22 Ind. App. 139 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
— Action by appellee Hixon against appellants Prescott and Cordrey, as sole defendants, upon a note, which was in words and figures, as follows:
“$1,064.26. ' Middlebury, Ind., Aug. 31, 1893.
“Thirty days from date I promise to pay to the order of Ilenry W. Hixon, one thousand and sixty-four and 26-100 dollars, negotiable and payable at Farmers’ Bank, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent, semiannually until this note is paid, — the interest payable semiannually,- — and attorneys’ fees. Value received. Without any relief whatever from valuation and appraisement laws. The drawers and indorsers, sureties, and guarantors severally waive presentment for pajment, protest, and notice of protest, and nonpayment of this note. The receipt of the interest in advance shall not release or discharge any indorsers, surety, or guarantor on this note.
“[Signed.] O. O. Prescott, Pres. Mid. B. & Cheese Co.; M. A. Cordrey, Sec. Cr. & Cheese Co.
“Indorsements: Guaranty of Directors:
“[Signed.] Jacob Pleiffer, Director M. B. C. Co.; George W. Roth, Director M. B. C. Co.; Christ. S. Messner, Director M. B. O. Co.; Frederick Pleiffer, Director M. B. C. Co.; Samuel J. Miller, Director M. B. C. Co.
“August 31, 1894, received interest for 1 year, $85.13.
“August 31, 1895, received interest for 1 year, $85.15.”
To the complaint upon the above note each of said appellants filed his separate answer in one paragraph, and each appellant also filed his separate cross-complaint in one para
The cross-complaints filed by appellants state the same facts with the additional averments, “That by the mutual oversight and mistake of the plaintiff and defendant, this defendant failed and omitted to insert the word 'for’ after the word 'president’ in his signature, so that the signature of this defendant was written upon said note as the same now appears thereon, instead of being written O. O. Prescott, president for the Middlebury Butter & Cheese Company, as was intended by the parties; that the payments of interest indorsed on said note were paid to the plaintiff by said corporation, and no part thereof by this defendant, or any other person, and plaintiff received said notes, including the note in suit, as the sole note of said corporation and not otherwise.” The prayer of the cross-complaint is that the note be reformed by writing the word “for” after the word president in his signature to the note. The action of the lower court in sustaining appellees demurrer to the separate answers and cross-complaints of appellants are the alleged errors assigned, and argued in this court by appellants’ counsel.
It is the settled law of this State that where a note is signed by an individual maker with such words as “trustee,” “president,” “manager,” “secretary,” immediately following the name, such words are, in the absence of a corporate seal upon the note, or an apparent intention in the body of the instrument to bind the corporation alone, considered as merely descriptive of the person of the maker, and the note is held to be the obligation of the person so signing it. Hays v. Crutcher, 54 Ind. 260; Hayes v. Matthews, 63 Ind. 412, 30 Am. R. 226; McClellan v. Robe, 93 Ind. 298; Williams v. Second Nat. Bank, etc., 83 Ind. 237; Smarts v. Cohen, 11 Ind. App. 20. Tiedeman in his work on Com. Paper (section 123, p. 200), says: “Where the name of the corporation
The foregoing statement of the rule is in accord with our view of the law as it exists in this State. The language of. Morris, C., in the case of Williams v. Second Nat. Bank,, 83 Ind. 237, seems to settle this case as to the sufficiency of the answer. In that case it is said: “The note upon its face purports to be the note of the appellants, and not the note of said lodge. The words ‘Trustees Perry Lodge No. 37, F. & A. M.,’ being descriptive of the persons of the appellants, merely. "Whether the manner and form of executing the note adopted by the appellants were the proper manner and form of executing the note of the lodge was a question of law which the parties will be conclusively presumed to have known. Knowing. the law, they must be held to have known that the note, in the form in which it was executed,, purported to be the note of the appellants, and not the note of the lodge. What the parties in fact understood, supposed, or believed as to the legal effect and meaning of the form in which they contracted, is immaterial. The intention which the law imputes to their contract must, in the absence of fraud or mistake of fact, be held to be the intention of the parties. They cannot avoid the contract by averring an intention or purpose opposed to that which the law attaches to
The cross-complaints present an entirely different question. Courts of equity will reform written instruments in all cases where the mistake is material, and is in the execution of such written instrument, but the courts cannot, except in rare cases, grant relief where the mistake was one of law, as when the legal effect of the language used differs from the intention of the parties at the time it was so written and signed. It is said in the case of Swartz v. Cohen, 11 Ind. App. 20: “Courts of equity will sometimes relieve against mistakes of law and will reform a written instrument •so as to make it conform, to or speak the intention of the parties. This is particularly true when words are used to express a contract previously made.” See Citizens Nat. Bank v. Judy, 146 Ind. 322, and cases there cited. But in this cause it is not asked in the cross-complaint that the court relieve appellants from a mistake of law. The relief demanded is that a mistake of fact be corrected, the mutual mistake of all the parties in omitting a certain word from the ■signature to the note. No reason is given, and we think no good reason could be given, why the relief demanded in the prayer of the cross-complaint of each of appellants could not be granted by a court of equity upon the introduction of sufficient evidence to warrant it.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, with instructions to overrule the demurrer of the appellee Iiixon to the cross-complaint of Oramel O. Prescott, to overrule the demurrer of the Middlebury Butter & Cheese Company to the cross-complaint of said Prescott, and to overrule the separate
Black, O. J., dissents.
Wiley, J., absent.