MacRitchie v. Johnson

49 Kan. 321
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 Kan. 321 (MacRitchie v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacRitchie v. Johnson, 49 Kan. 321 (kan 1892).

Opinion

Opinion by

Simpson, C.:

This action was brought in the district court of Butler county by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error upon two negotiable promissory notes, one for $900 and the other for $800, both bearing date December 9, 1886, a copy of said $900 note, with the indorsements thereon, being as follows:

“$900. Beaumont, Kas., December 9, 1886.
“For value received, we promise to pay, on the first day of January, 1888, to the order of Kniffin & White, $900, at the National Bank of El Dorado, Kas., with interest at 8 per cent, per annum from date.
[Signed] N. Herring. E. P. Leaming.
F. M. Leaming. C. Kofoid.
R. E. & I. F. Van Huss.
Clinton Squier. John MacRitchie.”
Indorsements thereon :
“December 14, 1886. Received on the within note, from N. Herring, one hundred dollars ($100).
“For value received, pay to the order of John P. Johnson. May 5, 1887. [Signed] Kniffin & White.”

The $800 note sued upon is in the. same form, made by the same parties, and having the same indorsements thereon, except that it became due on the 1st day of January, 1889. The suit was brought in said district court on the 11th day of May, 1889. Johnson, in his petition in the court below, alleged that, for a valuable consideration, before the maturity of the notes sued upon and each of them, Kniffin & White, the payees in said notes, indorsed and transferred said notes to the said plaintiff, Johnson, who was, at the time of filing said petition in the court below, the owner and holder of said promissory notes; and, as above stated, each of said notes was indorsed in the following words: “ For value received, pay to the order of Jno. P. Johnson. May 5, 1887. [Signed] Kniffin & White.” Neither of the answers of plaintiffs in error, defendants below, contained a denial under oath of the execution of either of said promissory notes or of the in[327]*327dorsements thereon; and the execution of the notes by the defendants and the indorsement thereof to the plaintiff as alleged in his petition must be taken as true. The defendants in the court below filed separate answers to plaintiff’s petition, setting up various defenses to the notes. The answer of Squier admitted the execution of the notes by him, but stated that he signed them under an agreement that several other parties besides the plaintiffs in error had agreed to and would sign the notes jointly with him, and, when so signed, they were to be placed in the hands of Herring, one of the plaintiffs in error, to be by him held until the parties who signed the notes should get together and express themselves as satisfied with the consideration for which the notes were given; that Kniffin, one of the payees, told him that said parties would sign said notes, and, believing his statement, he was thereupon induced to sign the same, which he would not have done if he had known or supposed that no one else, other than those above referred to, were to sign said notes; that said Kniffin & White at that time wanted to sell a stallion to him and other parties for $1,700, and made certain representations as to the quality and value of said stallion, and that he was not of the value or quality as represented; that in violation of said agreement, and without his knowledge and consent, Kniffin & White obtained possession of the notes, after they had been signed by plaintiffs in error, in some way to him unknown, and that he never received any consideration for said notes, and that plaintiff never received any legal right or ownership to said notes by the transfer of the same by Kniffin & White to him, for the reason that Kniffin & White never had any right to sell said notes, the same never having been delivered to them; that said notes were obtained through the false and fraudulent representations of Kniffin. He further answered, denying that plaintiff bought said notes before due, and stating that, if he did buy the notes before due, he was a party to the aforesaid fraudulent acts of Kniffin, and was in collusion with Kniffin & White to cheat, wrong and defraud the makers of said notes, and had them assigned to himself [328]*328for the purpose of aiding Kniffin & White to cheat the defendants and to collect said notes; that he had given notice in two newspapers, warning all persons not to purchase said notes.

The answers of the other defendants were in substance the same as that of Squier, above set forth, except that some of them set forth other defenses to said notes, as follows: MacRitchie claimed that he had signed the notes while he was intoxicated, and that his intoxication was procured by Kniffin & White, and he had no knowledge as to his acts in' signing said notes, and was not responsible therefor; that Johnson never made any demand on him for the amount due upon said notes until more than one year after the maturity of one of the notes. Herring, in his answer, alleged that Johnson and Kniffin & White were in partnership at the time the notes were executed and assigned, and were sharing the profits arising from the business in which they were engaged, to wit, of selling grade horses, representing the same to be thoroughbred imported horses, and that Kniffin & White owed him $200 for board and lodging, livery, feed bills, and labor. To each and all of said answers the plaintiff, Johnson, filed his reply, denying each and all of the allegations of said answers, and his reply to the answer of Herring alleging partnership of Johnson with Kniffin & White was sworn to.

The defendants, having alleged in their answers that the notes sued upon, were procured by Kniffin & White from them by fraud and without consideration, on the trial the plaintiff, Johnson, testified before the court and jury in regard to the circumstances under which he became the owner and holder of the notes, and that he was a bona fide purchaser of the same for a valuable consideration and before maturity. He testified that, in April, 1887, he was introduced to Kniffin & White by one Halloway, in his store in the city of El Dorado, Kas., and he learned that they had sold horses through the country, and had some notes for sale. He inquired of several parties as to the responsibility of the makers of the notes, and, among others, of the officers of the National Bank of El Dorado, and ascertained that they were good, bankable [329]*329notes, and made an offer for them, but went away from El Dorado to his home in Doniphan county without buying the notes, thinking when he went away that the notes were about to be sold to other parties in. El Dorado. He testified further, that some time thereafter Kniffin came to his office in Doniphan county with the notes, and notified him that he would accept his proposition made in El Dorado. His offer was a discount of about 4 per cent., so that the notes, which drew 8 per cent, interest, would make his money net him 12 per cent., and that he paid for the notes their full face value in money less only such small discount.

The testimony of Mr. Johnson, the plaintiff, was fully corroborated by the testimony of the witnesses Thompson, Ewing, Halloway, and Fouteh, all of whose testimony showed that Johnson was a bona fide

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Bluebook (online)
49 Kan. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macritchie-v-johnson-kan-1892.