Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Gunderson

60 N.W. 859, 6 S.D. 226, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 148
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 N.W. 859 (Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Gunderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Gunderson, 60 N.W. 859, 6 S.D. 226, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 148 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Kellam, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court for Minnehana county granting a new trial to the respondents, who were defendants below. As to the respondent Thompson, it is agreed by both sides that the case must turn upon one pivotal point. The action was upon four promissory notes. The complaint alleged that they were made by Gunderson as principal, and Thompson and Smith as sureties, and demanded judgment for the amount claimed to be due thereon. Smith was not served. Gunderson and Thompson answered separately. Each denied that Thompson signed the notes as maker, but alleged that he signed the same simply as a witness to the signature of Gunderson. The notes, except as to,, amount and time, were alike, and as follows;

[229]*229“$50.00. No. 55,709. Dated at Sioux Falls, S. Dak., on Aug. 3, 1891. On or before the first' day of September, 1891, for value received, we or either of us, of Baltic Post Office, county of Minnehaha, state of South Dakota, promise to pay to the Aultman & Taylor Company, or order, fifty dollars. Payable and negotiable at the office of the Dakota National Bank, Sioux Falls, S. D., with interest at ten per cent, payable annually from date until paid; provided, if paid at maturity, interest shall be 7 p.er cent. The drawers and indorsers severally waive presentment for payment, protest, and notice of protest and non payment of this note.

“K. Thompson. - John J. Gunderson.

“H. M. Smith. ”

Upon the trial these notes were offered in evidence by plaintiff. Defendants objected' upon the ground, inter alia, that they did not purport to be signed by Thompson as a maker, and did hot tend to prove any liability against him. The notes were admitted in evidence. Subsequently the court allowed Thompson to testify, against plaintiff’s objection, that he signed as a witness, and not as maker. At the close of the evidence the court- reversed its ruling in this respect, and directed judgment for plaintiff against both defendants. Upon these facts it seems clear that, if the position of Thompson’s name at the lower left-hand corner of the note carried with it a presumption that he signed as a witness only, the ruling of the trial court was wrong, and the granting of a new trial must be sustained. In Camden v. McKoy, 3 Scam, 437, this was not the very question upon which the case turned, but the court, in illustration, plainly expressed its view of the same, as follows: 1 ‘For instance, a signature at the bottom of a note on the right hand side of the paper is prima facie evidence that it was affixed there in the character of maker, whilst the same signature at the left hand side of the paper would furnish equally satisfactory evidence that it was placed there only as a witness to the instrument.” In Garrison v. Owens, 1 Pin. 471, the note in [230]*230suit was signed, as this was, by one party on the lower right-hand corner, where a maker usually signs, and by another party on the lower left-hand corner, where a witness usually signs. The court held evidence was admissible to show that the one so signing at the left hand corner signed as a subscribing witness. In Steininger v. Hoch’s Ex’r, 39 Pa. St. 263, “where one executed a single bill, and opposite his name on the left, in the place for the subscribing witness, the name of another was written, who was sought to be held as a co promisor because the word ‘witness’ did not appear, it was held that the signature of the defendant [the one signing at the left] was not prima facie evidence that it was his promise, to go to the jury on proof of execution merely, and that it was in error to so instruct the jury.” In its opinion the court attached some importance to the fact that the bill in form was single, and did not seem to contemplate more than one maker. In the case in hand the promise was by “we, or either of us,” thus indicating that more than one maker was contemplated. We think, however, the effect of this fact is somewhat qualified by the further fact that in the making of these notes printed blanks were used, and -that these words were printed, and so not the immediate act of the parties. If these words had been written by one of the parties at the time, as in the case last cited, they would have been more strongly suggestive that it was contemplated that the note should be signed by more than one maker.

These cases seem to go upon the theory that it has become an established and well-known custom for makers to sign in one place, and witnesses in another. The Illinois court, in the case supra, said: ‘ ‘If custom has ripened into the form of legal presumption, in these respects, it would seem to follow that a departure from this custom would negative such presumption”; that is, one signing where a witness usually signs will be presumed to have signed as a witness, rather than as a maker. At all events, these cases, which are all we have found upon this direct question, at least teach the doctrine that parol testimony [231]*231is admissible to show that one signing where a witness generally signs, but without any words of attestation, did sign as a witness, and not as a maker. 'We think this evidence was'admissible generally, and that there was so admission in Thompson’s answer which precluded him from making such proof. He admitted signing the notes, but expressly averred that he signed as a witness to Gunderson’s signature, and not as a maker. In excluding such evidence we think the trial court was in error. It is claimed, however, by appellant, that enough was shown by the evidence on the trial to charge Thompson as a guarantor of these notes under his contract of agency with appellant, but no such question was tried in the the court below. There was no claim nor suggestion of his liability other than as the maker of the note. That was the issue pi’esented by the pleadings. It was the only claim he was • called upon to defend against, and the only question litigated was whether or not he was liable as a maker of the notes. The very verdict which the court directed, the vacation of which is appellant’s alleged grievance on this appeal, was so directed on the specific ground, as stated by him in his motion, ‘ ‘that the defendants have proven no defense to the notes set up in the complaint.” There can be no doubt that that was the case, and the theory of the case tried below. It is frequently said that a party cannot try a case oh one theory in the trial court and upon another on appeal, for that would be to submit to the appellate court for review questions which were not presented to or passed upon in the trial court. Brooks v. Yocum, 42 Mo. App. 516; Agricultural Works v. Hooks (Iowa) 49 N. W. 61; Brumfield v. Manufacturing Co. (Com. Pl. N. Y.) 23 N. Y. Supp. 1025. From these views it follows that, in our opinion, the' trial court was j ustified in granting a new trial as to respondent Thompson.

We now pass to Gunderson and his defense, to ascertain if there was error there justifying the granting of a new trial as to him. The motion for a new trial was made upon the ground [232]*232of ‘ ‘errors in law occurring at the trial, and excepted to by defendants. ” A motion upon such ground is not addressed, to the discretion of the court, but involves only the correctness or incorrectness of the court’s rulings upon which error is assigned, and the decision of the trial court will be reviewed here as presenting questions of law only, and not of discretion. Sandmeyer v. Insurance Co., 2 S. D. 346, 50 N. W. 353; O’Brien v. Brady. 23 Cal. 243; Cochran v. O’Keefe, 34 Cal. 554; Hinkle v. Railroad Co., 55 Cal. 627.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.W. 859, 6 S.D. 226, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aultman-taylor-co-v-gunderson-sd-1894.