Salisbury v. Iddings

46 N.W. 267, 29 Neb. 736, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 303
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 46 N.W. 267 (Salisbury v. Iddings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salisbury v. Iddings, 46 N.W. 267, 29 Neb. 736, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 303 (Neb. 1890).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

This action comes up on error from the district court of Lincoln county; the plaintiff in error was also the plaintiff in that court. The action was brought on a promissory note executed by II. A. Iddings and C. E. Iddings, dated at Cheyenne, Wyoming, December 1, 1883, payable on or before fifteen months after date to the' order of N. Sweet-land for the sum of $14,058, with interest at one per cent per month from date until paid, which note was indorsed in blank by N. Sweetland and also had indorsed thereon a payment of $835.20, made June 6, 1885, all of which was sufficiently set out in plaintiff’s amended petition; also that said N. Sweetland, for a valuable consideration, indorsed and delivered said note to plaintiff before the same became due, admitting the payment as indorsed on said note and claiming judgment for $887.67, with interest [738]*738-thereon at the rate ©f one per cent per month from the 6th •day of June, 1885.

The defendants answered jointly: First, by a general denial; second, admitting that said note was signed by said H. A. Iddings as principal, and by C. F. Iddings as .surety, and alleging that said note was given in part payment for a half interest in certain furniture and hotel credits in the Union Pacific hotel in Cheyenne, Wyoming •Territory, bought by said H. A. Iddings of said plaintiff; that no consideration whatever passed from N. Sweetland for said note, but the entire transaction was with said plaintiff, and he had said note drawn in favor of said Sweetland with the intent to carry out the fraud hereinafter set forth; that said plaintiff sold to said defendant the half interest in said fixtures, furniture, stock, and credits cf said Union Pacific hotel, and in selling the same, falsely and fraudulently represented the value of the same, and the quality of the articles so sold, and upon the statements so made by plaintiff, with relation to the articles therein, and the quantity, value, and quality of the articles therein contained, defendant entirely relied and purchased the principal part of the same, to-wit, the articles and credits hereinafter mentioned upon said statement, to-wit, that said half interest was sold to H. A. Iddings for $6,865. Said plaintiff falsely alleged that said property had appreciated in value up to the time of said purchase and since the same was purchased in July, 1882, from one Jones, in the amount of twenty-five per cent, when said property had in fact depreciated over twenty-five per cent and was of less value than it was when purchased in an amount of $2,500; that said plaintiff turned in to said H. A. Iddings two barrels of whisky and charged the same to said defendant, which were returned and not kept, they being of no value, and had not been paid for, of the value as represented by plaintiff of $270.27; that plaintiff turned in a range, falsely representing the same to be in good condi[739]*739tion, at a valuation of $1,250, which had no value whatever; that plaintiff charged up one cow in excess of what he owned, and did not turn in, valued at $50; that plaintiff falsely charged for twenty-five gallons of brandy at $2.50, which proved to be wine costing $1.50, in excess $25; also, twenty-three and one-half gallons of wine at $2 per gallon, which was worthless, amounting to $47; also, fifteen and one-half gallons of Catawba wine at $2.45, which was worthless, amounting to $37.90; also, eleven gallons of catsup at $9.90, which was worthless; total, $1,690.07.

The plaintiff charged up and turned in the following credits due said firm, and falsely claimed that they were good and collectible, which were worthless1 and uncollectible, to-wit: (Here follows a list of thirty-four accounts against as many several persons, amounting in all to $654.70.) That plaintiff turned in and charged up thirty-nine gallons of brandy, falsely claiming that it cost $6.50 per gallon, bought of Iler & Co., when it only cost $2.50, $150, and freight on the same at thirty-one cents per gallon, which only cost ten cents per gallon, an excess of $8.19.

That in the agreement the defendant H. A. Iddings agreed to pay his part of certain enumerated debts of the prior firm in said hotel, to-wit, Sweetland & Rockafellow, amounting to $100, said plaintiff agreeing that if there were debts in excess of said amount said defendant should pay the same ($816.94), and that said plaintiff would allow and pay said defendant the excess over $100 so paid said plaintiff. At this time, having purchased said Rockafellow’s interest in said hotel business, and liable with his brother-in-law Sweetland for said debts, pursuant to said agreement, said defendant and Sweetland afterwards paid the following of the same debts due by said firm, to-wit : (Here follows a list of thirty-one debts amounting in the aggregate to $1,347.70.) From which deduct $100, leaving $1,247.70. One-half of wdiich, $623.85, was paid [740]*740by said defendant H. A. Iddings, and is justly due from plaintiff, who agreed to pay the same to said defendant, amounting to $623.85, which with items before set forth on 3d page, $1,690.07, and items set out on 4th page, $816.94, amounts to the sum of $3,130.86.

That plaintiff, at the time of the purchase of said articles by said defendant H. A. Iddings, guaranteed that they were of the value designated in the purchase, and that the debts transferred were good and collectible; that defendant H. A. Iddings, by his agent, Charles F. Iddings, relied op said guarantee in the purchase; that none of said amounts have been paid by said plaintiff.

That by reason of the premises plaintiff is indebted to the defendant H. A. Iddings in the sum of $2,508.06, with interest at ten per cent from December, 1883, with prayer for judgment, etc.

The plaintiff replied by a general denial.

There was a trial to a jury, with a verdict and judgment for the defendants in the sum of $851.39.

Plaintiff’s petition and assignments of error contain somewhat over fifty paragraphs, which, although not numbered, are separately stated, with convenient references to the respective pages of the record upon which they are predicated. As many of the errors assigned as are argued by counsel for plaintiff in the brief will be examined.

It is undisputed that the note sued on was one of a series of three notes given by H. A. Iddings as principal and C. F. Iddings as surety, for the purchase of a one-half interest in the furniture, fixtures, stock on hand, and business of the Union Pacific hotel, at Cheyenne. This property had been, something over a year before the giving of said notes, purchased from Mr. Jones by N. Sweetland, a brother-in-law of plaintiff, and one H. Gr. Rockafellow, and that the plaintiff advanced and loaned the money to them in severalty with which they paid for the same. These parties carried on the business for a year and more, [741]*741under the name of Sweetland & Co., when Rockafellow transferred his interest in said property and business to the plaintiff. About the time this transfer was made, the defendant C. F. Iddings being then in business at North Platte, the plaintiff came to him at that place, who was a friend and former employe of his, told him that he was going to take the house back, and proposed that said defendant should take it, and run the house for him, and, as said defendant stated when on the stand as a witness, “ made favorable propositions ” to him.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.W. 267, 29 Neb. 736, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-v-iddings-neb-1890.