46 Iowa 481 | Iowa | 1877
II. The plaintiff introduced the note sued on and rested his case. Upon the part of the defendants testimony was introduced that in October, 1873, the firm of Snow, Foote & Oo. was engaged in the wholesale stationery, paper and printing business, at Burlington; that Samuel "W. Snow was a member of said firm; that for his own use and benefit he signed his own name and that of Snow, Foote & Oo., to the note in question ; that he received the money for his own use, and told plaintiff that the money loaned on the note was for his own use; that the firm of Snow, Foote & Co. never had any interest in or benefit from said note, and that defendants did not know of the execution of the note until it was presented for payment. In rebuttal the plaintiff testifies as follows: “In the conversation on Front street, three or four days before the date of the note, Snow said to .me: ‘do yon know of anybody who has any money to lend, or have yon some? We are hard up down there, or a little short, and we cannot do anything at
Appellee claims, however, that the note is a legal instrument, having a well defined legal significance, which speaks for itself, and cannot be aided, modified or changed by extraneous circumstances; and that it is the right and duty of the court to place a construction upon it. This is true. The note is, as appellee claims, the joint and several note of Sam. W. Snow, and of Snow, Eoote & Co. This it was the province of the court to say to the jury. But what effect is to be given to the circumstance of taking the note in this form, in connection with other circumstances ¡proved, in considering the question whether plaintiff knew, or ought to have known, that the
Reversed.