164 P. 1026 | Utah | 1917
Tbe plaintiff brought this action against the defendant, hereinafter called appellant, to recover judgment upon a promissory note for the sum of $6,400. The appellant admitted the execution and delivery of the note in question, and alleged that the same was obtained by the plaintiff by fraud and false representations. The appellant, in his answer, averred that the note in question was executed and delivered by him to the plaintiff for certain other notes which had theretofore been made and delivered by the appellant to the plaintiff; that the original notes were obtained by means of false representations made by the plaintiff, which, in substance, are alleged to be as follows: That the original notes were given as the pur
From appellant’s brief it appears that the 3,000 shares of tie stock were sold on divers days between September, 1910, and May, 1911; that while the precise days on which the governor stock was sold does not appear, yet it was sold on divers days during 1911 and 1912. The exact dates or times when the sales were made are, however, not 'material. There were 3,000 shares of each stock sold at one dollar per share. The
“False representations, similar to the ones involved in an action, are admissible where the intent, motive, or knowledge of their falsity by the party making them are material, or where it is sought to prove a system or general plan or scheme to defraud.”
The court thus permitted appellant to prove by other witnesses to whom the plaintiff had sold some of the capital stock of said corporations about the time the appellant purchased the stock in question that the plaintiff had made representations and statements to them to the same effect as those which appellant testified were made to him concerning the stock. The court also permitted the appellant to testify that he believed the representations and statements made by the plain
We remark that there were four witnesses who testified for the appellant that they also bought some of the tie stock from the plaintiff, and that he had made similar representations and statements to them concerning the said stock that the appellant testified he made to him. Counsel offered to prove by all of those witnesses that they believed the representations and statements made by the plaintiff concerning the tie stock, and the court rejected the offer.
“Precisely the same state of facts was shown, or offered to be shown and proven, with regard to the respondent’s operation in selling the stock of the Dickerson Automatic Governor Company. The two cases were in all respects parallel, the only difference in the two being that the latter stock scheme was operated just after the first one; but the respondent’s system and his scheme was the same precisely in each case.”
While appellant’s counsel did not abstract the evidence relating to the governor stock, yet we have examined into it carefully, and-we cannot agree with counsel that “the two cases were, in all respects, parallel.” True, appellant’s allegations in his answer were practically the same with respect to both stocks, but his own testimony respecting the transactions relating to the governor stock leave little room for doubt that he purchased that stock entirely upon his own judgment after
"While we have not specifically referred to each one of counsel’s assignments, yet we have considered all of them. Notwithstanding the fact that appellant’s counsel has vigorously assailed the rulings of the trial court and the final judgment, we are thoroughly convinced that, in view of the whole record,. much of counsel’s complaint must be attributed to his zeal, and that he has no legal cause for complaint. "We are further convinced that both the court and jury have awarded to the appellant all that he was entitled to under the law and the evidence.
The judgment is therefore affirmed. Respondent to recover costs.