Court Opinion

ID: 8188670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:11:30.945065+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:31.357799
License: Public Domain

Marshall, J.
If the grounds upon which the learned circuit court rendered judgment in favor of respondents were legitimate, then, manifestly, error of law was committed in submitting the cause to the jury, and in the instructions. Therefore, we will not give consideration to the subject of •whether error was committed in setting aside the verdict, un*330less it shall appear that the subsequent action complained of was erroneous.
The bases of the order for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict, so far as need to he noticed, appear to he: (a) The evidence is undisputed that the vendors of the horse, by their agent, falsely represented the animal’s age; (h) The evidence is likewise conclusive that such vendors obtained the signatures of all of the respondents to the notes upon condition that in addition to such signatures Otto Jahnke and R. J. Hall should sign, making the full number of share-takers in the enterprise fourteen, so that each holder of a share would contribute in the ultimate $200 only, and that the papers were not so signed; (c) The evidence is likewise undisputed that while the notes were sold to aj)pellants before due they were hankers, and instead of parting with the agreed consideration at the time of the purchase it was placed to- the credit of the sellers in an account at such bank subject to check, and there-was no proof that the amount thereof, or any of it, was checked out before the commencement of the action.
The first ground requires but a passing notice. There was-no claim in the complaint that the contract of purchase was rescinded for misrepresentation or otherwise. The defense was not based on rescission, nor was any claim made for damages because of the horse not being as represented, nor were any damages proved. So no feature of the complaint on that score should have been treated as of importance in submitting the cause to the jury, or in determining after verdict the proper judgment to be rendered.
In deciding the question of whether error was committed in holding that the evidence conclusively established an understanding between appellants’ agent, who took the notes, and respondents that fourteen share-takers, including Otto Jahnke and R. J. Hall, should sign the notes before they should be regarded as binding, the rule must be applied that the decision of the trial court on such a subject must prevail on appeal,. *331unless it clearly appears to be wrong. There is no room for reasonable controversy but that the plan for selling the horse, well understood by every one who participated in the enterprise, was that there should be takers of fourteen shares at $200 each and that such number, as was supposed by those who participated, was secured and that it included Jahnke and Hall. The bill of sale of the horse was made to the fourteen persons by name. ’ There was an express promise made to a large proportion of the signers, individually, that unless the whole number signed “the note should be no good,” as some of the witnesses expressed it, or “there would be no sale,” according to the expressions of others, or “the note would be no good or void,” as was said by others.
Expressions of the sort indicated were made to at least seven of the signers". Further, by the uncontradicted evidence, at a meeting of share-takers, when nine were present and several signed the notes, the promise was made that there should be no sale unless the full number of signers was obtained. Two of those to whom a similar promise was individually made were not at the meeting, so there were eleven of the twelve signers who received the pledge. All were'told that there were to be fourteen signers.
Such are our conclusions, from a careful study of the record. It seems sufficient to state them without referring to the evidence in detail. True, as counsel for appellants contend, the answers on this point were to the effect that the understanding was that Jahnke and Hall should sign to make up the full number of share-takers, and.several of the witnesses who testified to the promise being made that there should be such full number did not claim that the names of Jahnke and Hall were mentioned, but the record shows that they were recognized as share-takers in the bill of sale, and, therefore, it must have been understood by all that they were to sign the notes. But let that be as it may, the real substance of the defense pleaded on this branch of the case is that it was *332represented to those who signed the notes, as an inducement for them to do so, that there were to be takers of the full fourteen shares at $200 per share, and that fourteen persons should sign the papers, or that they should not take effect as binding obligations. On all the evidence, direct and circumstantial, standing as it does entirely uncontradicted, we do not see any warrant for holding that the trial court was clearly wrong at this point. The concluding act of giving the bill ■of sale with the fourteen names therein as vendees together with the other evidence would seem to leave no reasonable •doubt on the question. That bill of sale is as follows:
“Know all men by these presents: That we have this day sold to W. H. Dunn, A. P. Lark, Bert Engel, Otto Jahnke, John Heitman, Herman Frank, Jas. A. White, Clarence Fayerweather, Andrew Lark, J. O. Stranberg, John Smith, V. Brownlee, Oscar Anderson, R. J. Hall, the imported Belgian stallion named Vigilant 1143 (21,674) in consideration of the sum of $2,800, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged.”
