Judges: Biedzell, Buee, Buexe, Ieistianson, Nuessle
Filed Date: 12/10/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This is an action on a promissory note. The defendant and respondent admits in his answer that he executed the note, but alleges that it was an accommodation note without consideration. The case was tried to a jury, and a verdict was returned for the defendant and from a judgment entered thereon, the plaintiff appeals.
After the plaintiff had rested, and the defendant proceeded to offer his testimony, appellant objected upon the grounds, and for the reason, that the testimony shows that the note was signed and went into the bank as an asset, and was in the bank as an asset at the time the receiver
California has the same statute, and in the case of Llewellyn Iron Works v. Abbott Kinney Co. 172 Cal. 213, 155 Pac. 986, the court said: “It is well settled that under our simplified system of procedure, where plaintiff’s pleadings on the facts begin and end with the complaint, there is by law afforded him an opportunity, without pleading, to interpose evidence overcoming an affirmative matter of defense set up in the answer. Thus he may establish fraud or an estoppel. It was not incumbent upon pláintiff, therefore, in the first instance, to plead the facts constituting this estoppel, as it was not advised of the nature of the defense which defendant corporation would interpose. Being so advised, it was within its rights to offer to establish this estoppel without pleading by way of replication.” 10 Cal: Jur. § 29, page 665; McCreery v. Charlton, 185 Cal. 37, 195 Pac. 670; Young v. Blakeman, 153 Cal. 477, 95 Pac. 888; Brooks v. Johnson, 122 Cal. 569, 55 Pac. 423; Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 429, 51 Pac. 630.
The evidence offered by the defendant did not show an estoppel, it
The defendant testified that, “In harvest time 1920,” A. E. Sevareid, cashier of the bank, came to him and asked him to give this note. “He talked to me about this several times. lie asked me several times to sign this note. Finally I did sign it and he said, it -would never come against me, that the Wilson land upon which the bank had a mortgage would be sold, and the note paid out of the proceeds, there would be no liability against me at all. I did not owe the bank anything. Sevareid said, that Mr. Wilson had a note there he wanted to put mine there to cover it up. The bank closed in 1923, and never made any demand and I never received any notice to pay anything. I never paid any interest, never was asked to, until after the bank closed and went into the hands of a receiver. I was a depositor in the bank.” On cross-examination, “J. A. Wilson is my father-in-law, and I believe that it was his note referred to.”
Mr. Sevareid testified, “that the defendant, did not owe the bank anything, but claims that J. A. Wilson, father-in-law, of the defendant, owed the bank something over $5,000 for which they had a mortgage on land. I told him that Mr. Wilson was going behind in his indebtedness, and we were considering foreclosing on mortgage on his land. We thought it best to talk to Mr. Kottke. . . . We thought he might be interested in preventing a foreclosure. Mr. ICottke gave his note for the Wilson note. I spoke to the defendant several times about it, and the first time might have been in the harvest season of 1920. The last time being on December 31st, the day the note was executed; that at that time, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson deeded the land upon which the bank had a mortgage to the defendant, that at the said time, he gave to the defendant a receipt of which “exhibit 2” is a copy and reads as follows:
*851 “Dec. 31st, 1920.
“Received this day from W. G. Kottke, his personal note in favor of this bank, as follows:
“Note dated Dec. 31st, 1920, due Dec. 1st, 1921, for $2600.00 — 8% int.
“Note dated Dec. 31st, 1920; due Dec. 1st, 1922, for $2700.00 — 8% int.
“The said notes being given as renewals of. notes held against James A. Wilson and wife, with mortgage on real estate, as follows:
“Note dated Nov. 10th, 1919, due Oct. 1, 1920 for $2700.00.
“Note dated Nov. 10th, 1919, due Oct. 1, 1920, for $2168.00.
“The said notes against James A. Wilson to be retained by this bank as collateral security only. When the notes of W. G. Kottke are paid, the notes of James Wilson shall be released and surrendered.
“Merchants State Bank
“By Cashier.”
“The deed was delivered to the defendant at the time; that he took it away with him and subsequently brought it back and left it in the bank for safe keeping, and later took it away.”
ITe is corroborated in the most of this testimony by O. A. Anderson, vice president of the bank. The defendant testified that he never purchased the land from J. A. Wilson, that no deed to said land was ever executed and delivered to him, that no receipt for the note -was ever executed and delivered to him; that he never saw “exhibit 2” or the original, and never was given any receipt for the note which he gave to the bank. This receipt does not agree with the testimony of the cashier that the Wilson indebtedness was an old indebtedness. It states that the Wilson notes are dated October 10, 1919, and due October 1, 1920, they had only been running a few months, were not due, and were secured by real estate mortgage according to this receipt, when the cashier of the bank began to importune the defendant for this note. The receipt- states that, “the notes are given as a renewal of the Wilson note with mortgage on real estate.” The cashier states positively that the note was given for the Wilson note; the defendant states, that it was an accommodation note, thus, raising a question of fact for
On tbe question of estoppel there is no evidence that anybody was deceived, or injured, by reason of this note, if it was an accommodation note. It remained in tbe bank for three years after it was given,, and Sevareid admits that no demand for payment was ever made upon tbe defendant for tbe payment of any part of tbe note or interest. He says that “there was some talk of tbe defendant trading some land in payment,” but this is denied by tbe defendant. Tbe bank bad a mortgage on land securing tbe Wilson note which it never foreclosed. It never tried to collect the Wilson note. There is nothing in tbe record to show that tbe mortgaged land will not more than pay tbe Wilson note, as tbe defendant claims Sevareid told him it would. There is no evidence of any fraud, of any undue advantage, of any wrong done by tbe defendant or any injury or prejudice suffered by the bank. Tbe defendant was induced to give tbe note by tbe earnest and often repeated solicitations of tbe cashier of tbe bank. There is no estoppel in tbe case. “Estoppel can be asserted only by one acting to his prejudice on false statements.” In Re Super. Trading Co. (C. C. A. 2d) 22 E. (2d) 480. “Unless a party claiming estoppel is misled or is induced to act to bis detriment there is no estoppel.” People’s Sav. Bank v. McCarthy, 206 Iowa, 28, 217 N. W. 453. “Equitable estoppel does not arise without injury.” McKeon v. Council Bluffs, 206 Iowa, 556, 62 A.L.R. 1006, 221 N. W. 351. “Estoppel arises only when one is misled to his hurt by conduct of another.” Losee v. Crawford, — Mo. App. —, 5 S. W. (2d) 105. “Tbe burden'of proof rests on the party setting up an estoppel to show tbe grounds on which it rests, and, as a pleading in estoppel should be certain in every particular and leave nothing for mere inference or intendment, so tbe evidence to support it must be clear, precise, and unequivocal.” 10 R. C. L. 845, § 150. This case comes within tbe rule in Baird v. Miller, 56 N. D. 142, 216 N. W. 340 and is clearly distinguishable from tbe case of Vallely v. Devaney, 49 N. D. 1107, 194 N. W. 903.
Appellant specifies as error, the sustaining of an objection to tbe following question, “Do you know of your own knowledge Mr. Sevareid what action was taken with reference to the bank’s taking of this note into the bank? This was not error, as on the preceding page of tbe
The judgment is affirmed,