheimer. His testimony tended to show that the plaintiffs purchased the note in suit before maturity of. a Mr. Parsons, and that at the same time they purchased of Parsons two other small notes; that they paid for the notes in jewelry. Some of
“I reside in Rochester, and have an office approximate to Kurz’s tailor establishment. I was present in 1889 when Mr. Ettenheimer, who has ju t been on the stand, came to Kurz. I heard Mr. Ettenheimer ask Kurz if he considered those notes good. Showed him the notes, and Kurz told him that he did; that he had been dealing in the notes, and they were always paid; that he. had taken them. I just heard a little of the conversation. I was standing four or five feet away, and I wasn’t listening exactly to the conversation until Mr. Ettenheimer spoke in a little louder voice. I heard him say something about those notes. These two or three sentences is all I heard. X wasn’t present at Ettenheimer’s when any of this talk was had.”
It may well be doubted whether this evidence of Beemer’s in any material respect corroborated the testimony of Ettenheimer. Beemer did not identify the notes. He left it entirely uncertain whether the note in suit was one of the notes concerning which the inquiry was made. His evidence fails to corroborate Ettenheimer’s evidence as to what was paid for the note, or whether there was anything paid for it, or as to the time that the plaintiffs actually purchased the note. His evidence simply shows the quite unimportant circumstance that Mr. Ettenheimer was inquiring of Kurz about some notes. The only other piece of corroborating evidence is the letter from the postmaster at Alden in reply to an inquiry from Mr. Ettenheimer, to the effect that he knew the maker of the note, and considered him honorable and upright, and good for the amount of the note. ■ It does not seem to us that the testimony of Mr. Ettenheimer was so far corroboi*ated upon the material facts incumbent upon the plaintiffs to establish as to justify the trial