Court Opinion

ID: 6603234
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:09:41.77604+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:05.601769
License: Public Domain

Lxosr, J.
1. The testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs is that the Hunt note was transferred to them as collateral security. There is no such satisfactory preponderance of testimony to the contrary as will authorize us to reverse the finding of the circuit judge that it was so transferred.
2. We are satisfied with the finding that, after the note became due, it probably could not have been collected by legal process; certainly not without extraordinary diligence. True, when the note matured, Hunt had some property in his hands liable to seizure on execution; but some of it was under mortgage (what portion does not clearly appear), and he disposed of a considerable part of it during the same year. He was insolvent in the spring of 1876, and the evidence furnishes good reason to believe that he owed more than the estimated value of his non-exempt property in October preceding, when the note matured. He owed the defendant about $1,000, probably more, for the price of property sold by him to Hunt; and the property for which the note in controversy was given went back into the hands of the defendant in the spring of 1876,-because Hunt was unable to pay for it.
The evidence so impresses us that á suit on the note brought against Hunt as soon as the note matured, and prosecuted with reasonable diligence to judgment and execution, would not have resulted in the collection of the note, that we cannot disturb the finding of the court in that behalf, or say that the plaintiffs were guilty of negligence in failing to collect it. Holding the note as collateral security, and not being chargeable with negligence for failing to. collect it, the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment for the admitted sum due on the account, without deduction.
3. There is another view of the case, founded upon the defendant’s theory of it, which leads to the same result. If, as the defendant claims, the plaintiffs made the note their own by failing to return it to the defendant immediately after maturity, it follows that the defendant is liable on the note as *178indorser. Although there is no count in the complaint on the indorsement, proof of it was received without objection. Under the rule of Flanders v. Cottrell, 36 Wis., 564, and other cases in this court, no good reason is perceived why the complaint may not be amended to conform it to the facts proved, or the variance be disregarded, and why j udgment may not be rendered in this action against the defendant on his indorsement. In such case the judgment would be for the amount already recovered by the plaintiffs. The defendant is compelled to invoke the rule just mentioned to make the defense of negligence, because of the plaintiffs’ failure to collect the note, available in this action; for he did not set up such negligence in his answer as a defense. Had the evidence to prove such alleged negligence been objected to, the objection should have been sustained. It was so held in Plant's Manuf'g Co. v. Falvey, 20 Wis., 200.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.