46 Minn. 531 | Minn. | 1891
This was an action originally brought in justice’s court, to recover the sum of $40 alleged to have .become due on November 1, 1889, as an instalment of the agreed price of a harvest
1. The paper styled a “reply” was unauthorized as a pleading in the case, and, as such, must be treated as a nullity. The statute (Gen. St. 1878, c. 65, § 28) authorizes a reply in justice’s court only when a counterclaim is set up in the answer. But it was filed by the plaintiffs without objection from the defendant, and beyond a doubt was considered by the parties and the justice as properly in the case. In the district court it was not regarded as a reply, but its contents were treated as in the nature of formal admissions made by the plaintiffs upon the trial, and this view of the effect of the paper was not erroneous.
2. As the plaintiffs could not maintain an action upon the materially-altered promissory note, they were compelled to resort to the original consideration as a foundation for their claim; and the question then arose, and is now presented, of their right to recover on the indebtedness for which the note was given. From an examination of the authorities, it appears to be well settled that a recovery is not
3. It stood admitted by plaintiffs, by means of the paper-filed by them styled the “reply,” that the note had been materially changed and altered after its execution and delivery. The defendant testified fully as to the alteration, so that the fact was conclusively established upon the trial, and the court could not have found to the contrary. This brings us to $ consideration as to where the burden of proof was on the question of the character and intent of the alteration. The plaintiffs asserted, in connection with their admissions, that the
After the instrument in question passed from defendant’s hands-into plaintiffs’ actual or constructive possession, a material alteration was made by increasing the amount thereof. Admitting all this, and at the same time asserting that the change was not wilful or fraudulent, and was without their knowledge or consent, the plaintiffs made no effort to explain the circumstances, or to show the facts, of which they must have been cognizant. The alteration itself wasprima facie evidence of a fraudulent intent, and the onus then rested upon the plaintiffs to repel and overthrow this proof of such intent. It has already been held by this court that the unauthorized and material alteration of a mortgage by the mortgagee or with his privity, after execution, unexplained, is presumptively fraudulent, and vitiates the instrument. Russell v. Reed, 36 Minn. 376, (31 N. W. Rep. 452.)
Judgment reversed.