Dacotah Packing Co. v. Bertelson

217 N.W. 393, 52 S.D. 324, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 345
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1927
DocketFile No. 5578
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 217 N.W. 393 (Dacotah Packing Co. v. Bertelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dacotah Packing Co. v. Bertelson, 217 N.W. 393, 52 S.D. 324, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 345 (S.D. 1927).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

This is an action on a promissory note, dated May 20, 1919, signed by the defendant, and promising to pay the plaintiff $7,000, with interest at 6 per cent per annum, one year after date. No part of the principal or interest hase been paid.

The defense is that the note was delivered conditionally, upon the understanding and agreement with plaintiff that it was not to take effect or be construed as 'being in force until a stockyards and packing plant in Rapid City, which the plaintiff corporation contemplated constructing, were completed, and if such stockyards and packing plant were not completed within 3 years, the note was to be returned to defendant. The stockyards and packing plant never were constructed.

The case w'as tried to a jury which found a verdict in favor of the defendant, and from the judgment upon this verdict and an order denying a new trial, the plaintiff appeals.

Defendant testified, in substance, that on May 20th, the date of the note, he owned $1,000 of stock in the plaintiff corporation; that on that date a sales agent for plaintiff came to defendant’s farm and solicited him to buy more stock, assuring him that in less than a month the stock would go up to 125 cents on the dollar, and that he took $2,000 additional stock and gave the sales agent his note for that amount; that the sales agent pressed him to take still more stock, telling him that the stock would certainly be advanced tc $125 a share in a couple of weeks, and after some further conversation the defendant says he agreed to take $7,000 additional stock and give his note for it on condition that the agent would give him a written guaranty that the stock would advance, as stated. The agent said he could not give such a guaranty, but the officers of the company could, and thereupon it was agreed between the defendant and the agent that defendant should sign an application for $7,000 of stock and give his note for that amount, and [328]*328that the note and application would not be delivered to the company until the defendant could go into Rapid 'City and talk the matter over with the officers of the company. The next day, and before defendant could get to Rapid City, a certificate for 90 shares preferred stock of the corporation was made out and sent by registered mail to defendant, who received it on May 24th.

On May 22d, before he had received the certificate, defendant appeared at the company’s office and had an interview with H. F. Fellows, the secretary and a director of the corporation, with whom the representations and arrangement made by the agent were talked over by defendant. Fellows told the defendant that the company could not make any such guaranty, and that no sales of stock could -be made on that basis at all; and Fellows testified that about this time Mr. Rinehart and Mr. Burke, the other two directors, came in, and they met as a board and spent nearly the whole forenoon discussing the matter, and finally a thorough understanding was had on the part of every one. The directors then told Bertelson that the subscription contract' contained a provision by which the corporation might reject an application, and his application was definitely rejected; that they then made an arrangement with him that the company would accept this $2,000 note unconditionally in payment of $2,000' of stock and they would hold his note for $7,000 for a period of 3 years under an agreement that he would keep the stock certificate that had been issued for 90 shares, and if at the end of 3 years the plant and yards were not in operation, or if he was not satisfied with the investment, he could have his note back and return the stock and have a new certificate for 20 shares issued to him; that Bertelson asked that this be reduced to writing, which was done, and all three of the directors signed it, and the writing was pinned to the note, and that this writing remained still pinned to the note when he ceased to be an officer of the company in October, 1920. Fellows further testified that the $2,000 note was discounted at the bank in Rapid City on the day it was received b}^ the company, but that the $7,000 note was never transferred or disposed of by the company, and that the reason for this was because of the agreement made with Mr. Bertelson that the $7,000 note was accepted conditionally and upon an agreement and understanding by the company that, if at the end of 3 years the plant and yard were not in operation, this note would be returned to Mr. Bertelson.

[329]*329Bertelson testified that two days after the agent procured the note in controversy he was in Rapid City and talked to Mr. Fellows, and that on the same day after talking with Fellows, Burke and Rinehart came in, and all three together talked of the representations made by the agent; that Fellows said Bertelson had come to demand his agreement with the agent, and they said they could not agree on that deal, that they would not accept that at all, but they had talked it over, and Mr. Burke said they had made an agreement among themselves and would keep the $2,000 note, “but this $7,000 note is not to be a note for 3 years until this stockyards and packing plant would 'be completed and in operation,” and that was our agreement.

All of this line of evidence was received over the objection of the plaintiff, that, when the note was handed to the agent, it became a contract in writing between the defendant and the company which could not be contradicted or varied by oral evidence.

Revised Code of 1919, § 1720, provides that:

“Every contract on a negotiable instrument is incomplete and revocable until delivery of the instrument for the purpose of giving effect thereto. As between immediate parties, * * * the delivery may be shown to have been conditional or for a special purpose only, and not for the purpose of transferring the property in the instrument.”

The testimony of defendant and Fellows shows the conditional delivery of this $7,000 note. It was not to be effective as a note until the stockyards and packing plant were complete and in operation, and, if they were not complete and in operation within 3 years from its date, the note was to be returned. The certificate for 90 shares preferred stock was to be returned and a new certificate for 20 shares, which had been paid for by the $2,000 note, was to be issued.

That oral evidence is admissible to- show that the delivery of a promissory note is conditional and not for the purpose of transferring the property in the instrument is settled in this state by repeated decisions. McCormick Har. Mach. Co. v. Faulkner, 7 S. D. 363, 64 N. W. 163, 58 Am. St. Rep. 839; Ricords v. Mead, 45 S. D. 617, 189 N. W. 703; Dimock State Bank v. Boehnen, 46 S. D. 50, 190 N. W. 485; City Nat. Bank of Huron v. Dwyer, 47 [330]*330S. D. 567, 200 N. W. 109. See, also, note to Vincent v. Russell, 101 Or. 672, 201 P. 433, 20 A. L. R. 417.

Fellows was asked, in substance, to state the conversation'between Bertelson and the directors of the company on this occasion, whereupon plaintiff’s counsel, being granted leave to interrogate the witness, asked:

“Q. Mr. Fellows, what occurred here was .before the board of directors acting as a board? A. Yes; we met and acted as a board, and there were minutes made of that meeting. You have the minutes there in that book, or you ought to have.

“Q.- What was done, there was made a record? A. Yes; it was.”

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Bluebook (online)
217 N.W. 393, 52 S.D. 324, 1927 S.D. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dacotah-packing-co-v-bertelson-sd-1927.