Clark v. Layman

62 P.2d 897, 144 Kan. 711, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 12, 1936
DocketNo. 33,034
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 897 (Clark v. Layman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Layman, 62 P.2d 897, 144 Kan. 711, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 154 (kan 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action to recover on a promissory note signed by twenty-four makers, as follows:

“Pretty Prairie, Kan.,
“$13,868.44. June 1, 1930.
“Thirty days after date, for value received, I, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of The Pretty Prairie Co-Op. Grain Co. of Pretty Prairie, Kansas, thirteen thousand eight hundred sixty-eight and 44/100 dollars, at the office of the Pretty Prairie Co-Op. Grain Co., Pretty Prairie, Kan., value re[712]*712ceived, with interest at eight percent from date until paid. Each and every maker and endorser hereof waives demand, notice and protest.
“A. D. Layman, Chas. W. Murphy; H. L. Dafforn, Jos. C. Graber, Amos Stucky, Jacob K. Graber, Joe M. Graber, J. J. Kaufman, J. D. Kautzer, H. G. Pargeter, Jacob B. Graber, E. K. Stucky, C. A. Lambert, S. J. Stucky, JR. H. Lackey, Milton' Stucky, P. J. Krehbiel, Jonas A. Stucky,' H. R.*'Graber, Peter J. Graber, Joseph Schrag, Mrs. J. P. Stucky, Mrs. M. J. Bay, D'. É. Bay.”

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that he was the duly qualified and acting receiver of The Pretty Prairie Cooperative Grain Company, payee, which had become insolvent, that the twenty-three defendants (H. L. Dafforn being dead) had made, executed and delivered the note to the payee; and that they had failed to pay the same. The plaintiff receiver prayed judgment for the full amount and interest.

Before answering this petition defendants filed a motion to abate the action on various grounds, which may-be summarized thus:

(1) The note had been assigned by the Pretty Prairie Cooperative Grain Company to certain persons, to wit: Fred V. Pargeter, P. J. Krehbiel, O. W. McCowan, Jacob B. Graber, J. K. Graber, Jos. C. Graber, J. J. Kaufman, H. L. Dafforn, Amos Stucky, Mrs. P. J. Stucky, J. D. Kautzer.

(2) All of these named assignees were signers of the note except Fred V. Pargeter and 0. W. McCowan, and were in possession of it, and that an action had been begun to recover the possession of that note in behalf of the original payee’ and to cancel the assignment thereof, that such action had been tried in the district court of Reno county and .decided in favor of the present plaintiff and against the defendant assignees, and that an appeal had been taken from that judgment to the supreme court where such appeal was then pending, and by reason of these facts, the twenty-three defendants alleged that plaintiff was not entitled to sue on the note, and—

“Said defendants ask that said action be abated for the additional reason: That in said action . . . not only was the right of the. possession of said note by the plaintiff involved and decided in said action, but also the right of plaintiff to sue upon said note, and also the liability of the assignees of said note or the signers of said note-was involved and decided in said action by the lower court, and is involved in the appeal of said action to the supreme court of the state of Kansas, where the rights of the assignees of said note in said action . . . and the signers of said note, defendants in this case, will be determined and adjudicated in said’ appeal to the supreme court of the state of Kansas.”

[713]*713The record is silent'as to what action the district court took on the foregoing plea or motion, but it may be inferred that joinder of issues was delayed by consent of court until after the appeal in the case referred to in the motion had been decided by the supreme court, which was on December 7,1935. (Clark v. Pargeter, 142 Kan. 781, 52 P. 2d 617.)

Thereafter twenty of the defendant makers (all except Jacob B. Graber, P. J. Krehbiel and Chas. W, Murphy) filed an answer which contained a general denial, an admission of the execution of the note, an allegation that its execution was sometime during the month of June and not on June 1, that the date was in blank when they feigned it, the name: of the payed and the place of payment’Vére in blank, that it was understood and agreed that each signer would be liable for an amount in proportion to the amount df stock which he held in the Pretty Prairie Cooperative Grain Company, and that at the time the note was signed by the defendant makers there was a contemporaneous written contract signed by all the makers of the note, the substance of which was as follows:

(a) The defendants designated themselves as. “accommodation makers” of the note.

(b) Defendants stated that they were stockholders of the Pretty Prairie Cooperative Grain Co., and authorized its officers to arrange for extension of time to pay the note.

. (c) Defendants authorized the officers of the company to retain any net profits of the company’s business which might be apportioned to them as dividends to apply on the note.

In their answer defendants also alleged that the note and contract were circulated together and were the record of a single transaction and that the note was signed by these defendants—

. . upon the representations and with the understanding that said note would be handled and collected as provided in said contract, and that each signer of said note would only be liable for $385.24, and said defendants further relied upon the motion which was passed at a stockholders’ meeting of The Pretty Prairie Cooperative Grain Company June 14, 1930,- and prior to the execution and delivery of said note, which resolution was in words and figures as follows, to wit:
“ ‘It was voted that each member pay their share of the deficit, which is S385.24. The vote twelve for, two against.’ ”

The twenty answering defendants further alleged that it was understood and agreed between them and the officers of the company that the note and contract would not be delivered nor become [714]*714effective until all the stockholders (apparently the twenty-four signers of the note) had signed the note and contract ; and that certain of these stockholders did not sign but refused to do so, wherefore the answering defendants were not liable on the note notwithstanding they .signed it, and the officers of the company had no authority to deliver the note to the company, and that such delivery was unauthorized.

Defendants pleaded further in respect to the case of Clark v. Pargeter in the same court and between the same plaintiff and eight or nine of these same defendants for the right of possession of the note now sued on and certain matters incidental thereto, which action culminated in a judgment which was affirmed on appeal to this court (142 Kan. 781, 52 P. 2d 617), the substance of that judgment being that the note and contract were held to be a stock liability, and that said instruments were made for the purpose of restoring a deficit in the capital stock of said corporation, and that the obligation created by said note and contract was a stock obligation.

Defendants further alleged that in 1931 through the application of certain dividends due them the indebtedness evidenced by the note was reduced to $12,878.89, and at a stockholders’ meeting on May 5,1933, the stockholders voted to apply $3,388.37 out of profits in further reduction of the note to $9,490.52.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 897, 144 Kan. 711, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-layman-kan-1936.