Raymond v. Barnard

28 N.W.2d 700, 71 S.D. 630, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 53
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1947
DocketFile No. 8911.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 N.W.2d 700 (Raymond v. Barnard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Barnard, 28 N.W.2d 700, 71 S.D. 630, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 53 (S.D. 1947).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover on a promissory note dated October 20, 1926, for the principal sum of $2,500, with interest from date at the rate of six per cent per annum, and payable three years after date.

The action was commenced in June, 1946, by an attachment of the undivided one-half interest of the defendant in a half section of land in Minnehaha county. Plaintiff and *632 defendant are sisters and were nonresidents of South Dakota when the note was executed. Plaintiff at the time of the commencement of this action was a resident of California and defendant resided in Colorado.

Defendant in her answer alleges that right of action is barred by the statute of limitations. She denies that she ever delivered the note or received consideration therefor. She further alleges that the note was delivered to her father; that it was agreed by the father and the parties hereto that defendant would assume the management of certain property and that the net income from the property would be paid to the father during his lifetime and after his death title to the property was to vest in plaintiff and defendant in equal shares; that defendant assumed management of the property, collected the rents, paid taxes and other expenses so far as the income from the property permitted; that the note was signed for the purpose of furnishing evidence of the interest of the plaintiff in the property or the proceeds that defendant might receive for the property and with the understanding that defendant’s liability was limited to the amount, if any, that defendant might receive from plaintiff’s share in the property; that the property was sold at a mortgage foreclosure sale and was not redeemed; and that defendant has never received any income or consideration whatever from the property over and above taxes and other expenses.

The action was tried to the court without a jury. The court found that defendant unconditionally delivered the note some time after its date and that the instrument was based upon a good and sufficient consideration “passing from the plaintiff and received by the defendant in the nature of a quitclaim deed in which plaintiff was grantor and defendant was grantee, describing Lot Seven (7) in Block Forty-Eight (48) of East Pueblo, an addition to the city of Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado, which property consisted of an apartment house and which quitclaim deed was dated October 15, 1926.” Defendant appeals from the judgment.

The original note was not offered in evidence. There *633 was offered and received in evidence what is known in the record as “Exhibit 1.” This exhibit reads as follows:

“This is a copy of the note I made to you Oct. 20, 1926
“Pueblo, Colo, Oct 20, 1926.
“On or before 3 years after date I agree to pay to Florence Raymond the sum of $2500.00 with interest at 6% payable annually.
“Lucille Barnard.
“Keep this for your records. Father has promised to give me the note but enjoys embarassing me by not doing so. Always reminding me that he has been a kind and loving father always. I resent his doing this way and can you blame me?
“L.
“In case anything happens to me or if I do not pay, the above will be proof for legal action. I think you should have it.”

It appears from the evidence that Ida R. Schweppe, mother of the parties hereto, conveyed to them on October 26, 1925, two quarter sections of land in Minnehaha county, subject to the life estate of her husband. On the same date, she also conveyed to her daughters, subject to the life estate of her husband, a dwelling in Boulder, Colorado. The mother died shortly thereafter. February 27, 1926, the father -and the parties to this action exchanged this property for an apartment house in Pueblo, Colorado. October 15, 1926, plaintiff by quitclaim deed conveyed to defendant all her interest in the apartment house. Defendant and her father transferred this property in exchange for other property which was not redeemed by defendant from a mortgage foreclosure sale.

Defendant admits the execution of a note payable to her sister for $2,500. She testified: “I gave it to my father. He picked it up after I signed it and I have never seen it since that I know of.” With reference to Exhibit 1 she testified: “It must be true or I wouldn’t have written it down that way.” Referring to the last paragraph of this exhibit she testified: “What is down there is the truth or I wouldn’t have written it.”

*634 Defendant contends that this is an action upon the original note and not upon the obligation thereby represented; that while it is true that Exhibit 1 purports to ■contain a copy of a note it is not a duplicate or substitute note, having all the legal effect and validity of an original; and that the evidence is insufficient to establish delivery of the note upon which the action is based.

In Benton v. Martin, 40 N. Y. 345, it was sought to recover on a draft given in place of the original, drawn by the same person, in the same words, and with the same date, across the face of which was written the word “duplicate.” It was held that the true construction of the word “duplicate” was that the draft was made as a substitute for, and to take the place of the original and was but new evidence of the same debt and no new liability was thereby created. To the same effect, see Bank of Gilby v. Farnsworth, 7 N. D. 6, 72 N. W. 901, 38 L. R. A. 843; Goodrich v. Case, 68 Ohio St. 187, 67 N. E. 295; and Samland v. Ford Motor Co., 123 Neb. 819, 244 N. W. 404. Defendant argues that if it had been her intention to give a duplicate or substitute note she would have, executed a separate instrument in the form of a note; that the copy of the note in Exhibit 1 is merely part of a memorandum for the information of the plaintiff and was not made as a substitute for, and to take the place of another note. A “duplicate” has been defined as “the original instrument repeated” and has all the validity of an original. Dakota Loan & Trust Co. v. Codington County, 9 S. D. 159, 68 N. W. 314; Cable Company v. Rathgeber, 21 S. D. 418, 113 N. W. 88. If it be assumed, without so deciding, that the copy contained in Exhibit 1 is not in legal effect a duplicate or substitute note, it is apparent that defendant intended it to be a copy in all essential respects of a note that she had previously signed and handed to her father and to be used as evidence thereof.

A note is incomplete and revocable until there is a valid delivery. Pavilis v. Farmers Union Livestock Commission, 68 S. D. 96, 298 N. W. 732. What constitutes dedelivery depends upon'the intention of the parties. It is not necessary that there be an actual manual transfer from *635 the maker to the payee. Defendant asserts that plaintiff was informed by Exhibit 1 that delivery of the note to the father was conditional. It is not susceptible of such construction. Defendant made no mention therein of any condition on which liability was to become absolute, but manifests a purpose to furnish plaintiff with evidence of an existing obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.W.2d 700, 71 S.D. 630, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-barnard-sd-1947.