38 Iowa 329 | Iowa | 1874
— I. Evidence was introduced at the trial tending to show that McNorton traded real estate valued at $4,100, in part payment to plaintiff for a stock of goods which invoiced about $6,000.
That McNorton was indebted to Eeno, and that it was agreed Eeno should take the stock of goods from McNorton, and pay plaintiff the purchase price above the value of the real estate.
That Eeno, in part payment of said balance, transferred the notes in question to plaintiff.
The plaintiff having rested his case, the defendant filed a motion to exclude his testimony upon the ground in various forms stated, that the said testimony is not pertinent to any issue in the casé.
The court overruled this motion, and defendant excepted. The evidence being closed, the defendant requested the court to give the following instruction:
“The plaintiff’s action as stated in his petition in this case, consists in the allegations in substance that the defendant, pretending to own the promissory notes in question, sold and transferred the sainé to the plaintiff for value, thereby undertaking and warranting the said notes to be genuine. That they were in fact forgeries as to the supposed makers, whose names appear thereon, and the plaintiff claims to recover the amount appearing payable by the face thereof with costs and expenses of litigation in attempts to recover of the various makers. The cause of action so alleged is not suj>ported by proof of mere delivery of said notes in part payment of a stock of goods purchased by defendant of plaintiff, if the testimony has so shown, and in absence of a written warranty of the paper, and in absence of fraud.” The court refused to give this instruction. Defendant assigns these rulings as error.
Appellant’s argument states his position as follows:
The petition set forth a good, cause of action, if true, and
The evidence does not prove a technical sale of the notes. A sale is a transfer of the absolute title to property for a certain agreed price. Story on Sales, section 1. The price must be in money or its negotiable representative. If one article be exchanged for another, a barter is made, but not a sale.
The difference, however, is merely technical, for both transactions are governed by the same general rules of law. Ibid., section 218. The petition it will be observed alleges that the defendant did sell the notes, which in itself includes the idea of a transfer of them, and that he did for value, in due course of business transfer them, to plaintiff. Now whilst it may be admitted that the evidence does not, in its technical sense support the allegation of sale, it is clear that it does support the allegation of a transfer for value. Hence the evidence does correspond with the allegations under section 2996 of the Revision, which provides that “ if a party state more facts, or a greater title or estate than is necessary to entitle him to the relief claimed, and such facts, estates or title be denied to the full extent, he shall not be compelled to prove more than is necessary to constitute a claim to the relief prayed, or to any lower degree of relief included in the relief prayed.”
The court did not err, therefore, in the rulings above considered.
If this language of the court was not strictly accurate, it is clear that it worked the defendant no substantial prejudice. We have before seen that the general rules of law governing a sale, and an exchange of one commodity for another are the same.
The transferrer of a note by delivery, whether the consideration be money or merchandise impliedly wai’rants the genuineness of the signature of the maker, and, if the jury, under the instructions, found a sale instead of an exchange, they found a fact which does not increase or vary the liabilities of the defendant. See Parsons on Notes and Bills, chapter 2, section 2, and cases cited.
III. The court gave the following instruction:
“ And if you further find from the evidence that the said notes, or either of them, were forgeries, that is, the persons whose names were written thereto as makers, never signed their names and never authorized or assented to their names being written thereto, or that the said notes after being signed were materially changed or altered, and before April 30, 1869, then the defendant is liable on his warranty of title for the cash value of those which were forgeries, and you should so find.”
Appellant maintains that so much of this instruction as 'recognizes the doctrine that the defendant is liable if the notes were materially changed, after their execution, and before their transfer, is wrong.
Such material alteration, however, is forgery, both at common law and under our statute. See 2 Wharton’s Criminal Law, § 1418; Eevision of 1860, § 4253. And we have no doubt that there is an implied warranty of the transferrer that there is no such defect in the instrument, as well as that the signature of the maker is genuine. See Parsons on Notes and Bills, Chapter 2, § 2, and cases cited.
Defendant objected to the' introduction of this paper on the grounds that it was not executed by Reno, and was not accepted, and that it is not material to the issues. The court overruled the objection, and this action is assigned as error.
We think it was properly admitted. Though it was not signed by defendant, and is not proved to be in his handwriting, yet if he offered it to plaintiff he made thereby an admission inconsistent with his present claim that he had nothing to do with the notes, and that they were transferred by McNorton.
' Appellant claims that the rule of recovery which allows
The better doctrine, however, we think is, that in order to the recovery of the costs of the litigation, it must appear that it was reasonably necessary and conducted in good faith. If the transferee was satisfied that a note was a forgery, he would not be justified in incurring needless costs in a hopeless litigation, and if he did so he could not recover the same of his warrantor.
"Wlien notice of the litigation is given the warrantor, the burden of proof is upon him to show that the expense was needlessly incurred. But in the absence of such notice the warrantee must prove the propriety of the litigation. The jdaintiff testifies that the defendant had notice of the claim of the maker, and that the notes were forged, and that the suit thereon was carried forward by his direction. This the defendant denies. The question of fact should have been submitted to the jury to determine whether under the circumstances proved the suit upon the notes had been properly instituted.
Inasmuch as this instruction holds the defendant liable for the costs incurred without regard to the propriety of the litigation, we think it is erroneous. See Sedgwick on the Measure of Damages, marginal pages 293, and 326-8, and cases cited.
Whether it is evidence at all of the fact of forgery depends, it seems to us, upon the question whether defendant had notice of the suit, and permitted it- to go forward, instead of restoring the consideration received. Sedgwick, Measure of Damages, marginal page 321, and cases cited. In the absence of such notice the defendant is a stranger to the controversy, and the record is not admissible against him. 1st Qreenleaf on Evidence, sections 522-3.
The court therefore erred in giving this instruction.
The authorities cited by appellant do not, it seems to us, support the position he maintains. Thomas v. Todd, 6 Hill, 340, was a case of payment in a counterfeit bank bill. It was held that, “ although the bill has no intrinsic value, it should be returned to the debtor so as to enable him to trace out and fall back upon the person from whom he received it.” The necessity for this in the case of a bank bill, where there may be thousands of them exactly alike except as to date and num
In determining the case the court said: “The court in this part of the case did not proceed on the ground that the notes and judgments were of no value whatever, and in holding and chargingthe jury that the agreement on which the "notes' had been received might be treated as a nullity, without making return of the notes or assigning the judgments, they committed error.”
In this case the notes, if forgeries, are of no value. The case falls more nearly within the principle of Campbell & Bro. v. Ayres, 9 Iowa, 108, in which it was held that the rule requiring a return of the consideration received, in order to á rescission of a contract, does not apply to a note which had been paid, and had thus become valueless prior to its transfer. The court did not err in refusing to give this instruction.
For the errors noticed the. judgment is
Reversed.