Olpin v. Grove Finance Company

521 P.2d 1221, 1974 Utah LEXIS 551
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1974
DocketNo. 13405
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 521 P.2d 1221 (Olpin v. Grove Finance Company) 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
Olpin v. Grove Finance Company, 521 P.2d 1221, 1974 Utah LEXIS 551 (Utah 1974).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice:

The issue presented on this appeal concerns the obligation of the defendant Grove Finance Company on a $10,000 bond it issued to the plaintiff E. Dee Olpin. Plaintiff’s position below, and persisted in here, is that he is entitled to the full face amount of the bond, together with the 10% interest thereon, from the date of its issuance; whereas, the defendant contended that it was obligated only to pay the principal, and interest thereon, in the amounts and from the time deposits were made by the plaintiff to pay for the bond, $6,000 of which was subsequent to its issuance. Upon a trial to the court, it made findings and entered judgment in accordance with the defendant’s contentions.

[1222]*1222Plaintiff appeals, charging that the trial court erred in: (1) permitting extrinsic evidence to contradict the terms of the bond; (2) allowing evidence of failure of consideration, to dispute its terms, without that defense having been pled; (3) improperly placing the burden of proof on plaintiff on that issue; and (4) in failing to award plaintiff’s attorney’s fee.

Most of the facts are not in dispute. Sheppard Hal Haycock is, and for many years has been the principal stockholder, president, and managing officer of the defendant Grove Finance Company. He encouraged his friend, plaintiff Dee Olpin, to deposit money on the promise of 10% interest. It is not questioned that over a period of years Olpin made substantial deposits; nor that the $10,000 bond upon which this dispute centers was issued July 1, 1963, by the defendant, payable to the plaintiff, and was negotiable in form, to bear interest at 10% per annum.

Plaintiff’s position and his evidence is to the effect that prior to that date there had been made deposits to his credit totaling $6,000; that on June 25, 1963, he made a further deposit of $4,000 which completed payment for the ,bond. Defendant’s contention and version of the transaction is that the $4,000 was the initial payment; and that the balance was to be paid in subsequent deposits. It concedes that the plaintiff’s subsequent deposits paid the full purchase price of the bond. It so acknowledged in its answer; and so states in its brief:

• The defendant always asserted that the initial payment made on the bond . was $4,000 made June 25, 1963, and that the full consideration for the bond was paid in installments subsequent to its issuance on the dates and in the amounts set forth in the appellant’s statement of facts and in the court’s findings. . . .

The statement of facts so accepted by the defendant includes the following deposits made to plaintiff’s credit with the defendant finance company, which for reasons not clear in the record, and immaterial anyway, were placed in three separate bank accounts:

FIRST ACCOUNT
June 25, 1953 . $4,000
July 16, 1965 . 1,000
October 1, 1965 . 3,000
SECOND ACCOUNT
August 9, 1963 . $1,000
April 1, 1965 . 1,000
THIRD ACCOUNT
September 25, 1966 . $2,000
FROM ESTATE OF PLAINTIFF’S FATHER
July 1, 1967 . $3,000
(On this latter item a separate bond was issued which is not in dispute here.)

It is unnecessary to recite the mathematical computation as to credits for interest, or as to withdrawals. The vital fact is that if plaintiff is entitled only to the deposits just listed, the judgment is correct. But if he is entitled to credit for the $10,000 bond from- the date of its issuance, instead of as paid for by later deposits, the judgment is short by the difference in those computations.

In January 1972, plaintiff went to the defendant to withdraw all deposits. After considerable discussion and figuring Mr. Haycock gave him a check for $1,977.40, insisting that that was his balance. After subsequent demands by plaintiff this suit was commenced.

The position asserted by the plaintiff is that the bond is a negotiable instrument; that as a purchaser thereof, he is a holder in due course; and that this carries certain presumptions: that it was duly executed by the maker; for a valuable consideration; that it is enforceable according to its terms; and that nothing different therefrom can be shown by extraneous evidence. In regard to those contentions we make these observations: the payee of such an instrument may or may not be an innocent purchaser for value, or [1223]*1223a holder in due course, depending upon the circumstances.1 Usually, as between the primary parties, subject to the rules of evidence relating to written instruments, evidence may be taken as to the true nature of the transaction.2 However, even though defendant argues to the contrary, the basic fact is that when it asserts that it had not been paid for the bond when it was issued, the essence of its contention is that there was a failure to pay the consideration. It is true, as plaintiff contends, that this is an affirmative defense which is required to be pleaded,3 and unless it is, it ordinarily should not be allowed as a defense,4 unless there was a motion to amend, or the parties acquiesce in the trial of that issue, or the plaintiff was otherwise given notice and an opportunity to meet it,5 neither of which was done here.

Correlated to the foregoing, and of greater importance in this case, is the matter of the burden of proof. As recited above, the issuance of such a bond, negotiable in form, carries with it the presumption that it was given for a valid consideration; and the burden of proof of the affirmative defense of failure of consideration is upon the maker.6 In this regard the plaintiff urges that the trial court erred in failing to require the defendant to meet this burden, and in imposing the burden of proof as to payment on him as a holder, in its finding which recites:

The Court finds by reason of the testimony of the parties hereto as aforesaid that there is an irreconcilable conflict in the uncorroborated [sic] testimony of the plaintiff, and the President and general manager of the defendant company, and the Court finds, by reason thereof, that the plaintiffs claim to the deposit of an additional $6,000.00 prior to July 1, 1963, above and beyond those deposits reflected on the records of the defendant company is not supported by a preponderance of the evidence and is found, by reason of that fact, to be not true.

Accepting the statement of the trial court that there is “irreconcilable conflict” in the testimony, it follows that the defendant has not proved its affirmative defense of failure of consideration by a preponderance of the evidence; and concomitantly, the recital that the plaintiff’s claim of payment “is not supported by a preponderance of the evidence” is in error in placing the burden of proving the contrary of the affirmative defense upon him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
521 P.2d 1221, 1974 Utah LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olpin-v-grove-finance-company-utah-1974.