Culbertson v. Salinger & Brigham

108 N.W. 454, 131 Iowa 307
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 12, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 N.W. 454 (Culbertson v. Salinger & Brigham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culbertson v. Salinger & Brigham, 108 N.W. 454, 131 Iowa 307 (iowa 1906).

Opinion

Deemer, J.—

Twice before has this cage been in this court. See 111 Iowa, 447, and 122 Iowa, 12. These opinions disclose in a general way the nature of the controversy and something • of the respective claims of the parties. On this appeal but "one question, with its related issues, need be considered, and that was mooted on the former appeals. For its settlement it is necessary to refer at some length to the pleadings, and to the record now before us. January 12, 1905, plaintiff and defendant Salinger entered into a stipulation whereby plaintiff was to take judgment against Salinger individually and as surviving member of the firm of Salinger & Brigham and against Salinger & Brigham, for the amount of plaintiff’s claim against them. This was dated January 12, 1905, but was not filed until January 18th of that yeal\ The trial on the issues between plaintiff and the representative of H* C. McAllister was commenced on January 16th and concluded on January 18th of the same year. Trial on the issues raised by defendant Salinger’s cross-petition was continued. No judgment has yet been entered upon the stipulation to which we have referred. In the original petition, which was filed March 20, 1896, plaintiff alleged that defendant McAllister had agreed to pay and had assumed to pay the four notes sued upon, the consideration being the receipt of the title to four hundred and eighty acres of land in Osceola county, Iowa. In an amendment filed April 17, 1896, the allegation is “ that the agreement by McAllister was an undertaking to become surety for Salinger & Brigham on two certain notes to be executed to Culbertson in lieu of others made by Salinger & Brigham to plaintiff. Said agreement was in writing, and a copy thereof is "attached hereto as a part thereof and marked * Exhibit A,’ and said writing truly states the consideration received by McAllister for his undertaking. The defendant McAllister received title to the east half of section 84, and the south-west one-fourth of section 35, township 100 north, range 39 west 5th P. M., Osceola county, Iowa, by [310]*310warranty deed.made to Mm by L. P. Brigham, and plaintiff avers that said defendant has said deed in his own possession, and that plaintiff does not know upon what agreement if any said land was so conveyed.” Exhibit A, therein referred to, is the written agreement, ref erred to, in the opinions when the case was before us on former appeals, and which was there held to create no obligation upon the part of McAllister. In an amendment filed November 27, 1897, plaintiff averred “ that defendant McAllister agreed with defendants Salinger & Brigham to sign certain notes with them, to be made payable to plaintiff, to sign said notes as surety, and to ultimately assume and pay off the debts evidenced by said notes, which were to be given to plaintiff in place of any and all notes then held by him against Salinger & Brigham; that said agreement was partly in writing and partly oral, the written portion- of it being attached by copy to an amendment to the petition filed herein on April, 8, 1896, and attached to said- amendment as Exhibit A. Wherefore plaintiff prays that he have judgment against defendant H. C. McAllister on account of breach by him of said agreement, in such sum as shall be. adjudged due him upon the notes herein sued upon copies of which are attached to his original petition.” After the case had twice been in this court plaintiff, on January 17, 1905, during the course of the trial, filed another amendment to his petition, in which he struck out the allegation of his original petition with reference to McAllister’s promise, and from the first amendment the allegation that the agreement of McAllister to become surety, etc., was in writing, and struck out all reference to Exhibit A; and from the amendment filed November 27, 1897, he struck out the allegation that McAllister was ultimately to assume and pay off the debt evidenced by the notes, and also the words partly in writing and partly” and the reference to the agreement called “ Exhibit A.”

In this last amendment plaintiff alleged

[311]*311That defendant Salinger & Brigham orally agreed with plaintiff, to execute to him promissory notes to be signed by them as principal and surety, to be delivered to plaintiff in lieu of any notes which plaintiff then held signed by Salinger & Brigham, and made by Salinger & Brigham to him, the plaintiff orally agreeing upon the delivery of such notes signed by Salinger & Brigham as principals and H. C. McAllister as surety to deliver to Salinger & Brigham any notes signed by them and owned by plaintiff at the time said agreement was made; that defendant H. C. McAllister orally agreed with Salinger & Brigham for a valuable consideration to sign such notes as surety, and that plaintiff accepted the said agreement of Salinger & Brigham, and that of H. C. McAllister; that defendants Salinger & Brigham were at all times ready and willing to perform their said agreement, that defendant H. O. McAllister wholly failed and refused to perform his said agreement that, therefore, defendants Salinger & Brigham were unable to and never did, perform their said agreement; that at the time the said agreements were made, and ever since, plaintiff was and has been, the owner of the notes sued upon in this action, and set out by copy in the original petition herein; that tbe said notes remain wholly unpaid, that payment thereof cannot be made from or out of the property of the makers thereof; that by reason of the premises and the breach of said agreement on the part of Salinger & Brigham and said H. C. McAllister, plaintiff has been damaged in a sum equal to the notes herein sued on, and the interest therein provided. (3) Further pleading plaintiff states that there never was but one oral agreement made between him and defendants Salinger & Brigham, or between defendant H. C. McAllister and defendants Salinger & Brigham with reference to and concerning the making of notes to plaintiff by Salinger & Brigham as principals and H. C. McAllister as surety; that said agreement was between Salinger & Brigham and H. C. McAllister, was oral, was made for the benefit of plaintiff, was accepted by him, was never canceled by him or with his knowledge, authority, or consent; that defendant H. C. Mc-Allister never made any agreement with plaintiff personally, nor in the presence of plaintiff, and that he accepted the agreement made between defendant Salinger & Brigham and H. C. McAllister for the benefit of plaintiff after the same [312]*312had been made. That plaintiff never accepted any notes signed by Salinger & Brigham as principal and H. C. Mc-Allister as surety for any purpose for the reason that the said H. C. McAllister wholly neglected, failed, and refused to sign any such notes as surety, and no notes so signed ever came into existence to be accepted. (4) Plaintiff further avers that the statements in his amendment to petition filed herein on April 8, 1896, that pláintiff further states that the- agreement by McAllister was a written undertaking that said agreement was in writing, and that a copy of said writing is attached as part of the amendment filed on April 8, 1896, and that said writing states the consideration received by Mc-Allister for his said undertaking, were placed in said amendment by and through mistake of law, and a misconstruction of the legal effect óf said writing.

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Related

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239 N.W. 559 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
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Bluebook (online)
108 N.W. 454, 131 Iowa 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culbertson-v-salinger-brigham-iowa-1906.