That bears date three days after the date of the note. It •appears that the persons who failed to sign the notes signed a preliminary agreement to become parties thereto.
If we were to hold that the evidence does not conclusively •show that all who signed the papers did so relying on an understanding that they should not be binding until the full number signed, still the situation would remain that many did sign with such understanding, and that those who did not, joined without knowing that their co-signers were only conditional makers. As to the latter the conclusion seems irresistible that they were induced to become parties to the notes by fraud. The natural, the necessary, inference one would ■draw upon unconditionally signing a note previously signed by others and to be still further signed, if not informed to the ■contrary, would be that all are to be equally bound, especially when the notes are in a form creating a joint and several liability. A person securing such unconditional signatures and *333keeping silent in respect thereto while inducing others to sign would he guilty of perpetrating a fraud upon the latter; Therefore, in any event, all of the defendants had a good defense to the notes so long as they remained in the hands of' the first holders. Luetzke v. Roberts, ante, p. 97, 109 N. W. 949.
It is familiar law, notwithstanding some conflict in the authorities, that a person may manually deliver an instrument, though it he in the form of commercial paper, to another, on its face containing a binding obligation in prcesenti of such person to such other, with a contemporaneous verbal agreement that it shall not take effect until the happening of some-specified event, and that the paper as between the parties will have no validity as a binding contract till the condition shall hava been satisfied; and that proof of such condition does not violate the rule that a'written instrument cannot he varied by a contemporaneous parol agreement; that such evidence-only goes to show that the instrument never had vitality as a contract. Nutting v. Minn. F. Ins. Co. 98 Wis. 26, 73 N. W. 432; Thorne v. Ætna Ins. Co. 102 Wis. 593, 78 N. W. 920; State ex rel. Jones v. Ch. of Comm. 121 Wis. 110, 98 N. W. 930; Golden v. Meier, 129 Wis. 14, 107 N. W. 27; Ware v. Smith, 62 Iowa, 159, 17 N. W. 459; Belleville Sav. Bank v. Bornman, 124 Ill. 200, 16 N. E. 210; Merchants’ Fxch. Bank v. Luckow, 37 Minn. 542, 35 N. W. 434; Burke v. Dulaney, 153 U. S. 228, 14 Sup. Ct. 816.
The authorities are not all in harmony with the foregoing. Dodd v. Dunne, 71 Wis. 578, 37 N. W. 430, is an example, but by the Negotiable Instrument Law, sec. 1675—16, ch. 356, Laws of 1899, the principle thereof was incorporated' into the written law of this state in these words:
“Every contract on a negotiable instrument is incomplete- and revocable until delivery of the-instrument for the purpose of giving effect thereto. As between immediate parties, and as regards a remote party other than a holder in due course,.. *334tbe delivery, in order to be effectual, must be made either by or under tbe authority of the party making, drawing, accepting, or indorsing, as the case may be; and in such case the delivery may be shown to have been conditional, or for a special purpose only, and not for the purpose of transferring the property in the instrument. But where the instrument is in the hands of a holder in due course, a valid delivery thereof by all parties prior to him so as to make them liable to him is conclusively presumed.”
The next important question is: Bid appellants become the -owners of the notes in due course ? We need not discuss the subject; at any considerable length, of what constitutes a holder of commercial paper in due course, since the written law covers the matter. Sec. 1676 — 22 of the Negotiable Instrument statute provides that:
“A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions:
“1. That it is complete and regular upon its face.
“2. That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it' had been previously dishonored, if •such was the fact.
“8. That he took it in good faith and for value.
“4. That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.
“S. That he took it in the .usual course of business.”
It will be observed that, in harmony with elementary principles, one of the important incidents of the transfer of negotiable paper, essential to the transferee becoming a holder in due course, is the actual payment therefor. So what constitutes payment, when there is not an actual transition of the money equivalent from the purchaser of the paper to the seller at the time of the transfer, has often been a subject of consideration. Such circumstances as we have here, that is the sale of a note before due and placing the consideration to the ■credit of the vendor upon the books of the purchaser subject to the former’s check, have been held not to be a taking for *335value so as to render the new bolder a purchaser in due course, except to the extent of the money actually drawn and charged against such credit. This court so held in Manufacturers’ Nat. Bank v. Newell, 71 Wis. 309, 37 N. W. 420. The principle there and in many cases declared was incorporated into the Negotiable Instrument Law at sec. 1676—24 in these words:
“Where the transferee receives notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same before he has paid therefor the full amount agreed to be paid he will be deemed a holder in due course only to the extent of the amount theretofore paid by him.”
