Arnd v. Grell

206 N.W. 613, 200 Iowa 1272
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 613 (Arnd v. Grell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnd v. Grell, 206 N.W. 613, 200 Iowa 1272 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Evans, J.

I. The plaintiff sued upon a negotiable promissory note for $500, duly signed by the defendant. Encounter *1274 ing an' answer which set up fraud at the inception of the note, the plaintiff abandoned his original petition, and filed an amendment. He averred therein that the defendant was a subscriber for five shares of capital stock in Nielsen Aero Company, a corporation; that he executed the note set out in plaintiff’s petition as evidence of his indebtedness for said subscription; that thereafter the corporation borrowed from the plaintiff the sum of $1,000, and on a later date the further sum of $500, and, to secure the payment of such loans, the said corporation “indorsed and assigned to this plaintiff the said note for $500 set out in the original petition as collateral security for the indebtedness of the Nielsen Aero Company to plaintiff, * *.* and that said plainliff made said loan to the Nielsen Aero Co., relying upon the said collateral security, and relying upon the fact that the said note of this defendant represented a subscription to the capital stock of the Nielsen Aero Co.” It is further averred that shortly théreafter the corporation went into bankruptcy, and that the plaintiff received dividend on his indebtedness to the amount of $37.90, and no more. The final paragraph of the petition is as follows:

“That the said $1,500 as evidenced by the two (2) promissory notes from the Nielsen Aero Co. to this plaintiff was loaned by said plaintiff to the said Nielsen Aero Co. in reliance upon the collateral pledged as security for said indebtedness, and in reliance upon the indebtedness evidencing the -subscription to the capital stock of the said Nielsen Aero Co. by this defendant, as evidenced by the promissory note set out in plaintiff’s petition, and that the assignment of said note, as set out in plaintiff’s petition, to this plaintiff as collateral, constituted an equitable assignment to this plaintiff of the said stock subscription of defendant and of the indebtedness evidencing the same, and that, by reason of the facts hereinbefore stated, this defendant is estopped from denying his liability evidenced by said note to this plaintiff. ’ ’

The evidence is that the note in suit was given by the defendant in part payment for a subscription for shares of stock in such corporation. He subscribed for 10 shares at the par value of $100, paying therefor $500 in cash and bonds, and executing his note for the remainder. "Within a few months there *1275 after, the company went into bankruptcy, and was adjudged bankrupt, and was virtually without assets. The plaintiff herein was recognized in the bankruptcy court as a secured creditor, and was permitted to hold his collateral. Evidence was introduced on the part of the defendant, tending to show that he was grossly defrauded by representations which induced his • subscription and his execution of the note. The opening statement in appellee’s argument is:

“This action is not on a promissory note, as stated by appellant, but on the cause of action as set out in the amended and substituted petition. ’ ’

One theory of the plaintiff’s is that the indorsement of the note by the corporation to the plaintiff amounted to an equitable assignment o£ the corporation’s cause of action against the defendant for his unpaid subscription to the shares of stock. A further theory advanced in argument by counsel, though not in the pleading, is that the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant under the provisions of Sections 8394 to 8397, inclusive, Code of 1924, on the theory that plaintiff is the creditor of the corporation, and that the defendant is a stockholder, indebted to the corporation for unpaid subscription for shares. The final summing up of appellee’s brief is:

“It is the clear intention, both of the statute above cited and of the common law, to make the unpaid installments on capital stock liable for debts of the company; and in the case at bar, the note itself, as representing the unpaid installment, was specifically pledged to this plaintiff as a creditor of the company, and the right of plaintiff to recover thereon seems clear. ’ ’

The result is that the appellee plaintiff will neither commit himself to the ownership of the note nor to a denial of such ownership. Neither will he commit himself to a reliance upon the statute without regard to the collateral, nor to a reliance upon the collateral without regard to the statute. The statute furnishes no aid to the plaintiff as a holder of collateral; nor has he any need of the statute if he relies upon his collateral. If he relies upon his collateral, however, we see no way of escape for him from meeting the issue of fraud tendered in the answer. If the facts were such that, at the time he acquired the note, he could not have become holder in due course by purchase, then *1276 for the same reason he could not become a collateral holder in due course. Nor could he improve his position by acquiring, as a mere assignee, from the corporation a cause of action against the stockholder. The evidence of plaintiff is of the same character as it would have been if he were trying to recover upon the note as collateral. His only evidence of the transaction with the corporation is that he took the note, with others, as security for his loan. The allegation in his petition that an equitable assignment was intended is purely argumentative. There is no evidence to sustain it as a fact, as distinguished from the argument. If there were, we do not perceive how a so-called equitable assignment could be available to the plaintiff in a law action. Nor, on the other hand, do we perceive how any gain could accrue to the plaintiff if such assignment had been reduced to a formal writing. Whatever the form of such assignment, whether legal or equitable, oral or written, his rights thereunder would be those of a mere assignee, and subject to any defense which was good against the assignor. One difficulty in the presentation of plaintiff’s case is that he does not stand consistently upon any one theory of recovery. He seeks to stand with one foot upon the statute and the other upon his collateral. If one seems to fail in any respect, he rests upon the other, and vice versa. Under the facts of the case, these two steeds do not run together, nor are they complementary to each other. The operation of the statute will be considered in another division hereof. It is sufficient now to say that, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon his collateral, he has no need of the statute; and, if he is entitled to recover by virtue of the statute, he has no need of the collateral. If he is not entitled to recover upon his collateral singly, or upon the statute singly, he is not entitled to recover upon both jointly.

The defendant, having delivered his negotiable note to the corporation for his unpaid subscription, was prima facie liable upon the note to the corporation, in the absence of affirmative defense. If the corporation transferred that note to a holder in due course, the defendant was liable therefor, regardless of affirmative' defense. Was he still liable to the corporation for his unpaid subscription? Manifestly not.

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 613, 200 Iowa 1272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnd-v-grell-iowa-1925.