Moore v. Wade

186 S.W. 828, 124 Ark. 137, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 22, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 186 S.W. 828 (Moore v. Wade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Wade, 186 S.W. 828, 124 Ark. 137, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 20 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This is an action instituted before a justice of the peace of Washington- Oounty by the plaintiff, H. K. Wade, against the defendant, J. F. Moore, to recover the amount of a promissory note executed by defendant to plaintiff, dated March 3, 1915, in renewal of a negotiable promissory note previously executed by the defendant to one W. L. Laurence, and by the latter assigned to the plaintiff. On appeal to the circuit court from the judgment of the justice of the peace, there was a trial before a jury, but the court excluded certain testimony adduced by the defendant and gave a peremptory instruction in the plaintiff’s favor. The plaintiff rested his case after introducing the note sued on and showing that the note was executed in renewal of the other note executed by defendant to Laurence. The contention of the defendant was and is that the note to Laurence was executed on a certain condition which had subsequently failed, and that he executed the renewal note to plaintiff” upon faith of the latter’s representation, which is alleged to he false, that he was an innocent purchaser of the note from Laurence and had no notice of the alleged condition.

Appellant in his testimony gave a history of the execution of the note to Laurence and the consideration upon which it was based. It appears from his testimony that during the summer of 1914 Laurence visited the city of Fayetteville, where all the parties to this litigation resided, for the purpose of promoting a corporation organized to establish .mausoleums for the burial of the dead. Laurence was selling stock in the corporation, and the consideration for the note executed to him by defendant was the sale of certain shares of stock. He gave defendant a receipt for the price of the stock represented by the, note, reciting in the receipt that the said corporation would “guarantee to Mr. J. F. Moore that in case we have not a building under 'construction or constructed, and Mr. Moore desires us to return his purchase price and cancel stock, then we agree to do so any time after five months and before maturity of his note,” and that “any compartments or crypts sold by Mr. Moore, he shall receive a commission of 15 per cent, on same.” The testimony also shows that after Laurence completed his operation at Fayetteville and returned to Little Bock, he absconded with the funds of the corporation and that no further steps were ever taken toward, carrying out the contracts of the corporation.

The note executed by defendant to Laurence was dated June 30,1914, and was due and payable 'six months after date, being in the form of a negotiable note. Laurence assigned the note to plaintiff by endorsement on the back 'of it. The defendant testified that the first he knew of his note having been purchased by the plaintiff was in •the latter part of the summer of 1914, or the early part of the autumn, which was before the maturity of the note, when he went to the banking house of the Mcllroy Banking Company, of which the plaintiff was the cashier, for the purpose of disposing of another note, and was then informed by the plaintiff that he held the Laurence note. He testified that he informed the plaintiff at that time that his note had been executed to Laurence upon certain conditions which had not been performed, but that plaintiff replied to him that he was an innocent purchaser of the note and that he would bring suit on the note unless it was paid. He testified also that after the note became due plaintiff made written demand on him to pay and threatened to sue him unless the note was paid, and that he went around to isee the plaintiff on March 3,1915, and upon the faith of the plaintiff’s representations of being an innocent purchaser of the note he executed the renewal note now in suit.

Defendant stated in his testimony that he suggested at the time of his last conversation with the plaintiff that the latter was not in fact an innocent purchaser and that his. suspicion was aroused on account of the refusal of the plaintiff, to allow him (defendant) to write a letter to Laurence demanding that he make good his guarantee for the reason 'that otherwise the plaintiff would not endeavor to enforce payment of the note. He says that plaintiff positively refused to allow his name to be used in such a letter for the reason that he was unwilling to appeár 'to be conceding that he was not an innocent purchaser of the note.

At this stage of the proceeding there was a motion made by the plaintiff to exclude the defendant’s testimony, and after hearing argument the court indicated its ruling sustaining the motion on the ground that it was not sufficient to show a defense to the renewal note, where-up'on the defendant made the following offer, as shown in the record, concerning thé introduction of further testimony :

“The defendant also offers to show by testimony that he submits is competent, and that the Mcllroy Banking Company had considered and passed upon — whether formally or informally — the question of subscribing for any stock in this proposed organization; that the matter had been definitely decided in the negative; and further, not to handle any of their paper. And further, by testimony of one'Prank Rail, assistant cashier of the bank, who purchased one note, similar to the note actually in controversy, and that when that action came to the knowledge of the bank, the matter was settled and compromised and gotten out of the way.' And that the evidence submitted is to show that the plaintiff, H. K. Wade, in his capacity as cashier of the Mcllroy Bank, must necessarily have had notice of such action and such knowledge on the part of the bank.” ■

The court refused the defendant’s offer and thereupon instructed the jury to return a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, which was done, and judgment was rendered acF eordingly.

(1-2) In the case of Stewart v. Simon, 111 Ark. 358, and also in other cases which followed IE, we have adopted the rule sustained by many of the authorities that's*‘one who gives a note in renewal of another note, witb^upjdedge at the time of a partial failure of the consideration for the original note, or false representations .. by the payee, etc., waives such defense, and can not set, it up to defeat or reduce a recovery on the original note.” The important condition upon which this rule is based is, that at the time of the renewal the party must have had knowledge of the failure of consideration or the-.alleged false representations upon which his defense against the payment of the original note was based. If he executes the renewal note without knowledge of the facts which would constitute a valid defense, the renewal does not operate as a waiver of the original defense. The same principle demands that if the party execute the renewal note upon the faith of false representations as to facts affecting his right to plead his original defense, he is not estopped by the renewal of the note to plead the original defense.

Applying that rule to the present case, if the defendant could show that notwithstanding the fact that he was fully advised as to his having a valid defense against the original note in the hands of Laurence, he executed the renewal note upon the faith of a false representation made by the plaintiff to the effect that he was an innocent purchaser, which fact if true would have deprived him of his right to defend against the note on that ground, then he is not estopped by the renewal.

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Related

Stewart v. Simon
163 S.W. 1135 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 828, 124 Ark. 137, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-wade-ark-1916.