Butte MacHinery Co. v. Jeppesen

241 P. 36, 41 Idaho 642, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 135
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 P. 36 (Butte MacHinery Co. v. Jeppesen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butte MacHinery Co. v. Jeppesen, 241 P. 36, 41 Idaho 642, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 135 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

*644 BUDGE, J.

— Appellant Butte Machinery Company, a Montana corporation, brought this action against respondent Jeppesen to recover upon a promissory note given by the latter to the order of the Hesperus Mining Company, a Montana corporation, in the principal sum of $1,000, dated at Idaho Falls, Idaho, September 22, 1921, and payable one year after date, with interest. The case was tried to the court and jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of the respondent, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellant claims that it took this promissory note at Butte, Montana, from the mining company in good faith, before maturity, in payment of a debt then due for the rental of certain mining machinery.

Respondent admitted the execution and delivery of the note to the payee, but denied that appellant purchased the same before maturity, for a valuable consideration and without notice of any defenses available to him against the note in the hands of the mining company. He alleged that the *645 note was given in this state for the purchase price of shares of its capital stock sold to him by the mining company, which was then doing business and selling its stock in this state without having complied with the provisions of either C. S., chap. 187, or chap. 206; that appellant likewise failed to comply with the provisions of C. S., chap. 187; that the execution and delivery of the note was procured by fraudulent misrepresentations as to the value of the stock and as to when the note would be used by the mining company.

The question of fraud in the procurement of the note was eliminated in the trial of the cause, the court having found that respondent did not produce sufficient evidence to warrant that defense being submitted to the jury. There being no cross-appeal by the respondent, the correctness of the trial court’s ruling in that regard is not here for determination. The note was transferred by the mining company, to appellant at Butte, Montana, thus eliminating-noncompliance by appellant with C. S., chap. 187, as any matter of defense.

From the record it must be conceded that the mining company, payee' of the note, failed to comply with the provisions of C. S., chap. 187, prescribing conditions precedent to the right of a foreign corporation to. do business in this state, or with the provisions of C. S., chap. 206, known as the Blue Sky Law, regulating the sale of corporate stock. But the defense that the note in question -was given by respondent for shares of stock in a corporation that had not complied with the provisions of the statute is ineffectual against the appellant if it is a holder in due course. (Ashley & Rumelin v. Brady, ante, p. 160, 238 Pac. 314; Katz v. Herrick, 12 Ida. 1, 86 Pac. 873.)

We come now to the serious question presented upon this appeal by appellant’s assignment of error No. 18, which is that the evidence is wholly insufficient to justify a verdict for the respondent, in that there is no proof that appellant had knowledge that the note was given to the payee in payment for shares of stock in a foreign corporation that had *646 not complied with the laws applicable to such corporations wishing to do business in this state, or with our Blue Sky Law.

The evidence, part of which is stressed by respondent as establishing knowledge on the part of appellant and its officers of the failure of the mining company to comply with the statutes above referred to, may be briefly summed up in the following statement: A corporation known as the Butte and New England Copper Mining Co. had previously to the transaction now in question operated on certain mining property in the city of Butte. This company went into bankruptcy, and its interest in the property was sold to the Davis-Daly Mining Co. Some time thereafter the Hesperus Mining Company began operations on this same property under an assigned lease from the Davis-Daly Mining Co. At the time of the transactions under which appellant claims title to the promissory note one .0’Flynn, residing at Butte, was the secretary of the mining company, one Roberts of Shelly, Idaho, its president, and one Lee of Idaho Falls, Idaho, a director or at least its legal adviser. Herman, the secretary-treasurer of appellant' corporation, and Roberts and O’Flynn entered into an agreement on behalf of their respective companies for the leasing to the mining company of certain mining machinery at the rental of $2,000 for sis months. When $1,000 became payable to appellant under the rental arrangement, O’Flynn represented to Herman that the mining company would be hampered in its operations if appellant demanded payment in cash, so between them they discussed the proposition of the mining company turning over in payment of this rental the note sued upon and other notes signed by Idaho people. Before accepting the respondent’s note as such payment, Herman wrote to a firm of attorneys at Idaho Falls inquiring as to respondent’s financial condition, and was advised that if the note became due in the very near future respondent would not be able to pay it, but that he was a farmer owning considerable good farming land, and might *647 be able to pay after harvest. Upon this information the note was taken by appellant. Herman testified at the trial that he was the only officer acting for appellant in the lease of the machinery and the taking of the note, that he did not know what the note was given for, that he knew that Roberts was president of the mining company and a resident of Idaho bnt that he did not know any other officers excepting O’Flynn and one McNulty, whose connection with the company had ended prior to the leasing of the machinery. He further stated that at the time of the lease the mining company was operating the mine and taking out ore, and had upon the premises mining supplies such as timber, powder, coal and steel, and the lighter equipment such as mine cars, rails, etc.

Respondent contends that from these circumstances “appellant must be charged with notice or knowledge that the Hesperus Mining Company was only another ‘wild cat or fly-by-night’ concern, promoted to sell stock” and “with notice that the note was made for stock, as the Hesperus Mining Company had no other resources.” He further argues that “appellant took the view that the Hesperus Mining Company was in failing circumstances, which it was at the time, and that the notes, the one in suit and others of like character transferred to appellant, were better than nothing”; and that this was “appellant’s reason for not inquiring of Mr. O’Flynn as to how the Hesperus Mining Company came to have these Idaho notes, as inquiry would have revealed the illegality, and made them valueless in the hands of the Butte Machinery Company.” He claims that “it would be a reflection upon his (Herman’s) intelligence to charge that he did not have a well fixed opinion at the time his company accepted these notes in payment of the obligation of the Hesperus Mining Company that the notes were made for stock that had been sold to residents of Idaho.” '

There is no direct testimony in the record that appellant knew that the note was given for stock, or that it knew that *648

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 36, 41 Idaho 642, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butte-machinery-co-v-jeppesen-idaho-1925.