Rowe v. Scott

132 N.W. 695, 28 S.D. 145, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 100
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 N.W. 695 (Rowe v. Scott) 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
Rowe v. Scott, 132 N.W. 695, 28 S.D. 145, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 100 (S.D. 1911).

Opinion

HANEY, J.

This is an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage given to secure the payment of nine promissory notes, payable to the American Type Founders’ Company, of which the plaintiff claims to be an indorsee in due course. The complaint is in the usual form. Defendants Eva K. Scott and Hibbard Patterson .do not appear to have answered. Defendant Mark D. Scott’s answer contains ix paragraphs, numbered consecutively. Pie apparently attempted to plead two separate defenses and one counterclaim, but neither division of the answer is complete in itself. No objection having been made to its form, the answer, [147]*147taken as a whole, should he construed as denying the plaintiff’s ownership of the notes, and as alleging that they were given to evidence the agreed price of a printing press purchased by the answering defendant of the payee, under an express warranty as to its fitness for the purpose for which it was purchased; that the press did not comply with the terms of the warranty; that it was óf no value for the purpose for which it was purchased; and that defendant suffered loss by reason of his afforts to use it for that purpose. Though the trial court failed to find whether or not the press was purchased under the alleged waranty, it found that the press did not comply with the terms of such warranty; that its actual value was $500; that the allegations of the answer, relating to defendant’s expense and loss resulting from his efforts to use it, were not proved; that the plaintiff was the owner of all the notes; that he purchased all of them in due course of business, in good faith, and for value, on May x, 1908; that the four maturing first were not purchased before maturity; that the five maturing last were purchased before maturity; and concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for $1,022, the amount due on the five last mentioned, together with costs and disbursements, and a decree foreclosing the mortgage. Judgment having been accordingly entered, and defendant’s application for a new trial denied, this appeal was taken.

[1, 2] If the plaintiff was an indorsee in due course, he was entitled to recover the amount due on the notes when the judgment was rendered. If he was not such an indorsee, being the owner of the notes, the amount of his recovery, if any, depended on the amount, if any, of defendant’s damages for breach of the warranty, which, according to the findings of the trial court, was at least $700, the difference between the agreed price of the press ($1,200) and its actual value ($500). Rev. Civ. Code, §§ 2305, 2306; Bank v. Feeney, 12 S. D. 156, 880 N. W. 186, 46 L. R. A. 732, 76 Am. St. Rep. 594; Shepard v. Hanson, 10 N. D. 194, 86 N. W. 704. The amount due on all the notes when the judgment was rendered was $1,497. Deducting $700, to say nothing of interest thereon and the damages resulting from de[148]*148fendant’s efforts to use the press, would leave only $797, as the amount to which the plaintiff was entitled, if he was not an indorsee in due course.

The notes, which bear date February 10, 1906, are thus described in the decision of the trial court: (1) One note due 3 months after date for $150. (2) One note due 4 months after date for $40. (3) One note due 6 months after date for $150. (4) One note due 7 months after date for $40. (5) One note due 15 months after date for $150. (6) One note due 18 months after date for $150. (7) One note due 21 months after date for $150. (8) One note due 24 months after date for $150. (9) One note due 27 months after date for $216.20.” It finds: “That on the 22d day of December, 1906, the time of payment of each and all of said promissory notes was by mutual agreement by and between the defendant, Mark D. Scott, and the said American Type Founders’ Company, and for a good and valuable consideration, by written entry upon the face of each of said notes, extended as follows: (1) The time of the payment of the note which fell due May 10, 1906, for $150, was extended to October 10, 1909. (2) The time of the payment of the note which fell due June xo, 1906, for $40, was extended to January 10, 1909. (3) The time of the payment of the note which fell due August 10, 1906, for $150, was extended to September 10, 1907. (4) The time of the payment of the note which fell • due September 10, 1906, for $40, was extended to April 10, 1909. (5) The time of the payment of the note which fell due May 10, 1907, for $150, was extended to December 10, 1907. (6) The time of the payment of the note which fell due August 10, 1907, for $150, was extended to May 10, 1908. (7) The time of the payment of the note which fell due November ro, 1907, for $150, was extended to Jauary 10, 1909. (8) The time of the payment of the note which fell due February 10, 1908, for $150, was extended to July 10, 1909. (9) The time of the payment of the note which fell due May 10, 1908, for $2x6.20, was extended to November 10, 1908.”

[3] The trial court certainly erred in deciding that note No. 5 was not subject to appellant’s defense. According to its find[149]*149ings, this note was payable, by the terms of the extension agreement, several months before it was acquired by the plaintiff. The contention that this error is not available, because not specified as a particular wherein the evidence is insufficient to justify the decision, is untenable. It has no relation to the sufficiency of the evidence. It is-in the conclusions of the court based on its findings of fact, and is presented by the assignments of error relating to such conclusions.

[4] And the court erred in concluding that the plaintiff was an indorsee in due course as to any of the notes. “An indorsee in due course is one who in good faith, in the ordinary course of business, and for value, before its apparent maturity or presumptive dishonor, and without knowledge of its actual dishonor, acquires a negotiable instrument duly indorsed to him, or indorsed generally, or payable to the bearer.” Rev. Civ. Code, § 2199. It did not find that either one was acquired “without knowledge of its actual dishonor.”- Nor could it have done s,o. Each note contained this clause: “This note is secured by chattel mortgage to American Type Founders’ Company, of even date herewith on personal property in Sioux Falls, state of So. Dak.” Though the authorities are not unanimous, we think the better-reasoned cases hold that a purchaser who takes a note which is not yet due with other notes overdue, all given as part of the same transaction, will be affected with notice as to the former. Harrell v. Broxton, 78 Ga. 129, S. E. 5; Harrington v. Claffin, 91 Tex. 294, 42 S. W. 1055; Bank v. Marcy, 79 Ark. 149, 95 S. W. 145, 9 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 339. The notes and mortgage, received by the plaintiff at the same time, disclosed that they were all parts of the same transaction.

[5] Moreover, all the notes were past due when the agreement to extend was made, and past due, notwithstanding such agreement, when they were acquired by the plaintiff, by reason of the provision of the mortgage. It is alleged in the complaint and admitted by the answer that the mortgage, which was assigned to the plaintiff when he acquired the notes, provided that, if default be made in the payment of said sums of money, or [150]*150any part thereof, at the time said notes became due, the whole sum of money secured by said mortgage should become due and payable. Clearly this provision was not abrogated by the agreement to extend the time of payment of each note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 695, 28 S.D. 145, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-scott-sd-1911.