Baird v. Radke

207 N.W. 149, 53 N.D. 583, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 12
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 149 (Baird v. Radke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Radke, 207 N.W. 149, 53 N.D. 583, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 12 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

*585 JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiff, as receiver of the First State Bank of Ilazen, brought this action on a promissory note. The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant. This appeal is from the judgment and from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for judgment non obstante or, in the alternative, for a new trial.

On January 10, 1920, the defendant executed the promissory note on which suit is brought, for $1,500, payable to Benjamin Stoelting, or order; the note was endorsed without recourse by the payee. The First State Bank of Ilazen was organized in 1916, and closed in December, 1923. One Harmsen was cashier of the bank during the entire period of its existence. Stoelting was president until sometime in 1920; he was also a stockholder in the Star Mercantile Company of Hazen, a concern in which. defendant Badke was financially interested. The record discloses the fact that Stoelting had borrowed somewhat heavily from the bank and that in the fall of 1917, Harmsen requested the president to reduce his indebtedness to the bank, calling attention to the fact that the loans to him exceeded the limit allowed by law. Subsequently, and on December 14, 1917, Stoelting brought into the bank a promissory note, executed by the defendant, payable to Stoelting; Harmsen claims that Stoelting asked him to give him credit for the note, and that the bank, knowing defendant’s financial responsibility, purchased the note,. entered it as one of the bills - receivable of the bank and gave Stoelting credit on the books for the full amount thereof, to wit: $1,500. This is disputed by S-toelting, who claims, in substance, that the note was conditionally delivered, was to be held by the bank and not to be taken by it in the manner claimed by Harmsen. This note was due December 1, 1918; it was not paid at maturity, but sometime later the defendant executed a renewal. note in the sum of $1,500, payable to Stoelting and, by the latter, endorsed without recourse. The renewal note was delivered to the bank, the old *586 note surrendered, and appropriate entries, evidencing this transaction, made on tbe books. When the second note fell due, the defendant did not pay. The interest, however, was paid, but not by the defendant, as he testifies; and a renewal note, dated January 10, 1920, payable to Benjamin Stoelting due on December 1, 1920, and signed by the defendant and endorsed by Stoelting as before, was delivered to the bank. The second renewal note was surrendered. The new note was entered in the usual way, as a part of the assets of the bank. It is this note which is in suit.

The plaintiff offered and introduced the note, the bills receivable ledger, the deposit slip showing credit to Stoelting, and the bills receivable and interest ledger. The ledgers show the transaction in detail, with interest payments and the dates when the notes became due. The deposit slip is dated December 14, 1917, credits the account of Stoelting with $1,500 and is marked “Radke, note $1,500.” The answer of the defendant, generally supported by his testimony, is that sometime in December, 1917, he agreed to purchase the interest of Stoelting in the Halpern implement business at Golden Valley, which business the Star Mercantile Company of Hazen, in which both were financially interested, had purchased, or was about to purchase; that in contemplation of the deal and for the purpose of binding the agreement, the defendant made the note which was delivered to the bank December 14, 1917, and turned the same over to Stoelting; that the delivery of this note to Stoelting was on the condition that it should be returned to Radke, if, for any reason, the deal should not be made; that the deal was never made; that Radke received nothing for his note; and that the defendant was entitled to, and demanded the return of the note accordingly. The defendant alleges that Stoelting wrongfully transferred the note to the bank; that the bank and its officers were fully cognizant of all the facts and circumstances relative to the making and delivery of the note and the conditions attached thereto, at, and prior to the time when it was endorsed and delivered to the bank. The defendant then alleges that the first renewal note was executed in circumstances well known to the bank; that it was executed under a threat of foreclosure proceedings against Stoelting, and that the latter induced defendant to execute the last renewal note upon the promise that the *587 first renewal note and the note in suit would be immediately returned to him.

The defendant’s testimony is, 'as stated heretofore, that negotiations were pending between him and Stoelting for the purchase of Stoelting’s interest in a certain implement business in Golden Valley; that Stoelt-ing’s interest in that business was supposed to approximate this amount; that the note for $1,500 represented the estimate of the purchase price as made by the parties at that time. The Star Mercantile Company operated a store at Hazen; one Ilalpern owned an implement business at Golden Valley. Negotiations had been in progress for the purchase of the implement business at Golden Valley by the Star Mercantile Company. The Star Mercantile Company, in which both Stoelting and Eadke were interested, purchased the Ilalpern implement business in Golden Valley. At or about the same time, it was proposed that Eadke purchase the interest of Stoelting in the Golden Valley business which was to be or had been purchased by the Star Mercantile Company. When the inventory of the Golden Valley business was taken, it was discovered that the value of the stock was greater than had been anticipated and the negotiations for the purchase of the Stoelting interest by the defendant came to an end. Stoelting’s interest in the Golden Valley Implement business, it appears, so largely exceeded $1,500 that Eadke was unable to buy and Stoelting accordingly released him. Stoelting testified that at the same time and as a part of the same transaction, he executed his note in the same amount payable in thirty days, to Eadke. This he did each time there was a renewal. This is admitted by Eadke. Stoelting says that he took the Eadke note to the bank and asked if he could have credit therefor; but that he told the cashier that the note was dependent upon a certain deal, and that the note would not he good until the deal was consummated. This testimony is denied by the cashier, who asserts that he took the note in good faith without any knowledge of any conditions affecting its enforceability. Eadke testifies that the cashier told him that Stoelting had left the note in the bank “with the understanding that it was not to be used until the deal was consummated,” and, that in 1918, the cashier had promised to see that the note was returned to the defendant after the deal had been abandoned.

From this brief summary of the testimony, it is clear that there is *588 'evidence to support a finding by tbe jury that tbe note made in December, 1917, was conditionally delivered to Stoelting, and that the negotiation thereof to tbe First State Bank of Hazen, amounted to legal fraud upon tbe defendant Iladke and that, as a result, tbe title of tbe plaintiff to tbe original note was defective, within the provisions of § 6940, Comp. Laws 1913, being § 55 of tbe Negotiable Instruments Law. It, therefore, devolved on tbe plaintiff to prove that it acquired the note without notice of any infirmity or defect.

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Related

Norma State Bank v. Scalf
228 N.W. 209 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
Nybakken v. Baird
219 N.W. 472 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 149, 53 N.D. 583, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-radke-nd-1925.