First National Bank v. Laughlin

61 N.W. 473, 4 N.D. 391, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 49
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 473 (First National Bank v. Laughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Laughlin, 61 N.W. 473, 4 N.D. 391, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 49 (N.D. 1894).

Opinions

Wallin J.

Plaintiff sues as the bona fide purchaser ■ of a promissory note. The complaint is in the usual form, and describes the note upon which suit is brought. Plaintiff claims as indorsee of Rix & Goodenough. The action was against the makers of the note. The defendants, in their answer, deny that they ever executed or delivered the note described in the complaint, but admit that they executed and delivered to the firm of Rix & Goodenough a writing in all respects similar to the note described, except that it contained the words: “Agreeing to pay all expenses incurred by suit or. otherwise in attempting the collection of this note, including reasonable attorney’s fees.” And they allege that after the execution and delivery of said note, and without the knowledge or consent of defendants, or either of them, the said note was materially and fraudulently altered by striking therefrom the words above quoted, and allege that said alteration changed said note from a nonnegotiable to a negotiable instrument, and rendered the said note void, and extinguished the indebtedness upon which it was based. They further set up that the note in suit and two others were executed and delivered by them to said Rix & Goodenough as the purchase price of one stallion purchased by them from said firm at the ágreed price of $2,000; that one of said notes was for $600, and the other two, one of which is here in suit, for $700 each; that said stallion was sold with a warranty to the effect that he was sound and healthy, and a good foal getter. They negative the existence of these qualities, and allege that the horse was worthless, As a separate [395]*395and distinct counterclaim, defendants alleged the execution and delivery of the $600 note, the same being identical in all respects with the note sued upon except as to amount and date of maturity; allege the alteration of said note in the same manner and for same purpose as the note in suit; and state that at or soon after the maturity of said note the defendants, by mistake, and in ignorance of said alteration, paid the amount of said note to the plaintiff herein, and took the same up. Defendants demand judgment of dismissal as to plaintiff’s cause of action; also judgment on said counterclaim for the sum of $662, with interest from November 1, 1891. There was a jury trial, and the verdict was, “No cause of action as to the note described in the complaint,” and was in favor of defendants to the full amount of said counterclaim. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, basing the motion on a statement of the case. The District Court denied the motion, where upon judgment was entered below upon such verdict, from which plaintiff appeals to this court.

The errors assigned in this court are:

The court erred in permitting defendants to amend their answer. This assignment of error is untenable. During the trial the court permitted the answer to be amended by adding thereto the following words concerning the warranty: “And in the sale of said stallion by said Rix & Goodenough, and the purchase by defendants, the defendants relied wholly upon said warranty, and purchased the horse upon the faith thereof, and not otherwise.” The trial courts have extensive discretionary powers under the Code in the matter of granting amendments to the pleadings, either before or after judgment, in furtherance of justice; and it is well settled that the exercise of such discretion will not be reviewed by the appellate courts except in cases of abuse. The amendment allowed in this case introduced no new feature into the case, and could not, we think, have operated as a surprise to the plaintiff. Finding no abuse of discretion in allowing the amendment, this assignment of error is overruled.

