Byers v. Tritch

12 Colo. App. 377
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
DocketNo. 1503
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Colo. App. 377 (Byers v. Tritch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byers v. Tritch, 12 Colo. App. 377 (Colo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Bissell, J.

This judgment which rests on the findings of the court which are amply supported by competent testimony, is assailed on various grounds. None of the positions taken by counsel appear to be tenable. We will first state the issue as formed [378]*378by the pleadings because the procedure is an object of attack, though the case made by the proof in no wise departs from it but abundantly sustains it.

Tritch brought suit against Byers, Gutsch and Briggs, stating in his complaint that the Denver Hardware Company, a Colorado corporation, on the 15th of April, 1895, made its promissory note, payable ninety days after date for value, to the order of Tritch, at their office, with interest at twelve per cent after maturity. It was further averred that Byers, Gutsch and Briggs signed their names on the back of the instrument before delivery, and then stated the legal conclusion that they thereby became the joint makers of the note. It was further.stated that nothing had been paid on the note which was long past due and the property of the plaintiff. The plaintiff for some reason which is not plain to be seen, stated that the hardware company had made an assignment of all of its property for the benefit of creditors and that the assignee had given bonds, qualified and entered on the discharge of his duties. It was averred that plaintiff had presented his claim to the assignee for allowance, but that nothing had been paid, but that he did not intend thereby to waive any rights. The complaint was verified and the defendants answered, putting their defense into three separate paragraphs. The first denied that the defendants were liable jointly as maker or makers of the note. The second set up that the plaintiff ought not to have his action because the note had been delivered to the plaintiff before their indorsement and that no consideration passed to any of them. The third defense set up the assignment of the hardware company and the proof of the plaintiff’s claim before the assignee which was averred to be an election which concluded him. There, was a replication which as to the first defense was that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute any defense; as to the second, a denial of all the allegations, and as to the third, a denial of the election coupled with a statement that the alleged defense did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense. The case was set for trial on the plaintiff’s motion. The issue was [379]*379made up in November and early in that month notice was served that an application would be made to the court to set the case for trial on the merits. This motion was not resisted nor were any steps taken by the defendants with reference to it until the 20th of January when they filed a motion to vacate the order of trial because the case had been prematurely set without the disposition of the issues of- law raised by the ■ answer. On the day of trial the motion was denied and the case proceeded. At this time, the defendants moved, as suggested, to vacate the order and prayed that the cause should be set for hearing on the plaintiff’s demurrers to the answer. The motion was denied. The court did not regard the application as one which called for the vacation of the order setting the cause for trial and no farther application was made respecting this matter. It is insisted on this appeal that it was error for the court to proceed with the trial without the disposition of what is called “ the demurrers of the plaintiff ” to the defendants’ answer. Manifestly the replication of the plaintiff did not take the form of a demurrer, although he could very correctly have demurred to the first and third defense and answered as to the second. Had he pursued this course the code requires that the issues of law shall be disposed of before the trial of questions of fact is proceeded with. Putting the objections into the replication scarcely made that pleading a demurrer, nor as we look at it, was it at all necessary for the plaintiff to have said anything about it. If the plaintiff had simply replied, though whether that was necessary is an open question in the peculiar form in which the issue was presented, he could at the trial have raised the same question which is suggested by the statements that the first and third defenses presented no facts which constituted a sufficient plea by way of bar or abatement. He would thereby have obtained the same advantage for the purposes of attack on the pleading that he enjoyed by putting these matters into his replication. We do not regard the procedure of the trial court as open to objection nor do we concede the procedure to be questionable. In any event it is not one which could [380]*380operate to reverse the case. It is an immaterial error which occasioned the defendants no harm, and as their pleas were manifestly insufficient in law and the court’s ruling thereon correct, and they were in fact completely.overcome by proof, the judgment must stand. A similar practice seems to have been regarded as unobjectionable by the supreme court. McKee v. Howe, 17 Colo. 538.

Although it is suggested by the defendants’ counsel that he is unadvised that the question has been settled by the appellate courts, it has been our opinion ever since the case of Martin v. Good was decided by the supreme court of the territory in 1873, and affirmed by the supreme court of the United States in 1877 that the liability and status of strangers to negotiable paper who put their names on the back of it prior to its delivery to the payee, or to a bona fide holder, was not an open question. As we understand it that case decides that thereby they in law assume the position of joint makers subject to all the responsibilities attaching to that position, and under the code may be sued either jointly or severally with the comaker. Good, v. Martin, 2 Colo. 218; Good v. Martin, 95 U. S. 90.

We are not unmindful of the fact that the appellants’ counsel with some vigor attack the evidence by which this matter of fact is sustained. We might very easily shelter ourselves behind the very general rule which prevails where the trial judge hears the testimony and determines the facts, but we have read the evidence with considerable care and we see no escape from the conclusion that this note bearing the indorsements of the defendants and appellees was thus executed by all of them prior to the time it was completed and delivered to Tritch. The company wanted money. The note without the name of the payee was evidently prepared and placed in the hands of one Burdette, and possibly, originally, a note payable to his order was prepared and delivered to him to raise money on. It is one of the things known sometimes as a “kiting note” and sometimes as a note made for the purpose of sale. However this may be, the note in [381]*381suit was ultimately prepared and probably without the name of the payee written in. Burdette then had some dealings with Berlin, who was a person doing that kind of business. He approached Tritch for the purpose of getting the money from him. Just what the discussion was between Tritch and Berlin is unimportant as respects the issue, but in any event Tritch declined to advance the money on the hardware company’s note without some sort of security, and the note was taken back and evidently completed by the insertion of Tritch’s name and the indorsement of these three appellees. It was then taken to Tritch who gave a check for it less the discount.

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Related

Good v. Martin
95 U.S. 90 (Supreme Court, 1877)
Good v. Martin
2 Colo. 218 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1873)
McKee v. Howe
17 Colo. 538 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1892)
Neil v. J. I. Case & Co.
25 Kan. 510 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Colo. App. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byers-v-tritch-coloctapp-1898.