73 N.W. 87 | N.D. | 1897
This is an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage upon an Otto gas engine. The mortgage was given by defendant to secure the payment of a promissory note made by the defendant, and payable to the firm of Schleicher, Schumm & Co., or to the order of that firm. The plaintiff is a corporation, and alleges in its complaint “that thereafter, and prior to its maturity, said note was, for value, transferred to this plaintiff, which has since been, and now is, the holder and owner thereof.” The complaint also states that the chattel mortgage in question was made and delivered of even date with the note, and that the same has been kept alive by a proper renewal thereof, and that the conditions of the mortgage had been broken by the non-payment of the note. To this complaint defendant filed an answer, which in terms admitted the execution of the note and mortgage, and, by its silence, admits all the other averments contained in the complaint. The answer further embodied new matter by way of counterclaim, which, in the view we have taken of the record, need not be set out in detail. It will suffice to say that the answer avers, in substance, that said note was given for part of the purchase price of said Otto gas engine, which engine was sold by said firm of Schleicher, Schumm & Co. to the defendant; that said firm entered into certain warranties as to the construction and capacity of said engine, which warranties were broken;, and that defendant was damaged thereby. To the new matter in the answer, plaintiff replied by a general denial. At the trial the plaintiff, under objection, introduced in evidence a deposition
Pausing here, and summarizing what has been said concerning the state of the record before us, it appears that in addition to certain evidence which was offered and received at the trial, and which is incorporated with the record, a certain deposition, viz. that of Ames, was offered in evidence by the defendant, and ruled out below, and that such evidence is not embraced in the record sent here; second, that a certain oral evidence, having reference to the subject matter of the defense pleaded in the answer, was offered, and, upon plaintiff’s objection was excluded by the order of the court below, and not taken down or preserved. This oral evidence so offered and excluded was of the same general tenor as that embodied in the Ames deposition, and was excluded by the trial court upon precisely the same ground, viz. that, when it was offered, the defendant had not by any evidence shown that the plaintiff was not a good faith purchaser of the note, without notice of defenses. This record presents an important question of procedure. The issues joined were issues of fact, and the trial was had before the court without a jury. At the time of the trial, § 5630 of the revised Codes was in force, and hence the case was necessarily heard and determined under the provisions of that section. Said section provides that in “all actions tried in the District Court without a jury, in which an
The judgment must be reversed, and the record will be sent down for further proceedings.