112 Kan. 182 | Kan. | 1922
The action was one to recover the value of a certain promissory note which the plaintiff claims she was entitled to receive from the appellant. The case is this.
John L. Agnew, the appellant, had in his possession $2,000 belonging to the appellee, Mrs. M. R. Spencer. By arrangement they met at the Traders State Bank, at Salina, to make settlement. One thousand dollars of the claim was paid to her in the form of a note and mortgage with some cash. Agnew then produced a promissory note which he held in his hand and stated to Mrs. Spencer that it was a thousand-dollar note of the Salina Light, Power & Gas Company, and said to her, “Will you take this note for the remaining thousand dollars?” She knew the light company was perfectly good, and Agnew knew that her son-in-law was secretary of the company. She said that she would take the note for the other thousand dollars. She expected it to be turned over to her, but Agnew said that the note was to be left with C. B. Kirtland, an officer of the bank, for collection. Kirtland was called in, and Agnew stated to him that a settlement had been effected, and the note was handed over to Kirtland. When it matured, about a year later, Mrs. Spencer requested Kirtland to bring the note to her at her home. He called there, paid her a year’s interest on the $1,000, and when she asked for her light company note he offered her three other notes, referred to in the evidence as the “Broeker notes,” which she refused to accept. She inquired what had become of her light company note. Kirtland made no answer to this question, and left her. Some time later Mrs. Spencer discovered that Agnew never had a light company note for a thousand dollars, and that no such note had been turned over to Kirtland. She sued both Agnew and Kirtland. Each answered that a note of the light company for that amount had been delivered to her and left with Kirt-land for collection, and that he had collected the note and reinvested the proceeds in three other notes. Issues were joined and a trial had, in which the jury returned a general verdict against Agnew for the amount of the note and interest. Among the special findings returned was the following:
“Q. 13. Did the defendant, John L. Agnew,. have anything to do with the business of the plaintiff and the Traders State Bank after March 29, 1917. A. No.”
The rule is that a party is entitled to recover, for a breach of contract, such damages as are the natural, direct and proximate result of the breach. (Speed v. Hollingsworth, 54 Kan. 436, 441, 38 Pac. 496; George v. Lane, 80 Kan. 94, 102 Pac. 55. Stroupe v. Hewitt, 90 Kan. 200, 133 Pac. 562; McDanel v. Whalen, 91 Kan. 488, 492, 138 Pac. 590; Epp v. Hinton, 91 Kan. 513, 516, 138 Pac. 536.)
In this case Mrs. Spencer was entitled to the benefit of her bargain.
The fact that Agnew had nothing to do with the business between Mrs. Spencer and the bank after March 29, 1917, would not relieve him of liability for the wrong perpetrated upon her at the settlement. Therefore the answer of the jury to question No. 13 is a finding of a fact of no importance in determining the rights between Mrs. Spencer and Agnew.
It is insisted that the 8th instruction is erroneous for the reason that it authorized a verdict against Agnew if the jury found that in the settlement he represented to Mrs. Spencer that he was delivering the note of the light company, which representation was false, provided they found from the evidence that plaintiff relied upon his representations and believed that the note she was receiving was the note of the light company. The complaint is that the court did not couple with these provisos another to the effect that the jury must also find she was injured; but in the 12th instruction the court charged that before the jury could return a verdict against Agnew they must find that Mrs. Spencer was damaged by his acts. The claim of error is predicated upon the singling out of a particular instruction and ignoring the instructions in their entirety. The appellant concedes that if the instructions are considered together they correctly state the law. ! The rule is that they will be considered in their entirety.
The judgment is affirmed.