Longman v. Pope

197 N.W. 955, 111 Neb. 838, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 74
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1924
DocketNo. 22687
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 N.W. 955 (Longman v. Pope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Longman v. Pope, 197 N.W. 955, 111 Neb. 838, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 74 (Neb. 1924).

Opinion

Eldred, District Judge.

The Farmers State Bank of Springfield sued John U. Pope on a note of $3,000 alleged to have been executed November 21, 1919, by the defendant, payable to himself, due in one year, and which it is alleged he, on the same day, for a valuable consideration, indorsed and delivered to Bankers Brokerage Company, of Lincoln, Nebraska. The petition further alleges:

[839]*839“Thereafter and before maturity thereof, the plaintiff, for a valuable consideration and in the regular course of business, purchased said promissory note from said Bankers Brokerage Company, without notice or knowledge of any existing equities, defenses or infirmities in said paper, and is now the owner and holder thereof.”

The answer is a general denial. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals.

The first assignment of error relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment, which will be referred to later. By assignments 2 and 3 errors are charged in giving to the jury instructions Nos. 3 and 4. ■Instruction No. 3 quotes section 4663, Comp. St. 1922, and adds the following:

“In this connection you are instructed that the positive statements of the plaintiff’s officers as to their actions in purchasing the note in question are not necessarily to be taken as conclusive by the jury, but you should consider all of the circumstances and facts known and given in evidence and determine from all the facts and circumstances surrounding the alleged purchase, together with statements of the plaintiff as to whether or not plaintiff is such bona fide purchaser.”

This instruction is in harmony with the rule announced in Nebraska State Bank v. Walker, ante, p. 203. But it is strongly urged that the question of good faith in the transfer, under the pleadings, was not a material issue. Had not the plaintiff itself by its petition, by the evidence it offered, and the instructions it tendered, made it an issue, there would have been merit in the criticism made. The plaintiff by its petition made that question an issue. Evidence as to the good faith of this transfer was first offered by the plaintiff on direct examination of its first witness; the issue was insisted upon by the plaintiff at the close of the evidence, by requesting instructions to the jury. The plaintiff requested five instructions, and three of them embody the proposition of the good faith of the plaintiff’s purchase. The instruction complained of [840]*840presented to the jury an issue and proposition first injected and brought into the action by the plaintiff itself. The case having been tried and submitted on plaintiff’s own theory, it cannot now successfully contend that the issue submitted was immaterial. If the instruction was erroneous, on account of embodying an immaterial issue, it was an invited error of which plaintiff cannot complain. Schrandt v. Young, 62 Neb. 254.

Complaint is made of the use of the word “known” in instruction No. 3, in the clause “circumstances and facts known and given in evidence;” but we think the clause is not vulnerable to the criticism made. A fair construction of the clause implies that the circumstances and facts referred to must be known, not from some outside source, but those “known and given in evidence.”

Instruction No. 4 quotes section 4634, Comp. St. 1922, and further advises the jury, in substance, that, if the plaintiff failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant signed the note sued upon, the plaintiff could not recover, even if they found the plaintiff was an innocent holder of the note in due course. The complaint of this instruction by the appellee is that it submitted to the jury the question of whether the plaintiff was the holder in due course of the note in controversy, and thereby sought to impress upon the minds of the jury that the issue was controverted, or at least that there was sufficient evidence to justify the finding adverse to the plaintiff in relation thereto. We cannot adopt this view. The defense in this case was forgery. The plaintiff having pleaded that it was a holder in due course, and having offered evidence in support of such allegation, the instruction was a correct statement of the law, and under the circumstances in this case, evidence of good faith having been offered, was properly given to the jury. Had this or some similar instruction not been given, the jury might readily have reached the wrong conclusion as to the rights of a holder in due course of a forged note.

By instruction No. 2, requested by the plaintiff and re[841]*841fused by the court, the court was requested, in substance, to advise the jury that the undisputed evidence established that the plaintiff was the holder of the note in question in due course of business. Such an instruction, under the facts in this case, might have been misleading to the jury, and was properly refused.

Instruction No. 3, requested by the defendant, was as follows: “You are instructed that the instrument upon which this suit is brought is a negotiable promissory note, payable to bearer and transferable by delivery without, further indorsements.” The note in suit was not payable, to bearer, unless the name of John U. Pope, indorsed thereon, was his genuine signature. In the form presented the request was properly refused. Before the note in question could have been treated as a note payable to bearer, the jury must have first found that the indorsement of the name of John U. Pope thereon was genuine.

Instructions 4 and 5, "requested by plaintiff, covered the proposition as to what constitutes a good faith purchaser. While correct as abstract statements of law, they refer to the same subject covered by instruction No. 3, given to the jury, which the plaintiff now insists was an immaterial matter. Had they been given, it would have emphasized any possible error in instruction No. 3, given by the court. Their refusal was not prejudicial.

Complaint is made of the ruling of the court in sustaining objections to certain questions on cross-examination of plaintiff as to the genuineness of the signature on a document not involved in this case, except as it was desired for comparison. Witness had not admitted the signature on the instrument inquired about.

Complaint is also made of rulings of the court in excluding questions on cross-examination of the witness Holbrook, who was called as an expert on handwriting. The questions went to previous experience and qualifications of the witness. The cross-examination of both of these witnesses was liberal; in fact, quite extended. The extent to which cross-examination may be extended as to matters [842]*842not necessarily material is largely within the discretion of the trial court. Gatzemeyer v. Peterson, 68 Neb. 832.

The remaining assignments of error go to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment. Some days prior to the transaction in question the defendant had bought stock in the Bankers Fire Insurance Company to the amount of $1,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 N.W. 955, 111 Neb. 838, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longman-v-pope-neb-1924.