54 N.W. 919 | N.D. | 1893
This action was brought, in claim and delivery, to obtain possession of certain personal property which the National Bank of North Dakota, plaintiff and appellant, claimed as assignee of a chattel mortgagee. The defendant and respondent, Lemke, was the mortgagor. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment • for respondent. The facts arc somewhat involved, and the evidence upon some .points conflicting. On November 24th, 1888, Lemke and his wife executed to the firm of Whited & Johnson their promissory note for $633.65, drawing interest at 12 per cent, per annum, and due October 1st, 1889. This note was secured by a chattel mortgage covering some— perhaps all — of the property here in controversy. This note is indorsed October 28th, 1889, with interest to October 1st, 1889, and $180.88 to apply upon the principal. This indorsement was made by Whithed & Johnson. Following this is the indorsement without recourse by said firm, and on April 2nd, 1891, a further payment of $9.50; and under date of April 15th, 1891, there is a memorandum indorsed on the note, showing balance due on April 2nd, 1891, to be $531.65. It is undisputed that Whited & Johnson transferred the note to E. A. Mears, but at just what date docs not appear. It must, however, have been subsequent to October 28th, 1889, and after the date of the maturity of the note. On April 2nd, 1891, Lemke and wife executed a new note for $531.65 to E. A. Mears, due October 1st, 1891, and bearing 12 per cent, interest. This note was secured by chattel mortgage covering the same property as the first mortgage. The old note was not delivered to the makers when the new note was taken. Both notes subsequently came into the possession of the appellant bank, of which E. A. Mears has been president since its organization. There was some claim made that the appellant received these notes before the maturity of the note of April 2nd, 1891, but this question was submitted to the jury upon an instruction' requested by appellant, and their verdict is conclusive of the fact that appellant received such note after maturity. One of the defenses set up in the answer is that the only consideration for
It is thus clear that at the time of the execution of the note of April 2nd, 1891, respondent owed E. A. Mears, to whom the note was given, and who is president of the appellant bank, nothing; and such note is entirely without consideration, unless appellant’s contention that the court erred in its instruction heretofore quoted, as to the effect of usury in the original note, can be sustained. The instruction given was clearly in harmony with § 3723, Comp. Laws 1887, which was in force when the note was given, but this section was repealed by Ch. 184, Laws 1890, and hence was not in force when this action was tried; and it is urged that this repeal wiped out all the penalties and forfeitures under the old statute, and left the note to be enforced in its entirety. In other words, that neither the penalty prescribed by said § 3723, nor by the usury law enacted in 1890, and which repealed the old law, could be applied to this particular transaction, and, even if confessedly usurious under either or both statutes, still there is no remedy left for the enforcement of the consequences of such usury. That the repeal of a statute penal in its nature, without a saving clause, operates to absolutely extinguish all penalties under such law, is, we think, quite well settled. See Ewell v. Daggs, 108 U. S. 143, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 408, and cases there cited. But this rule of law has been abrogated by a general provision in this state. Section 4767, Comp. Laws, reads: “The repeal of
On the question of payment, the court instructed the jury that, if they found that payments were made in wheat, they should allow respondent the highest market price from the time of delivery to the time of trial. This was clearly error. The court had in mind a rule sometimes applied in cases of conversion, but clearly foreign to this case. Appellant insists that for this error the case must be reversed. When an erroneous instruction is given an immediate presumption of prejudice arises, and the case must be reversed, unless it is clear that such error, under the facts, could have worked no prejudice to the complaining party. McKay v. Leonard, 17 Iowa, 569; Hook, Adm'r v. Craghead, 35 Mo. 380; Freeman v. Rankins, 21 Me. 446, Hayne, New Trials, § 287, and cases cited. It is equally certain that when the error could work no injury to the complaining party the case will not be reversed by reason thereof. See last citations. In the statement of facts as heretofore made, we have either taken facts about which there was no dispute in the testimony, and which the jury were bound to accept as true, or we have in every case taken
The defense of duress is pleaded, and 'much of appellant’s brief is devoted to that subject, but, as the case must'be affirmed by reason of the total want of consideration for the note secured by the mortgage under which appellant claims the property, the question of duress becomes immaterial.
Affirmed.