The second assignment of error is as follows: “The court [396]*396erred in admitting evidence of the alleged alteration of the notes in question.” Against plaintiff’s objection thereto, evidence was introduced by the defendants tending strongly to show that all of the notes, when signed and delivered by the makers thereof to Messrs. Rix & Goodenough (the payees,) were in the words and figures as set out in the defendants’ answer; and that all of said notes, after their execution and delivery as aforesaid, were altered by some one other than the defendants, by striking therefrom, and from each and all of them, the following language: “Agreeing to pay all expenses incurred by suit or otherwise in attempting the collection of this note, including reasonable attorney’s fees.” We are of the opinion that the testimony was admissable. The defense of a material and fraudulent alteration of the notes after their delivery is pleaded in the answer both as to the note sued upon by the plaintiff and the note pleaded in connection with the defendants’ counterclaim. We think the defense of a material and fraudulent alteration of the notes as above pleaded in the answer is a valid legal defense to the notes, and, if established by testimony, would operate, as against the defendants, to extinguish both the notes and the debt evidenced by them. The notes, in the form in which they were drawn and delivered to Rix & Good-enough, were, by a decided weight of authority, nonnegotiable instruments. The last sentence in the notes above the signatures operates to render the paper nonnegotiable in form and in law; but if the erasure was done after delivery, and for a fraudulent purpose, the effect would be to nullify them, and extinguish the debt as against the makers. When so altered, the notes would have the appearanee on their face of valid, negotiable paper, as the legal presumption prima facie is that alterations appearing upon written instruments were made before delivery. But, as we said, the notes, when fraudulently altered after delivery, would, as against the makers, cease to be valid obligations, even in the hands of a good faith purchaser. A settled public policy, long sanctioned by the .courts, demands that such fraudulent paper should be rendered null and void as against the maker thereof. [397]*397After such alteration, the paper is no longer the same paperas that sent out by those who executed and delivered the original instrument. This doctrine has long since become elementary law, and is distinctly voiced by the Civil Code. Comp. Laws, § 3595; 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 502, note 1. See authorities below. It is settled that the alteration of a note nonnegotiable in form when delivered so as to invest it with the form and guise of negotiable paper is a material alteration, and, if done fraudulently, the altertion will extinguish the debt as well as the note as against the makers. Daniel, Neg. Inst. § § 1395, 1410; Rand. Com. Paper, § § 1742, 1750, 1753; Eckert v. Pickel, 59 Iowa, 545, 13 N. W. 708; Huntington v. Finch, 3 Ohio St. 445; Ide v. Churchill, 14 Ohio St. 372; Johnston v. May, 76 Ind. 293; Chism v. Toomer, 27 Ark. 108; Lee v. Starbird, 55 Me. 491; Booth v. Powers, 56 N. Y. 31; Plow Co. v. Campbell, (Neb.) 52 N. W. 883. In the last case cited it is held that a defendant under a general denial may show that a note signed and delivered by him is not his obligation, because it has been fraudulently altered since its delivery, and made negotiable in form, and its character thereby changed. This was held as against a good faith purchaser. The case is much in point, and cites numerous authorities in support of the general proposition we have laid down.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fischer v. Lebedoff
244 N.W. 310 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1932)
Stevens v. Wheeler
3 S.W.2d 122 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1928)
Horswill v. North Dakota Mutual Fire Insurance
178 N.W. 798 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1920)
Kurtz v. Paulson
157 N.W. 305 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)
Aamoth v. Hunter
157 N.W. 299 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)
Erickson v. Wiper
157 N.W. 592 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)
Loisseau v. Gates
140 N.W. 258 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
Christofferson v. Wee
139 N.W. 689 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
Duncan v. Great Northern Railway Co.
118 N.W. 826 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1908)
Cudahy Packing Co. v. State Nat. Bank
134 F. 538 (Eighth Circuit, 1904)
Porter v. Hardy
88 N.W. 458 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1901)
Vidger v. Nolin
87 N.W. 593 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1901)
Ravicz v. Nickells
84 N.W. 353 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)
Cass County v. American Exchange State Bank
83 N.W. 12 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)
Fegan v. Great Northern Railway Co.
81 N.W. 39 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1899)
Stadler v. First National Bank
56 P. 111 (Montana Supreme Court, 1899)
Sawyer v. Campbell
107 Iowa 397 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1899)
John C. Oswald & Co. v. Moran
77 N.W. 281 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1898)
Township of Noble v. Aasen
76 N.W. 990 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1898)
Kolka v. Jones
71 N.W. 558 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 473, 4 N.D. 391, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-laughlin-nd-1894.