State Bank of Beaver County v. Hollingshead

25 P.2d 612, 82 Utah 416, 1933 Utah LEXIS 82
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1933
DocketNo. 5018.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 P.2d 612 (State Bank of Beaver County v. Hollingshead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bank of Beaver County v. Hollingshead, 25 P.2d 612, 82 Utah 416, 1933 Utah LEXIS 82 (Utah 1933).

Opinions

*419 MOFFAT, Justice.

This action is based upon a promissory note. Defendant is an indorser. The plaintiff sues for an unpaid balance of $2,750.97, with accrued interest. The face of the note was $5,000. The execution and delivery of the note are admitted. As stated by respondent, “there was only one issue before the court, and that was whether the note in question had been fully paid.”

In order to understand the position of the respective parties it is necessary to state briefly not only the material matters admitted and proved, but also some offered to be proved. This statement also reflects the theories of the respective parties to the litigation.

In September, 1923, William Roberts, Oren Burke, and Ralph Myers applied to the plaintiff bank at Beaver City, Utah, for a loan of $5,000. The bank agreed to make the loan provided the note be secured by adequate indorsements. On September 11, 1923, the date the note bears, the cashier of the bank prepared the note, and the makers, Roberts, Burke, and Myers, signed it at the bank in Beaver City. The note was then taken by the makers to the neighboring town of Minersville, where the makers resided, for the purpose of procuring the necessary indorsements. The note was there indorsed by the defendant and five other individuals. Shortly thereafter the makers delivered the note to the bank, and on September 17, 1923, the bank issued to the makers a time certificate of deposit payable to the order of Roberts, Burke, and Myers, drawing 4 per cent interest, and maturing six months after date.

The makers of the note had been the successful bidders for, and were later awarded, a contract for the construction of a 7mile section or road in Zion National Park. One of the conditions of the contract required them to file a surety bond for the faithful performance of the contract. The surety company, before it would execute the bond, required collateral security. To secure this bond Roberts, *420 Burke, and Myers, to whom the certificate of deposit was issued, indorsed it to the surety company as collateral security, and at maturity it was paid by the bank. The bond was written and work commenced upon the contract. About the time of beginning work Mr. Roberts died, and the remaining parties, Burke and Myers, soon found themselves in such financial difficulty that it was impossible for them to continue the contract work. Loss appeared inevitable. Burke and Myers, the remaining partners, the indorsers of the note, and a number of other individuals who had become involved upon the paper of the partnership, took an assignment of the contract and entered into an agreement with the partnership and among themselves whereby they took over the partnership assets, and assumed the liabilities. By the agreement John R. Murdock was appointed to take full charge of all work, hire employees, keep 'accounts, and generally to manage the affairs and property, receive and pay out money, make and indorse checks and vouchers incident to the work as it progressed.

A little later Oren Burke, Ralph Myers, and Lillie Roberts, as administratrix of the estate of William Roberts, deceased, executed separate powers of attorney appointing John R. Murdock as their attorney in fact “to endorse, sign, and deliver any and all checks, vouchers, or other papers necessary to sign for any and all payments to the said second parties (the partnership) for any work, labor, or other purposes connected or in any way appertaining to said contract.” These powers of attorney were by their terms irrevocable. Copies of the agreement and powers of attorney were delivered to the bank.

Exclusive of the $5,000 note, the subject-matter of this suit, large sums of money were advanced by the bank for the purpose of financing the work of completing the road under the contract. An account was carried at the bank into which moneys received from loans or in payment for work under the contract were deposited and checked out by *421 Mr. John R. Murdock under the power vested in him under the agreement and powers of attorney.

After the road job had been completed the surety company sent to Abe Murdock, its local representative, a draft or check payable to Roberts, Burke, and Myers, with instructions to deliver the check upon surrender of the receipt issued by the surety company for the certificate of deposit at the time of bonding Roberts, Burke, and Myers on the road contract. This check was delivered to John R. Mur-dock, who had the receipt and charge of the work of Roberts, Burke, and Myers, and he deposited the check in the State Bank of Beaver to the credit of the account of Roberts, Burke, and Myers, as shown by the ledger sheet of the bank. Some time after, there was credited upon the $5,000 note sued upon herein the sum of $2,249.02, reducing the principal balance to the sum of $2,750.98, the amount sued for in the action.

Had the whole picture or set-up of the parties and what actually took place in relation to the road contract, and what was done in order to complete the work required under the contract, and the disposition of the certificate of deposit, been permitted to be heard the story would have been very different from that which the jury actually heard. The crux around which the testimony presented and received, and offered but not received, is this $5,000 note and the return of the proceeds thereof by the surety company, and the application made thereof.

The complaint states a cause of action upon a promissory note against an indorser in the usual form. The answer admits execution, delivery, and valuable consideration, then makes denial of any amount being due, and pleads as an affirmative defense what was finally admitted to be a claim of payment. Another plea of release of other indorsers is contained in the answer, but is not relied upon. It is upon what is denominated in the pleadings as paragraph 1 of the affirmative defense that the testimony and battle of issues revolve. That particular paragraph reads:

*422

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.2d 612, 82 Utah 416, 1933 Utah LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-of-beaver-county-v-hollingshead-utah-1933.