Marsol Credit Co. v. Blacker

95 P.2d 285, 150 Kan. 477, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 10, 1939
DocketNo. 34,157
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 P.2d 285 (Marsol Credit Co. v. Blacker) 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
Marsol Credit Co. v. Blacker, 95 P.2d 285, 150 Kan. 477, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 154 (kan 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action on several promissory notes. Judgment was for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.

The petition first alleged that plaintiff was a New York corporation authorized to do business in Kansas, and that James'R. Blacker and Glen D. Cole were at the time the notes were executed doing business as the Blacker Milling and Grain Company; that on December 12, 1933, defendants executed to the Duralith Corporation, [478]*478a New York corporation, their promissory note in the amount of $280.35, dated December 12, 1933,-and due in two months from that date. The note recited that it was one of a series of twelve notes; and that upon default in the payment of any one of them the others would become due; that the note was endorsed on the back by the Duralith Corporation and was stamped on the face “Protested for Nonpayment this 13th day of Feb., 1934;” that this note was number 2 of a series of twelve notes executed by the defendants; that before maturity, for value, in the usual course of business the note was endorsed by the payee and delivered to plaintiff, who thereupon became and still was the owner and holder thereof in due course; that at maturity the note was presented for payment and payment was refused; that defendants had failed and neglected to pay the note. The petition then set out ten other notes in like amounts and terms except that the next note was to run for three months, and the next for four months, and so forth. It was alleged that each note became due and payable February 12, 1934. In all, eleven notes of $280.35 each were set out. Judgment was asked in a total amount of $3,083.85.

The answer of defendants was first a general denial and a denial that plaintiff was the owner. The answer then stated that they were induced by fraud and misrepresentation to enter, into a contract with the Duralith Corporation for the purchase of a patented article, known as “Duralith,” which was a paint used upon inside walls; that the Duralith Corporation represented to the defendants that this paint was waterproof and washable and that it would hot check, all of which was known to the Duralith Corporation to be untrue at the time; that the Duralith Corporation represented to defendants that if they would enter into a contract to sell Duralith in and about Kansas City, Wyandotte county, Kansas, it would conduct a sales campaign by newspaper and radio which would insure the disposal of the first shipment of Duralith; that all of these representations were false and known to be false by the Duralith Corporation, and the corporation had no intention of performing these promises; that relying on these false representations the defendants entered into a contract with the corporation and ordered $3,000 worth of the Duralith, which was shipped to defendants, and they gave in payment trade acceptances; that this Duralith was unfit for the purpose for which it was sold and was known so to be by the corporation; that the Duralith was shipped in paper bags and [479]*479was misbranded within the meaning of the “act of congress;” that the Duralith Corporation went through the form of transferring the trade acceptances to the Marsol Credit Company; that at the time the Marsol Credit Company went through the form of receiving these trade acceptances it knew of the fraudulent acts of the Duralith Corporation and knew that the consideration of these trade acceptances had failed; that many other merchants had been induced to. enter into similar contracts with the Duralith Corporation by fraud and deception; that the Marsol Credit Company lent itself to this fraudulent scheme, adopted the acts of the Duralith Corporation, and became a part thereby of a conspiracy to defraud the merchants; that the Marsol Credit Company had permitted itself to become the tool and dummy of the Duralith Corporation; that subsequent thereto the first of the trade acceptances became due, and the defendants still relying upon the fraudulent representations of the Duralith Corporation, which were at all times known to the Marsol Credit Company, entered into an arrangement with the Marsol company whereby the Marsol company would accept in lieu of the trade acceptances the notes of defendants; that while the Duralith Corporation is named as payee in the notes, the Marsol Credit Company was in truth and fact the payee therein and the Marsol Credit Company fraudulently inserted the name of the Duralith Corporation as payee in an effort to conceal its part in the fraud and to give it the appearance of being a purchaser for- value of the notes; that the Duralith Corporation never at any time had possession of the notes.

The reply was a general denial.

Subsequently Glen Cole died and the action was revived in the name of James R. Blacker and James R. Blacker, as administrator of the estate of Glen D. Cole, copartners. A supplemental petition was filed asking the same judgment against Blacker in person and Blacker as administrator. During the trial defendants were given leave by the court to add to their answer the following as to the false representations made by the Duralith Corporation: “That it would not check or crack and that it was more economical than the material ordinarily used for textile finish of inside walls.”

At the trial counsel for the plaintiff made the following opening statement:

“This action is brought upon eleven promissory notes. Those notes were given to replace three trade acceptances. . . . The three trade acceptances [480]*480were due in a series of three months. The defendant desired an extension of time, and three trade acceptances were surrendered to him, and in place of them the plaintiff received twelve notes in monthly series running from month to month over a period of a year. One of those notes was paid and eleven remain unpaid, and upon those eleven suit had been instituted. The plaintiff in this case purchased this paper in the usual course of its business.”

For the plaintiff, I. Edwin Katz testified by deposition that he was treasurer of plaintiff, and its business was discounting negotiable instruments; that its office was at 25 W. Forty-third St., New York City; that he conducted its business. He identified a check for $3,364.20 that was issued by Marsol Credit Company to the Duralith Corporation in pay for five trade acceptances of the Blacker Milling and Grain Company; that none of the trade acceptances were paid. He identified the eleven notes, each dated December 12, 1933, in the amount of $280.35. He identified the following letter from defendants to plaintiff:

“January 15, 1934. To Blacker Milling and Grain Company, Third street and Osage avenue, Kansas City, Kansas:
"Gentlemen: We have this day received twelve notes drawn by you to the order of the Duralith Corporation, in exchange for five trade acceptances, on which your name appeared as acceptor. The first of these notes matured January 12, 1934, and since it was not received until after this date, it will be forwarded to your bank for collection within a few days. Trusting that you will give this item your attention, very truly yours, Marsol Credit Co., Inc.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 P.2d 285, 150 Kan. 477, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsol-credit-co-v-blacker-kan-1939.