Alexander v. Bank of Lebanon

47 S.W. 840, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 620, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 320
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 840 (Alexander v. Bank of Lebanon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Bank of Lebanon, 47 S.W. 840, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 620, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 320 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

Appellee sued appellant on three promissory notes, one of which was barred by limitation and was eliminated from the ease by the court’s charge. Verdict and judgment were rendered for appellee for the amount of the other two notes, and the defendant has appealed. As to these two notes, appellant interposed the following defense:

“é. Defendant further says, answering plaintiff’s suit on the two $1100 notes described in his petition, dated October 18, 1892, that said two $1100 notes were executed and delivered to said E. Harper upon the distinct understanding and agreement between the said Harper and this defendant that said notes were never to be collected, but that they were merely executed as an accommodation to said Harper, not to be used by him in any way so as to make this defendant liable therefor; all of which was known to plaintiff bank and its cashier, S. G. Stratton, before the execution of the same; on the date of the execution of the same and at the time that said notes were indorsed by said Harper and turned over to plaintiff bank, that said Stratton, the cashier of said bank, at the time knew all about the arrangement, advised it, and was a party to it. Defendant further says that no consideration whatever of any character or kind was paid by said Harper to this defendant for said notes; all of which was known to the plaintiff bank and its cashier, S. G. Stratton; that no consideration of any kind whatever was paid by said bank to said E. Harper, the payee in said notes, or anybody for it; that said notes were executed under the following circumstances and conditions: that at the time of the execution of the same E. Harper was indebted to plaintiff, and there was pending against said E. Harper in the courts of Mc-Lennan County, Texas, a suit by the son of C. C. Hancock, the former partner of E. Harper, in the partnership as set out in clause 3 of this answer; that the claim of young Hancock was an unjust one, but of *622 doubtful result, inasmuch as C. C. Hancock, the former partner, was aiding his son in establishing the same against said E. Harper, and which claim was defeated. But in order to meet the contingency of a recovery by young Hancock against said Harper, said Harper, by the advice and instigation of S. G. Stratton, the cashier of plaintiff bank, had Alexander to make his notes to said Harper, which are the two $1100 notes sued on herein and other notes not sued, on, and which two $1100 notes sued on herein were indorsed by said Harper to plaintiff bank, but it was distinctly understood and agreed between said Harper, the plaintiff bank, and said Stratton, its cashier, that said notes were never to be collected. In order to cover up said property, as suggested by plaintiff bank through its cashier, said property was turned over to defendant Alexander to be sold by him for said Harper, and the proceeds of the sale of such stock to be paid by this defendant to said Harper, and by said Harper to plaintiff bank, which has been done. This defendant did not want to go into this agreement, and said Harper promised him that it should never hurt him. Plaintiff bank knew all about it, was a party to it, and advised it, was protected by it and received the benefit from it, and this defendant sold the stock that was placed in his hands by said Harper, and said Harper paid the same over to plaintiff bank and plaintiff agreed to return said notes to this defendant. Said two $1100 notes, by agreement between this defendant and said Harper, the payee therein, and with the knowledge, consent, and acquiescence of plaintiff bank, were never to be collected by said Harper, or by the bank from this defendant, but the proceeds of said stock was to be paid over by defendant to said Harper and by him to plaintiff, all of which was done as aforesaid, and all of which was fully, clearly and distinctly understood and agreed on by said Harper, said Stratton, said bank, and this defendant. The only purpose of said notes being to show that said Alexander had property in his hands belonging to said Harper, which he was to sell and turn over the proceeds to said Harper and said Harper to plaintiff; all of which has been done. The proceeds of the sale of said stock was paid over to said Harper by said Alexander, was paid over by said Harper to plaintiff bank, and plaintiff bank promised said Harper to turn over-said notes to this defendant, wherefore this defendant says that there was no consideration for said notes; that the same was never intended to be circulated, and that the proceeds of the property evidenced by same had been long since paid over to plaintiff bank, in pursuance of the agreement between the parties, whereby the defendant says the plaintiff ought not to have and maintain this suit on said notes against said defendant; all of which this defendant is ready to verify, puts himself upon thecountrjr, and prays the judgment of the court.”

Harper testified in substance to all the facts alleged in the answer-quoted ; but in so far as his evidence tended to show the bank had notice-of the transaction between him and appellant, he was sharply contradicted by the testimony of S. G. Stratton, the bank’s cashier. Appellant *623 also testified that the notes were executed in the manner and for the purpose alleged in his answer.

In charging the jury the court used this language in describing the appellant’s defense: “The defendant alleges that said two $1100 notes were executed by him to E. Harper, under an agreement made between him and said Harper, with the knowledge and under the advice of plaintiff’s cashier, and in furtherance of a fraudulent scheme, whereby said Harper transferred to defendant a large amount of personal property for the purpose of defrauding his creditors, and that said notes were executed by him as the apparent consideration therefor and by the said Harper indorsed to plaintiff, whose cashier had advised said fraudulent transaction, and who had full knowledge thereof when it received said notes from Harper.” And in another paragraph, in submitting to the jury the issues raised by the answer quoted, the court refers to the transaction alleged therein as a “fraudulent scheme.”

Appellant objects to the charge quoted as improperly characterizing his defense, tending to prejudice the jury against him, and calculated to influence them in determining the credibility of his witness E. Harper.

This objection is well taken and requires a reversal of the judgment. The pleading referred to expressly charges that the claim of young Hancock in his suit against Harper was unjust and was ultimately defeated. If the claim was unjust, a judgment obtained upon it would have been unjust, and while the agreement pleaded may, in a restricted and technical sense, have been in fraud of Hancock’s legal right to enforce a judgment obtained upon his unjust claim, if he should obtain such judgment, it involved no moral turpitude, and therefore was not fraudulent in the popular sense of that term. We think it probable that the jury accepted the court’s language in its popular sense, and understood it as conveying the idea that the alleged transaction between appellant and Harper was reprehensible; and if they so understood it, it was calculated to disparage both appellant and his witness Harper, and may have influenced the jury in deciding the case.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 840, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 620, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-bank-of-lebanon-texapp-1898.