Hill v. May

218 N.W. 946, 205 Iowa 948
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 946 (Hill v. May) 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
Hill v. May, 218 N.W. 946, 205 Iowa 948 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

—It is not denied by John Aj. May and Orpha L. May that they signed the written instrument sued upon, but the legal battle is waged over the: First, defenses interposed concerning the nature of the delivery, the consideration for each maker, the conditions of payment, and the lack of good faith in the.purchase of the note by plaintiff and appellant; and-second, reply alleging waiver of those defenses.

Briefly, the faets are: Appellant John Aj. May, on the 23d day of December, 1920, executed, made payable, ¿nd delivered to Irving W. Durfey said written instrument, in the sum of $4,500, due September 1, 1928, with interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum. This was thus given to Durfey in payment of a supposed *950 interest purchased by John Aj. May in a Texas land syndicate, represented by Durfey and one Arthur F. Willoughby, both residents of Illinois. Immediately, ■ that note was indorsed by said Durfey and transferred to Willoughby, who, in turn, sold the document to the appellant Homer Hill, of Sioux City, February 4, 1921. However, on February 23d of that year, before the last transaction, the appellee, Orpha L. May, placed her signature, as accommodation maker, upon the subject of this controversy.

In'view of the fact that there' are two appeals involved, it will lend to clearness if the further incidents surrounding each appeal are related under the separate discussions thereof.

I. John Aj. May pleaded: First, failure of consideration; second, delivery of the note in trust, to be used for buying equity contracts for syndicate purposes only; third, that the payment was to be made, on the instrument sued upon, by John Aj. May only if and when Durfey sold those equities, and had more fiinds of the syndicate belonging to the said May than the total amount due on the note; and fourth, that, at the time of purchasing the note, appellant Hill knew and understood all the terms and conditions under which it was executed by May and received into the syndicate. To this answer, appellant Hill interposed in reply: First, a general denial; and second, a waiver: (a) based upon the circumstances that, before Hill bought the note, he demanded and received from John Aj. May a telegram, to the effect that the contemplated purchase was agreeable to him; and (b), after knowing of the proposed transfer, and in pursuance thereof, he obtained, on behalf of appellant Hill, the accommodation signature of his wife, Orpha L. May, thereon.

Upon these issues, the cause was tried between the two litigants. Evidence was offered and introduced on behalf, of John Aj. May to establish the trust relationship. Moreover, there was in the record confirmation of appellant May’s claim that the note was delivered' for the uses alleged. Additional-testimony was submitted and received, .to indicate that appellant Hill, at the time he acquired the note, in violation of the trust agreement, knew the facts and circumstances surrounding- its execution, as well as the purposes of the trust. Supplemental proof was presented, to show that there was no sale of the syndicate property, or accumulation of money therein belonging *951 to John Aj. May, or anyone .else. Those particular facts, under the pleadings in the case at bar, affected the maturity of this particular obligation and Hill’s right to recover thereon.

Also, before the trial court were the statements, at least of May, that he received no consideration of any kind for this instrument, and failed to acquire any property in the syndicate.

Thus, there was some evidence, under the theory of the trial, upon which a jury could base its finding to the effect that no liability existed at that time on the part of John Aj. May.

II. Nevertheless, appellant Hill urges that a directed verdict was proper because appellant May waived his right to interpose the above defenses, in that he authorized the sale of the note by means of a telegram.

The record at this juncture, in behalf of appellant May, is to the following effect: Arthur F. Willoughby testified:

“Hill told me that he would not want to buy Dr. May’s [appellant John Aj. May] note unless Dr. May knew about it. I sent a telegram to Dr. May, asking him to wire me, stating that he did not care who bought the note. I can’t recall the words of the wire. The wire verified the existence of the note and its sale. The wire was for the purpose of substantiating the proper existence of the note.”

As to what “sale” ivas referred to does not appear. Up to- that time, there had been but one in “existence,” and that was from Durfey to Willoughby. Hence, the jury could well have found that the verification of the sale’s existence had reference to the transaction between Durfey and Willoughby. Especially is this true when the witness follows his declarations with the sentence: “ The wire was for the purpose of substantiating the proper existence of the note. ’ ’

May, in his own behalf, testified that he did not remember, the language of the telegram, the original of which-was not introduced into the record. So it was entirely ■ consistent with appellant May’s theory that by sending the wire-he was authorizing, the use of the note for collateral purposes, within the purview of the trust, rather than an out-and-out sale to a stranger.

■ Parenthetically, it is to be noted that appellant Hill was the-«-brother-in-law of appellant May. They were well acquainted, and there appears to be no reason why appellant Hill should not have communicated with appellant May directly, *952 rather than depending upon the stranger, Willoughby, for the “verification” demanded. Hill knew, according to the record, that appellant May had executed this note for the purposes before stated; yet, for some unexplained reason, the proposed sale to Hill was kept a secret from appellant May.

A waiver of appellant May’s defense was not conclusively established by the telegram transaction, but rather, there was at least created thereby a disputed fact, to be determined by the jury.

III. Notwithstanding this, appellant Hill still contends that the directed verdict in his favor can be substantiated under the waiver doctrine, because of the action taken by the appellant May in procuring the signature of his wife, appellee, Orpha L. May, to the note after its original delivery. Especially, it is said this is true in view of the telegram which was received before the appellee, May, became an accommodation party. With this we do not agree. Willoughby declared:

“I * * * went on the next train to Manchester, and presented the note to Dr. May [John Aj. May, appellant] and Mrs. May [Orpha L. May, appellee], and got her signature to the note.”

On that subject, John Aj. May was asked this question:

“Q. And what was said to you by Mr. Willoughby with reference to the purpose of obtaining your wife’s signature upon the note?' A. To be used as collateral.”

Therefore, appellant May explained his actions in a way that amounted to a rebuttal of appellant Hill’s claim of waiver. Clearly, there was sufficient evidence on the controverted fact to entitle its submission to the jury; and because of the court’s failure so to do, there must be a reversal on appellant May’s appeal.

IY.

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218 N.W. 946, 205 Iowa 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-may-iowa-1928.