Soaps v. Eichberg

42 Ill. App. 375, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 275
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 375 (Soaps v. Eichberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soaps v. Eichberg, 42 Ill. App. 375, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 275 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Boggs, J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by defendants in error against the plaintiff to recover upon a promissory note assigned to them by Mary A. Sawyer.

It appears that one J. H. Walker arranged to borrow $150 from Mary A. Sawyer for the purpose of sending it to his brother-in-law, B. F. Courtney, who then lived in Kansas, and was in need of assistance. Courtney was a son-in-law of Mrs. Sawyer. A note was delivered to Mrs. Sawyer by Walker, of which the following is a copy:

“ Staunton, III., June 16th, 1880.
One year after date we, or either of us, promise to pay Mary A. Sawyer, or order, $150, value received of her, with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent until paid.
Thomas X. Landers,
William Soaps,
George W. Mize,
George Soaps,
J. H. Walker,
J. T. Cothran,
E. E. Godfrey,
Oliver X. Piper,
Galen Francis,
Joseph Sawyer, Jr.
Frank Godfrey,
M. C. Sawyer,
John McMullen,
William X. Brown.”

Mrs. Sawyer on receiving the note gave the money to Walker, who sent it to Courtney.

Courtney returned from Kansas in the summer of 1881, and after the note fell due and while it yet belonged to Mrs. Sawyer, signed the note, placing his signature just above that of plaintiff in error and at the top of the 'left hand column of makers’ names. Courtney testifies: “ I signed the note after its maturity; it was in the hands of Mrs. Sawyer and I signed it at her request; she told me if I would sign it she would extend the time of its payment for six months, and in consideration of that I signed. Soaps was not present; knew nothing of my signing it. I never talked with him about it until after Eichberg had the note. I did not first propose to sign the note, but signed at Mrs. Sawyer’s request, and on condition she would extend the payment”

Concerning the signing by Courtney, Mrs. Sawyer testifies, “ Courtney came back from Kansas in summer of 1881; he was at my house one day and said he had not signed that note and that if I would get it he would sign it. I got it and he signed it. I did not ask him to do so. He proposed to sign it himself. I did not agree to extend the time of payment if he would sign it. Don’t recollect that Walker said anything about Courtney signing the note when he delivered it to me. He ver talked with Soaps about it. I sold the note to the plaintiff several years after Courtney signed it.”

The note was assigned, without recourse, by Mrs. Sawyer to defendants in error several years after it fell due and after it had been signed by Courtney, and this suit was brought upon it by defendants in error, against plaintiff in error alone, to the September term, 1888, of the Macoupin Circuit Court. The declaration contained two counts.

The second count, omitting the usual allegation of assignment, liability of defendant to pay to the assignees, and the breach, is as follows:

“And whereas, also, heretofore, to wit, on the sixteenth day of June, A. D. 1880, at Staunton, Ill., to wit, at said county of Macoupin, the said defendant, Geo. W. Soaps, for value received, executed to one Mary A. Sawyer his certain other promissory note in the words and figures following:
“ ]STo. 134. Staunton, Ill., June 16, 1880. One year after date we, or either of us, promise to pay Mary A. Sawyer, or order, $150, value received of her, with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent until paid.
Signed, Geokge Soaps.

• “And the plaintiffs aver that after the execution and delivery of said note, the said Mary A. Sawyer then being the payee therein named and the legal holder thereof, to better secure the payment of the said sum of money in said note specified, procures divers other persons to sign said note and to become also liable for the payment thereof, according to the tenor and effect of said note, all of .which said actings and doings were without the knowledge or consent of the defendant and have never since the commission thereon, been ratified or assented to by the defendant.”

A demurrer was sustained to this second count, and under leave given an amended declaration was filed which contained two counts, the first setting out the note in haeo verba, including the signature of Courtney, the second setting out the note m haee verba, omitting the signature of Courtney.

To this declaration plaintiff in error filed the general issue, a plea denying the execution of the instrument sued on, verified by his oath, and a plea that the timé of payment of the note had been extended. Issue was joined by similiter to the first and second pleas, and issue was made on the third plea by denial of the alleged agreement for an extension of the time of payment.

A trial was had before the court and a jury resulting in a judgment against the plaintiff in error for $269.57, to reverse which this writ of error is prosecuted.

It is first assigned for error that the note, over the objection of plaintiff in error, was received in evidence and read to the jury without proof of its execution. Under our statute proof of the execution of the instrument sued on is not as at common law necessary, unless that issue be raised by a verified plea denying its execution. Such a plea properly verified was interposed and proof of its execution was therefore required before the note could properly be read in evidence. Templeton v. Hayward, 65 Ill. 178; Zuel v. Bowen, 78 Ill. 234.

We are, however, strongly inclined to regard this as a harmless error, for the reason that the genuineness of the signature of plaintiff in error to the note was not really denied by him, in fact he admitted it to be genuine when he was tesr tifying as a witness.

The real purpose in presenting this plea was to raise the question of the legal effect of the addition of the name of Courtney to the note, which plaintiff in error claimed so altered the instrument as to make it no longer his note.

It was treated by the court and the parties as a proper plea for that purpose, and under it proof as to the alteration of the note was received and by the authority of an intimation in Pankey v. Mitchell, Breese, 383, it may be regarded as raising that issue, though where the genuineness of the signature is not denied, but the defense is that the instrument has been altered since it was signed, we think a plea setting out in detail the alleged alteration would at least be more appropriate. 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills, 580.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 375, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soaps-v-eichberg-illappct-1891.