Miller v. White

258 P. 565, 70 Utah 145, 1927 Utah LEXIS 24
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1927
DocketNo. 4530.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 258 P. 565 (Miller v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. White, 258 P. 565, 70 Utah 145, 1927 Utah LEXIS 24 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

HANSEN, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover judgment against the defendants on a negotiable promissory note. The note is dated March 21, 1925, and is for the sum of $1,000, made payable to the order of “myself or ourselves.” The makers also agreed to pay reasonable expenses of collection including attorney’s fee. The defendants Mohonri M. White and Mary Dott White signed the note as makers thereof, and they are also blank indorsers. Defendants C. A. Quigley and E. J. Welch are also blank indorsers of the note.

The complaint is in the usual form. Defendants Mohonri M. White and Mary Dott White answered. In their answer they admit that they executed the note sued upon. They also admit that they delivered the note to the defendant E. J. Welch, but allege that before the note was issued and delivered to said defendant E. J. Welch they informed him “that they would not be able to pay the amount set forth in said note, or any part thereof, either principal or interest, *147 at the time of its maturity, or at all; that thereupon the defendant E. J. Welch told these defendants (in the presence and hearing of plaintiff) that said note would be used by him solely for the purpose of obtaining temporary credit, and that these defendants would never be called upon to pay said note, or any part thereof, either principal or interest, and that before the maturity of said note, the same would be paid by the defendants E. J. Welch and C. A. Quigley, and returned to these defendants; that these defendants believed and relied upon said statements, representations, promises, and agreements, and in reliance thereon, and not otherwise, executed and indorsed said note and delivered the same to the defendant E. J. Welch, subject, however, to the condition that these defendants would not be required to pay the same, or any part thereof, either principal or interest; that plaintiff, before taking said note, knew the consideration for the same, and the conditions under which it was obtained, and which were attached to its delivery, as hereinbefore specified and set forth, or knew of such facts that it was his duty, acting in good faith, to make inquiry concerning the same.” The defendants in their answer also admitted that they have paid no part of said note. They denied that the note was indorsed and delivered before maturity to the plaintiff herein by C. A. Quigley and E. J. Welch, and also deny that the plaintiff is the owner and holder of the note.

A trial was had to a jury, and a verdict rendered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, no cause of action. Motion for new trial was made by plaintiff and denied. The plaintiff appeals. The defendants Quigley and Welch took no part in the trial of the case; neither do they appear in this court on this appeal.

After the jury was impaneled, and respective counsel had made their opening statements, and the note in question was introduced in evidence, and counsel had stipulated that, in the event plaintiff should recover on the note, the sum of $100 should be allowed plaintiff’s attorney as a fee for the *148 prosecution of this action, the attorney for plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings. On this appeal the plaintiff assigns as error the refusal of the court to grant this motion.

In appellant’s brief it is urged that the facts alleged in the defendants’ answers concerning the circumstances under which the plaintiff took the note do not constitute a defense.

We shall again consider this phase of the case in connection with defendants’ evidence. We do not deem it necessary to discuss the question of whether or not the motion for judgment on the pleadings was or was not timely interposed. The complaint alleges and the answer denies that the note in question was indorsed and delivered by E. J. Welch and C. A. Quigley before maturity, for value, and in due course to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff is now the owner and holder of the note. The pleadings having raised these issues, the same must of necessity be determined by the evidence. The trial court therefore properly denied plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.

At the conclusion of the evidence counsel for the plaintiff interposed a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the amount of the principal and interest owing upon the note and for an attorney’s fee in the stipulation sum of $100. The court denied the motion and appellant assigns this ruling as error. In considering this assignment of error it becomes necessary to review the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendants.

The defendant Mohonri M. White testified in substance that he is 46 years of age, a mail carrier by occupation, but has been a farmer during the greater part of his life; that the defendant E. J. Welch solicited him to become a purchaser of the stock of the Pahvant Coal Company; that Welch informed him that, if he would lend his credit for a few days for the sum of $1,000 the defendants Welch and Quigley would give him (White) $1,000 par value of stock *149 in the Pahvant Coal Company; that on the first visit White rejected the proposition, but upon the second visit he accepted their offer; that he signed a property statement showing his net assets to be $25,650, and also signed the following agreement:

“Salt Lake City, Utah, March 21, 1925.
“I, the undersigned, have this day loaned to Quigley & Welch one thousand dollars, and it is understood and agreed that for and in consideration of this loan I am to have issued to me one share of stock of the Pahvant Coal Company, par value one dollar per share, as a bonu’á for each dollar loaned.
“Said Quigley & Welch also agree that this subscription carries with it the right to buy coal from them at wholesale prices as long as I am a stockholder in the Pahvant Coal Company. Coal deliveries will be made as soon as Pahvant Coal Company’s mine is in operation. In the meantime coal deliveries will be made at the lowest possible price attained by Quigley & Welch. It is also understood and agreed that the amount of this loan is to be repaid to me by said Quigley & Welch on or before one year from date.
“By Mohonri M. White, subscriber. Quigley & Welch, 301-2-3, Clift Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, by Jos. S. Welch, Agent.”

The witness testified that at the same time he also signed the following:

“Salt Lake City, Utah, March 21, 1925.
“To Whom It may Concern:
“This is to certify that I, the undersigned stockholder of the Pah-vant Coal Company, a Utah corporation, advanced money and credit to E. J. Welch and C. A. Quigley for the defrayal of expenses incurred by them in placing the property of said company in production.
“We know that said company owned 280 acres of coal property in Carbon County, Utah, and that said property was near a railway, and that it would take money and credit to place it in working condition, and we fully expected that it would require further financing.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 565, 70 Utah 145, 1927 Utah LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-white-utah-1927.