134 P. 316 | Or. | 1913
Opinion by
1. The testimony admitted for the purpose of making a record for the Supreme Court should be treated as though it had been offered and rejected.
2. In the view that the court took of the law, it is difficult to see how the defendant has been prejudiced by the statement of the judge that he would not hear nor consider the evidence. In fact, the defendant stands in a better position upon appeal than it would had the judge made no statement of his views as to the evidence offered. Had he, after hearing all of the evidence, made the same findings that are here presented in the record, they would probably have been conclusive against defendant, and it would have been remediless upon appeal. As it is, the bill of exceptions shows that the findings were made upon a portion only of the testimony, and that the testimony offered by the defense was rejected. If this testimony was admissible, and we are of the opinion that it was, we are at liberty to disregard the findings. Witt, the plaintiff, was president of the El Nacional Cigar Company and naturally, as well as by legal presumption, must have had knowledge and notice of its dealings with its customers, including the contract with the defendant. This contract was in writing and is as follows:
“The El Nacional Cigar Co., Tampa, Florida, by their representative and vice-president, Mr. Wm. Lineaweaver, hereby agree that Mr. Lineaweaver or some cigar salesman satisfactory to the Campbell-Lakin Segar Co., will devote such time as is necessary to assist the Campbell-Lakin Segar Co. in placing and popularizing the Fama Nacional Cigar in the territory
“El Nacional Cigar Co.,
“By Wm. Lineaweaver, “Vice-Pres.”
3. The contract calls attention to the fact that there was no proof of the genuineness of the indorsements. Such indorsements are no part of .the note, and the introduction of the note in evidence did not carry with it the indorsements: Ayre v. Hixon, 53 Or. 19 (98 Pac. 515, 133 Am. St. Rep. 819). For the purposes of this appeal, therefore, the note must be treated as though no indorsement had been made thereon.
4. “When the instrument is made payable to ‘order,’ the indorsement of the payee is necessary to transfer the legal title; and the transferee, without indorsement, takes it as a mere chose in action and must aver and prove the consideration. And he takes it subject to all equities that attached to it in the hands of his transferrer”: 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. (2 ed.), § 664; Selover, Neg. Inst., § 123.
6. The plaintiff insists that defendant is without remedy here-because it failed to present findings to the court embodying its views of the evidence and to have them passed upon. This is no doubt the rule where the whole evidence is received by the court; but in the case at bar the court refuséd, so far as it was concerned, to consider the defendant’s evidence, and the presiding judge, who is always willing to give a defeated party a fair chance to be heard upon appeal, incorporated that refusal in the bill of exceptions and stated, in effect, that the whole purpose of its admission was to allow the defendant to make a record for this court. So far as the Circuit Court was concerned, the testimony was just as thoroughly excluded as though it had never been received.
7. The testimony offered tended to show that, pursuant to the written contract, defendant had from time to time purchased from plaintiff large quantities of cigars and had tried faithfully and without effect to get them upon the market; that it had complained to Lineaweaver, plaintiff’s vice-president and agent, who from time to time had promised to assist them in building up a market, but had in fact done little or nothing to that end; that the goods were unsatisfactory. It also fended to show that when goods were shipped and received the defendant gave its notes for the shipments, which notes, except the one in suit, were paid from time to time as they fell due. The giving of these notes did not supersede in any way the original agree
There is no contradiction of the note by oral testimony in this case. The agreement to take back the cigars if they proved unsatisfactory was in writing and of equal dignity with the note and, as we have before remarked, would not have been waived by defendant’s paying the cash for them, much less would it have been waived by the giving of a promissory note, unless it had been understood that such was to be the effect of the note. Taking into consideration the whole testimony offered by defendant and rejected by the court, there is much to indicate that no such waiver was in
The judgment will therefore be reversed and a new trial ordered. Reversed.