117 P. 182 | Okla. | 1911
This case presents error from the district court of Pawnee county, being an appeal to that court from a judgment of a justice of the peace, rendered prior to statehood. Action was brought by S. N. Treese, as plaintiff, to recover against M. A. Wiers and W. A. Moore, defendants, on the following promissory note: "$40.00. Cleveland, O. T., Sept. 6th, 1901.
"January 1st, 1904, after date, the Greenwood Gin Co. promise to pay to S. N. Treese Son or bearer, forty dollars at the Triangle Bank of Cleveland, O. T., value received with interest at 10 per cent. per annum.
"No. 3. Due Jan. 1st, 1901.
"M. A. WIERS, Pres. of Company,
"W. A. MOORE, Sec."
Judgment was rendered on the trial in the district court in favor of plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed to this court, assigning error on two propositions: First, that the court erred in admitting oral testimony to explain who was liable on the note in question; and, second, in overruling motion of plaintiff in error for new trial for and on account of newly discovered evidence.
It appears that on the trial of the action the court admitted, over the objection of plaintiffs in error, evidence showing that the note was signed by them in their personal capacity and that it was intended to bind them, and not the Greenwood Gin Company. Courts in which this proposition has been presented and passed on have left no field for original research or expression, and, in passing on the same, we content ourselves with a quotation from two well-considered cases which disclose the state of the law and which express our views.
The Supreme Court of Maryland, in the case of Laffin Rand *776 Powder Co. v. Sinsheimer,
"The construction of written instruments, signed by persons describing themselves as agents, or as officers of corporations, has been a fruitful source of litigation, and the decisions are conflicting and in many cases unsatisfactory. Not that there seems to be any difficulty in regard to the rules of law, which ought to govern in the interpretation of contracts, but in the application of such rules to each particular case. The subject is fully considered by Parsons on Notes and Bills, Story on Promissory Notes, Byles on Bills of Exchange; and we do not propose to examine in detail the many cases referred to by these writers, nor attempt the fruitless task of reconciling conflicting decisions. After all, the question whether one signing a note or accepting a bill, as an officer of a corporation, means to bind himself personally, is a question of intention between the parties to the instrument; and this intention, we admit, as a general rule, must be determined by the face of the paper itself. Where one having authority accepts a bill in such a manner as manifests an intention not to bind himself but to bind a corporation of which he is an officer, and to be paid out of the funds of the corporation, it is clear in such a case, the acceptance will not bind him personally. But cases frequently occur, owing to the almost infinite variety in forms of expression and in the use of words, in which it is difficult to determine from the face of the paper itself whether the party signing means to bind himself, and adds his official character merely for the purpose of indicating the character in which he acts, or whether the official character is added for the purpose of showing he does a mere ministerial act, and that the promise is made and the obligation incurred for and in behalf of the corporation. In other words, does he, in the language of the court inBradlee v. Boston Glass Com'y. 16 Pick. 347: 'Apply the executing hand as the instrument of another; or the promising and engaging mind of a contracting party'? In such cases, where there is such ambiguity on the face of the paper as to be consistent with either construction, whether one means to bind himself personally, or acts only in an official capacity, parol evidence is clearly admissible, to prove the circumstances under which the contract was made; or, in other words, to prove the true nature of the transaction. Hails et al. v. Pierce,
And speaking further of the conflict referred to in the case above noted, and holding parol evidence admissible, the Appellate Court of Indiana, in the case of Swarts v. Cohen etal.,
"In Falk v. Moebs,
In the case at bar, if the note in question does not carry with it the manifest intention to bind the defendants, we must hold that *778
such ambiguity exists as to open the door to the admission of evidence to make certain the intention of the parties. Other authorities sustaining the conclusion to which we have come may be noted as follows: 2 Ency. Evidence, p. 464; Mechem on Agency, sec. 445; 8 Cyc., p. 269, n.; Metcalf v. Williams,
The showing made of alleged newly discovered evidence, tendered in support of the motion for a new trial, does not disclose any diligence whatsoever was exercised to procure the same in time for the trial, provided it could reasonably be termed newly discovered, which we very much doubt, and the court committed no error in denying the motion.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the trial court is, accordingly, affirmed.
All the Justices concur.