150 N.W. 934 | S.D. | 1915
On April 29, 1911, defendant executed and delivered to a Minnesota corporation, the Farmers’ General Service Company of Minneapolis, a promissory note for $107.50 due on or before October 1, 1911, which note was indorsed:
“Without recourse
Farmers’ General Service Company.
By S. P. Lesselyoung, Pres.
$21.50, May 6th, 1911.”
Plaintiff Peterson brings action on this note, alleging that he is an innocent purchaser for value before maturity.
Appellant assigns as error insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict upon this issue. The evidence in the record
The evidence in the record covers some 60 printed pages, and an attempt at recapitulation -thereof would unduly extend .this opinion to- no useful purpose. Suffice it to siay that defendant, with the single exception hereinafter referred to, has not offered any evidence -tending to. show that -the statements or representations which are alleged to have induced him to sign the application were in fact false, or that -the service company, when it accepted the application land made the contract, was not able to or did not intend to perform the obligations' assumed by it under the contract. On the contrary, the evidence tends strongly to show that the company was acting in good faith toward its contract holders, and possessed the means and ability -to perform the obligations it assumed. Whether defendant acted with good business judgment in purchasing such a contract, or whether the benefits under it would be as great as he anticipated, is not the question before us in this case. Courts cannot relieve men against mistakes of judgment in the co'nduct of their business affairs. Relief can- be given only when fraud and deceit are elements in such transactions.
In rebuttal of t-his testimony, plaintiff offered -the testimony of farmers, neighbors -o-f defendant and whom defendant, in- company with Desselyoung, had solicited, an-d who had secured contracts identical with the one in question here, to show that such contract holders had demanded and received satisfactory services from the company. No representations upon which, as a matter of law, a man of ordinary intelligence might rely, are shown to have been fals-e b-y anything in the record. The verdict of the jury upon that issue is not sustained by any evidence.
The judgment and order o-f -the trial court mus-t be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.