Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Shaffer

172 Iowa 173
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 Iowa 173 (Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Shaffer) 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
Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Shaffer, 172 Iowa 173 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

The defendant asserts that the note in suit was' obtained from him by the fraudulent representations of the agent of payee, and that the plaintiff was not an innocent holder of said instrument. The note was given for shares, of stock in a 'corporation known as the Stotts Signal Company, and made payable to E. S. Stotts, who was the promoter, organizer and principal manager of such company, and the alleged false representations are said to have been made by one Dodge, who .negotiated the sale in behalf of Stotts, or of the [175]*175company. These include representations to the effect that the company owned a large and valuable manufacturing plant in Marion, Iowa, and that the plant was free from incumbrance, and that the company was authorized to do business and to issue stock in Iowa. The defendant asserts that the company did not own or have any such property or assets, and its stock was entirely worthless; and that, by reason of these premises, defendant received no consideration for said note; and that said representations were relied on and the purchase of the stock and the giving of said note induced thereby.

The court withdrow'from the jury all save the representation as to the ownership of the plant free from incumbrance, that the corporation was authorized to do business in Iowa and that its stock was issued by proper authority. Upon these issues, a verdict was returned for defendant.

1. Bills and notes: fraud: por™ suffl-P’ ciency. I. We must decline to hold that there is no evidence upon which a verdict sustaining the charge of fraud and misrepresentation can bé sustained. See Stotts v. Fairfield, 163 Iowa 726, which involves an investigation of a . . similar transaction on part of this corpora-^011- ^ would serve no useful purpose for us to enlarge upon why we reach this conclusion.

2. BILLS AND notes : aeRiryUn0t°con-: hoider’s^testimony.

[176]*1763. b ^ notes : tainted note: holder burden c0°£urse: pr°°f. [175]*175II. Appellant contends that, as a matter of law, plaintiff is a purchaser of the note for value and without notice of the said alleged defenses-. In said other Stotts case (163 Iowa 726), we held, upon substantially the same „ ’ , . . , , state ot facts, that this was a question for the jury> and are disposed to adhere thereto, This we do, though not unmindful that the officer of the bank, who purchased the note for the bank, testified that he did so without any notice'or knowledge of the consideration for which it was given or the sale of the stock to the defendant. Nor do we overlook the fact that, under the Negotiable Instruments Act (Acts of the 29th G. A., Ch. 130), the purchaser of commercial paper cannot be .charged with notice of any defense thereto unless it appear [176]*176that he had actual knowledge of the infirmity in such paper “or knowledge of such facts as that his act in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.” But this is a matter for charging the jury, rather than a rule which compels a holding that, under the testimony in this ease, this burden was not discharged. The court did charge the jury that defendant had this burden, and did so in explicit terms. A rule of law that a defense is not made out unless certain things be proven is one thing; but for the courts to say that, as matter of law, some particular effort at proof fails to establish such defense, is quite another. The case here, as said, leaves it fairly a question of fact whether the proof required by the law has been made. In view of the circumstances disclosed in the evidence, the denial by the purchasing officer of knowledge or notice was not conclusive on the jury. Surely, the intimate knowledge on his part concerning the inside history and condition of this corporation, his official connection with its management and with the issuance' of the very stock sold to defendant, his interest in the result of the trial and other circumstances shown in the record, as well, have sufficient tendency to discredit his denial to make the question so put in issue "an appropriate one for the jury. Moreover, when the jury found, as it evidently did, that the note was tainted by fraud in its inception, it put the burden on plaintiff to make an affirmative showing of good faith. On this latter theory, it can avail the plaintiff nothing that the evidence for the defendant on this head was weak or wholly lacking. It never discharges a burden of proof that the party who does not have it has failed to establish what it is the duty of his opponent to establish. On the proposition that this was a jury question, see McNight v. Parsons, 136 Iowa 390, 396; Stotts v. Fairfield, 163 Iowa 726; Joy v. Diefendorf, 130 N. Y. 6.

[177]*1774. Bir.LS AND NOTES : stock ■ of foreign corporation as consideration: validity: burden of proof. [176]*176III. The court charged that no recovery could be had on a note given for stock purchased if defendant established that [177]*177the payee falsely represented that it had authority to sell stock in Iowa. Appellant concedes that, if the note be obtained in consideration of the transfer of shares of stock made in Iowa, and there is no authority given by the state to sell stock, this is a defense to the note, but insists that there was no evidence that such authority was lacking. In the view we take, it is immaterial whether there was or was not such evidence. We are of opinion that it was the burden of the one claiming under the note to show that the sale of stock by which the note was obtained was an authorized sale. If that be so, then it does not avail the holder of the note that there is no evidence upon this point. Such absence results in the failure of the plaintiff to make the necessary proof, and defendant is not affected by failure of plaintiff to discharge the burden of proof resting upon plaintiff. Chapter 104 of the Acts of the 33rd G. A. requires the filing of certified copies of incorporation, consent to service of process and the payment of a stated fee, as conditions to the right to sell stock. From this are excepted certain associations whose articles of incorporation provide that their business be conducted on a purely mutual and co-operative plan, wdthout capital stock. Stock issued in violation of these requirements is void and may be cancelled at suit of the attorney general, and anything of value received for such stock shall be returned, and if the consideration is labor or other service of an intangible nature, its value shall be a claim against the corporation that issued such stock in exchange therefor.' We think the plaintiff who seeks to recover on a note confessedly given for the transfer of specified corporation stock has the burden of showing that there was authority to issue and transfer such stock. We held, in First National Bank v. Baker, 57 Iowa 197, that, w'here it is sought to subject a homestead to execution on the claim that the debt was contracted prior to its purchase,— which, being true, would prima facie make the property subject to execution, — the fact that the homestead was purchased [178]*178with the proceeds, of a sale of a former homestead and is, therefore, exempt notwithstanding the fact that the debt sued on was made before the acquisition of the second homestead, is in such sense the assertion of an exception as that the burden of proof is upon the defendant.

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