Farmers State Bank & Trust Co. v. Parr

234 Ill. App. 78, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 251
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1924
DocketGen. No. 7,693
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 234 Ill. App. 78 (Farmers State Bank & Trust Co. v. Parr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank & Trust Co. v. Parr, 234 Ill. App. 78, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 251 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shurtlefp

delivered the opinion of the ■ court.

On May 10, 1922, judgment was taken by appellee against the appellant in the Macon county circuit court, by confession, for the sum of $19,875.90, upon a judgment note in ordinary form for the principal sum of $17,917.00, dated October 18, 1920, signed by the appellant and payable to the order of appellee bank six months after date, with interest from date at the rate of seven per cent per annum. On motion of the appellant, the judgment was thereafter set aside and appellant was given leave to plead. The declaration consisted of the usual narr and cognovit, based on a judgment note.

The appellant filed a plea of nonassumpsit and five special pleas. The second and third pleas pleaded no consideration for the note, and the fourth, fifth and sixth pleas were in substantially the following form:

The fourth plea set out the indebtedness of Frank J. Parr to appellee bank, in a very large amount, and alleged the criticism of the bank examiner to the extension of so large a credit and the giving of the note in question, by appellant, as an accommodation maker and of the contract and agreement made by John B. Pogue, president of appellee bank, with the said Frank J. Parr, for the maker, that said maker would never be called upon by the bank to pay said note, and that there was no consideration for the note.

The fifth plea sets out substantially the same matters that are contained in the fourth plea, and further alleges that appellant purchased stock in the Wenatchee Orchard Land Company from said bank, under the -representations of said John B. Pogue and his warranty that said stock was an especially good and safe investment, and that the corporation was legally transacting business in the State of Illinois; that, on the contrary, said corporation was not legally transacting business in Illinois and that said stock was worthless; that appellant gave her note for $1,200 to the said bank for said stock; that appellant executed a further note for $4,140, as an accommodation note to said bank, to allay criticism of the bank examiner for the excessive credit extended to the said Frank J. Parr and avers that a contract and agreement was made with the president of said bank, John B. Pogue; that appellant would never be called upon to pay the said note for $4,140, and that the said notes were without any consideration whatever.

The sixth plea sets out substantially the matters pleaded in the fourth and fifth pleas and the giving of the notes for $1,200 and $4,140, as set out in said pleas, and that appellant gave a further note for the sum of $5,340 to take the place of the said two notes, with the agreement, as set out, that appellant should never be called upon to pay said note and the plea avers the giving of the note in question for the sum of $17,917 with a like contract and agreement with the said John B. Pogue, president of said bank, that the appellant should never be called upon to pay said note, and the plea avers the total lack of consideration for the said note.

Art issue was made upon these pleas and the cause was submitted to a jury and at the close of all the evidence the court instructed the jury to find a verdict for appellee, and there was a verdict finding for appellee bank in the amount set out and a motion by appellant for a new trial having been overruled, a judgment was entered for appellee and the case is brought to this court by appeal.

For an understanding of the issues in this case, it should be stated that the witness Frank J. Parr is the husband of the appellant, and practically all of the transactions between appellee bank and the appellant were carried out and transacted through said Frank J. Parr, the appellant contending that her husband, in so acting, was the agent of the appellee bank and the bank contending that Parr, being a director of and largely indebted to appellee bank, was acting in his own behalf or as agent of appellant. The transactions on the part of the bank, appellee, had been carried on substantially by John B. Pogue, its president, and while it appears that both Pogue and Frank J. Parr were interested in the bank as directors, Parr and Pogue had also been interested in outside corporations, — the Wenatchee Orchard Land Company, a Washington corporation, and the White County Mining Company, — and that Frank J. Parr had become indebted to appellee bank in a large amount, at the time the note in question was given.

On the 18th day of October, 1920, when the note in question was executed by appellant, appellee bank held the note of appellant, signed by her, in the sum of $5,340, which was the sum of two notes, executed by appellant theretofore, one for the sum of $1,200 and one for the sum of $4,140, and which had been held by appellee bank and upon a renewal, had been merged in the one note for $5,340.

It was shown by the testimony that at the time the note in question was executed by appellant and delivered by Frank J. Parr to appellee bank, that said Frank J. Parr was indebted to the bank in the sum of $20,577 upon various negotiable instruments or promissory notes, about which indebtedness there was no dispute.

As to the note in question Pogue testified that he stated to Parr that he was owing too much money at the bank; that the credit had been extended upon Parr’s representations that he, Parr, owned a section of land near Storm Lake, in the State of Iowa, and that the bank had discovered that the title to this land was in Mrs. Parr and that he must secure the notes and that Parr suggested that he could get his wife, Mrs. Parr, the appellant, to sign the notes, and Pogue testifies that he informed Parr that the bank could carry him, Parr, on $8,000 of the indebtedness, if he could get appellant to take over and assume the balance of the debt. This arrangement, according to Pogue’s testimony, was carried out, and appellant’s indebtedness was added to that of her husband’s and Parr’s note was taken for the $8,000, and appellant’s note, the one in suit, for $17,917, for the remainder of the indebtedness of both. Pogue testifies that the note in question was made out at the bank and that Parr took the instrument and later returned it to the bank with appellant’s signature attached, and delivered the note to the bank, and Pogue denies the testimony of Parr as to any other conversation or arrangement in regard to the note. Parr testified to conversations with Pogue in regard to the indebtedness that tend to support the pleas. Parr had ceased to be a director of appellee bank in January, 1920. Parr testified that Pogue prepared the note and asked him to take the note to his wife and ask her to sign it and stated that he should say to his wife that it was made to relieve the bank situation and that she would never be called upon to pay it. Parr states that he took the note to his wife and that she, appellant, signed the noté and he returned it to the bank. The witness Parr testified to other matters in connection with the transaction, but over appellee’s objection, Parr was not permitted to testify to any statements made by him to his wife, nor any communications in reference to said note, made by appellant to him, Parr, and the appellant, while on the stand, was not permitted to testify to any communications between herself and husband in regard to said transaction, on the ground that it was conversations between husband and wife, during the married state, and in violation of the proviso to section Five of the Act [Cahill’s Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
234 Ill. App. 78, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-trust-co-v-parr-illappct-1924.