Since in this case the evidence conclusively shows that when appellants took the notes from the original holder they placed the consideration to the credit of the latter, and there is no proof that the credit was thereafter exhaustéd in whole or in part by payment of money on account thereof, there was a failure of proof that appellants became holders of the papers in due course so as to cure the infirmities therein, unless the mere production thereof was sufficient to make out a prima facie case in that regard. On that the learned trial court decided in the negative, and seems in so doing to have followed the written law, as indicated by sec. 1676—25 of the Negotiable Instrument Law, which covers the subject in these words:
“The title of a person who negotiates an instrument is defective within the meaning of this act when he obtains the instrument, or' any signature thereto, by fraud, ... or when he negotiates it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amount to a fraud.”
So as we have seen the title of the original holders of the papers in question was defective. They negotiated such papers in bad faith as to all who signed conditionally, and as to others, if any there were, their signatures were obtained by fraud. The purchaser of commercial paper under such circumstances occupies a materially different position, when he *336attempts to judicially enforce it, from that occupied by one-who has taken a note as indorsee, which in the hands of the original holder is subject to a defense not based on the title-of the latter being defective or his signature having been obtained by fraud. Ordinarily the second holder is presumed,, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to have taken the-paper in due course and before maturity. But the rule in this state and generally, independent of the written law, is-that where circumstances exist rendering the title of the original holder defective, or showing fraud in obtaining the paper,, the burden is on the second holder to go further than to-merely produce such paper. He cannot rely upon the mere presumption Which obtains, generally, but must carry the-burden of showing that he is a holder in due course by proving facts sufficient to establish it. Fuller v. Green, 64 Wis. 159, 24 N. W. 907.
The reason for the foregoing rule, as indicated by judicial authorities, is fairly stated in 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) at page 323, to the effect that proof of fraud suggests that the party thereto who formerly held the paper and is precluded from recovering thereon himself, transferred it tó another to recover for his use, and the latter must overcome the presumption in that regard. It is further said there with supporting authorities:
“It is well settled that the holder does not meet the burden cast upon him by proof of value merely, but he must also prove . . . that he gave value within the conditions which the law prescribes to establish the character of a bona fide holder; or, as it is sometimes expressed, he must show all the circumstances under which he took the paper, with a view to determining his good faith as a holder,” “But ... it has been held that proof that the holder before maturity paid full value for the instrument sued upon” makes out a prima facie case of “bona fides.” Market & F. Nat. Bank v. Sargeant, 85 Me. 349, 27 Atl. 192; Henry v. Sneed, 99 Mo. 407, 422, 12 S. W. 663.
*337That seems reasonable and we adopt it, although it is not universally supported by judicial authority. Of course, proof of payment is not conclusive, it only makes out, as indicated, a prima facie case; one subject to be rebutted by the adverse party. The basic principle of the law, as thus declared by the courts, was incorporated into the Negotiable Instrument Law at sec. 1676—29, in these words:
“Every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated the instrument was defective, the burden is on the holder to prove that he or some person under whom he claims acquired the title as a holder in due course.”
Counsel for appellants freely concede that the mere crediting of the consideration agreed upon, to the seller of commercial paper, as was done in this case, does not constitute payment therefor, but it is insisted that the burden in such circumstances is on the respondent to show that the credit was not balanced by payment. Not only the judicial authorities, as we have seen, are to the contrary, but the written law is also. Counsel rely confidently on Warman v. First Nat. Bank, 185 Ill. 60, 57 N. E. 6, but as we read that case it does not bear out counsels contention. The note there dealt with was subject in the hands of the original holder to an ordinary defense, not one based on the title of such holder being defective, or on fraud in obtaining the paper, and so governed by the principle incorporated into sec. 1676—29 of the Negotiable Instrument statute.
What has been said renders all other questions discussed in the briefs of counsel immaterial. The conclusion reached by the learned circuit court that the title of the original holders of the notes was defective and that, such condition cast upon the appellants the burden of proving that they became holders of the papers in due course, which included proof that they actually paid therefor, not merely entered upon the bank books a credit for the agreed consideration, and that, there being *338no proof produced on that subject, tbe evidence failed to establish the causes of action pleaded, seems to be fully warranted.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.