Commercial Credit Co. v. Calkins

241 P. 529, 78 Colo. 257, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 2, 1925
DocketNo. 10,993.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 241 P. 529 (Commercial Credit Co. v. Calkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Credit Co. v. Calkins, 241 P. 529, 78 Colo. 257, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 581 (Colo. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Commercial Credit Company, a Delaware corporation, plaintiff in error and plaintiff below, sued Calkins as endorser on a cognovit promissory note. Calkins, after the preliminary matters hereinafter mentioned had been dis *259 posed of, filed an answer and counterclaim to recover certain moneys paid by him in the transaction and for exemplary damages; plaintiff lost his suit on the note and also on defendant’s counterclaim against him. Plaintiff brings error.

The note endorsed by defendant upon which plaintiff sought to recover contained therein and as a part of the note a waiver of service of process and authority to confess judgment without notice. Plaintiff took judgment in the manner provided in the note and under that authority, without service of process or appearance by the defendant; the defendant in apt time filed a motion to set aside the judgment, supporting it with an affidavit showing a meritorious defense and counterclaim; defendant, with permission of the court, filed an answer and counterclaim; plaintiff demurred thereto; the demurrer was sustained in part and overruled in part; replication filed; trial to jury; verdict for defendant; judgment on the verdict, which the plaintiff seeks to have set aside and to recover judgment against defendant.

The assignments of error discussed in plaintiff’s brief consist chiefly of the following: (1) Overruling of plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s answer and counterclaim; (2) refusal of plaintiff’s request for certain instructions and objections to other instructions given by the court; (3) that the verdict of the jury was based upon prejudice and passion and not upon the evidence, and that the award of exemplary damages was excessive. We shall consider them in the above order.

1. As to plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s answer and counterclaim: We have repeatedly held that a judgment by confession under warrant of attorney contained in a note must be vacated on motion of defendant made in apt time and supported by affidavit showing a meritorious defense. McGinnis v. Hukill, 71 Colo. 476, 208 Pac. 248; Ferguson v. Farmers State Bank, 67 Colo. 184, 184 Pac. 370; Richards v. First National Bank, 59 Colo. 403, 148 Pac. 912; Cozart v. Haines, 68 Colo. 261, 188 Pac. 726.

*260 The plaintiff concedes this much, but says that because the defendant, who was an endorser of a note, admitted the allegations of the complaint as to the note, that therefore there could be no meritorious defense that could be set up. This is too broad a statement for us to agree to. In this case, the plaintiff was engaged in discounting automobile paper secured by chattel mortgages; the defendant was an automobile dealer in Denver; the action was upon a promissory note owned by plaintiff, signed by George Spears and endorsed by defendant; the defendant admitted that he endorsed the note, but alleged as one of his defenses that he sold and transferred the note to plaintiff, with the chattel mortgage securing the payment thereof, and that he had paid plaintiff money for the purpose of obtaining insurance of indemnity against loss arising from any theft or embezzlement, or wrongful removal of the automobile by the mortgagor contrary to the provisions of the chattel mortgage; that plaintiff, in consideration thereof, agreed to procure such insurance, but in violation of its agreement, failed to do so; that the automobile was thereafter stolen, embezzled and wrongfully removed by the mortgagor Spears, contrary to the provisions of the chattel mortgage, and that because of plaintiff’s failure to procure insurance, the money represented by the note was lost, and that plaintiff ought not to recover the same, or any part thereof, from the defendant.

The above was a meritorious defense, and the court properly overruled the demurrer thereto. The evidence shows that the plaintiff received money from the defendant for the purpose of procuring the insurance and agreed to procure it, but failed to do so. The other allegations of the above defense were.also sustained by the proof.

It is further to be observed that the defendant had paid plaintiff a large amount of money on the note sued upon, under pressure brought to bear upon him by plaintiff; that plaintiff gave defendant a receipt, showing that the payment was made without prejudice to defendant’s rights and that the latter contended that he was not liable *261 on the paper endorsed by him, and that “It is agreed that said Calkins may at any time hereafter assert and prove in any action said fact of embezzlement”. Plaintiff itself pleaded this receipt in its replication. It is a waste of time in this court for plaintiff to say to us that it should be permitted to keep the money so obtained, and not let the court or jury pass on a relevant question relating to the same transaction, that plaintiff agreed in writing with defendant that the latter would have the right to assert in any action.

Plaintiff also argues that the defendant should not have been permitted to interpose a counterclaim. We held otherwise in McGinnis v. Hukill, supra, a suit on a cognovit note, which finally resulted in a judgment for defendant on the counterclaim and we shall follow that precedent here. In the instant case, defendant sought, among other things in his counterclaim, to recover from plaintiff moneys paid in the matter, which defendant alleged the plaintiff got from him by coercion and threats of criminal prosecution; defendant also asked for exemplary damages. It arose out of the transaction set forth in the complaint and was connected with the subject of the action, and as such was good as a counterclaim. Code of Civil Procedure, 1921, section 63. The plaintiff after-wards admitted the receipt of the several payments, but denied that the money was paid under threats of criminal prosecution or coercion. The verdict of the jury indicated differently.

The briefs on both sides contain much interesting reading matter about the rights of plaintiff corporation to do business in Colorado without complying with our corporation laws, defendant contending that plaintiff has no standing in court because of non-compliance with the laws of this state, and plaintiff saying in response that its rights in this respect cannot be challenged in this proceeding. However, the trial court, at plaintiff’s request, instructed the jury to disregard the evidence relative thereto, so it was not hurt; the defendant won on other points *262 and he ought to be satisfied; and as to ourselves, we do not conceive it to be our duty to search the pleadings and proof for the purpose of ássembling and correlating law and facts not passed upon by the trial court and not requisite to a decision of this case, and we shall not do so.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 P. 529, 78 Colo. 257, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-credit-co-v-calkins-colo-1925.