Roles v. Roles

225 N.W. 809, 58 N.D. 310, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 211
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 809 (Roles v. Roles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roles v. Roles, 225 N.W. 809, 58 N.D. 310, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 211 (N.D. 1929).

Opinion

BiRdzeul, J.

The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant on a promissory note. The defendant moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. The motion being denied, the defendant appeals to this court. The following statement of facts gleaned from the record will suffice to indicate the basis for the questions raised upon this appeal. In 1917, Nick Roles, a brother of the plaintiff, was indebted in a considerable amount to the Citizens Rank of Minot. Towards the end of the year there had been some *312 discussion of this indebtedness between Nick Eoles and Peter Ehr, the president of the bank. Nick Eoles was in need of more money which the bank was reluctant to furnish and he looked to his brother for assistance. After some preliminary talk with Ehr to this effect, Nick Eoles caused the plaintiff, who resided at Eobbinsdale, Minnesota, to visit him in North Dakota and they together called at Peter Ehr’s office in the bank in Minot. The plaintiff there manifested his willingness to loan Nick Eoles $2000 upon security being furnished, and the latter proposed the conveyance of a quarter section of land as security. Ehr stated that this would have a bad effect upon the credit of Nick Eoles and signified his willingness to sign a note for this amount with him, stating at the same time circumstances showing that his credit should be good for this amount. Thereafter a note for $2000 dated January 1, 1918, due one year after date, payable to the plaintiff, was executed by Nick Eoles and Peter Ehr and delivered to the plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that he remitted the amount of the note by draft and Nick Eoles testified that the entire amount was paid over to Ehr, but Ehr denies having received it. There is a further conflict in the testimony with reference to the payment of the note and the payment of interest. The defendant claims and testifies, in substance, that when the note fell due he spoke to the co-maker, Nick Eoles, about the necessity of it being paid, was told that it was paid and that the latter, upon his request, agreed to bring it in and'exhibit it to him, which was never done; also, that he had never given any directions regarding or assented to the payment of any interest subsequent to that time. Nick Eoles testified in substance denying the conversation with reference to the payment, contending that he had indicated that the payee would be content to carry the obligation provided the interest was paid; that pursuant to this understanding interest was paid from time to time; that, specifically, in the fall of 1924 when there was substantial return from the crops raised by Nick Eoles, by the direction or assent of Ehr, he had sent $500 to the payee with the direction to credit it upon interest. The amount so sent was credited upon interest owing upon both the note in question and other indebtedness, paying all interest to October, 1924.

The first contention on the appeal is that the court erred in permitting counsel for the plaintiff, in his examination of the jurors upon *313 tbeir voir dire, to examine them with reference to whether they were interested as stockholders or otherwise in banks. It was pointed out that the suit was between individuáis and did not involve banking nor the interests of any bank, and the suggestion in this manner served to convey to the jurors the idea that the bank, rather than the defendant, would be affected by a recovery. It is said that such an intimation is as prejudicial to the defendant ais would be the suggestion that an insurance company would sustain the real loss resulting from a recovery for personal injuries, such as was involved in Beardsley v. Ewing, 40 N. D. 373, 168 N. W. 791. An examination of the record in the instant case, however, convinces us that the examination in question cannot be considered prejudicial. The evidence bearing upon the negotiations which led to the execution of the note in question necessarily disclosed the relations between Nick Roles and the Citizens Bank, of which the defendant Ehr was president, and showed that Ehr was acting in the interest of the bank.

The plaintiff testified without objection that Peter Ehr told him he was president of the bank and owned the building across the -street, and upon cross-examination of Nick Roles, the defendant’s attorney, himself, inquired as to -whether the witness was indebted to Peter Ehr or the Citizens Bank, eliciting this answer: “Well I guess my dealings was through the Citizens Bank. Peter Ehr was president.” “Q. In other words, if you turned this $2000 over to anybody you turned it over to the bank to apply on your debt, didn’t you ? A. I turned this money over to Mr. Ehr because it was for me he signed the note, not the Citizens Bank didn’t sign. Q. Didn’t you turn it over to apply on your debt? A. Well through Mr. Ehr, yes. Q. And you knew it ■was to be applied on your debt to the Citizens Bank, didn’t you ? A. Well that is what I expected, yes. Q. That is what you turned, it over for ? A. Yes.” ’This is only a fragment of the testimony, but the record is replete with evidence indicating that the relations between Nick Roles and the Citizens Bank are inseparably connected with the transaction in question and that, while Peter Ehr signed the note in question personally, he did so largely because of his interest in the bank and his desire to advance its welfare. So, even if the suggestion of the bank’s interest in the litigation had' not been made in the examination of the jurors, nevertheless there would have been — as in *314 fact there was — ample foundation in the evidence for the jury to have inferred that the bank’s interests were involved in the lawsuit as well as the personal interest of the defendant.

It is argued that the appellant, being an accommodation maker and known to be such by the plaintiff, was released from liability by extensions of the note from year to year made between the plaintiff and the defendant Nick Holes, the principal debtor. Whether this contention be well founded may depend upon whether Peter Ehr was in fact an accommodation maker or whether he signed the note to serve some purpose of his own, thus receiving a consideration; whether even though an accommodation maker, he would be released under the Negotiable Instruments Act (Comp. Laws 1913, § 7004; Neg. Inst. Law, § 119; First Nat. Bank v. Meyer, 30 N. D. 388, 152 N. W. 657); or whether the record discloses any actual contract between the plaintiff and Nick Poles extending the time of payment. A careful examination of the record fails to disclose that any contract was made whereby any definite extension was agreed upon. This must exist before-a surety or accommodation maker is released. McCormick Harvesting Mach. Co. v. Rae, 9 N. D. 482, 84 N. W. 346. Hence, in any view of the case the appellant was not released, and we are not called upon to express any opinion as to whether Ehr was an accommodation maker or whether he would be released under § 119, supra.

It is contended that the action against the appellant was barred by the statute of limitations. The record shows that there was no communication between the plaintiff and the defendant Ehr regarding the note in question at any time after it was executed until the bringing of this action in October, 1927, some eight years and ten months having elapsed after the accrual of the cause of action.

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Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 809, 58 N.D. 310, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roles-v-roles-nd-1929.