Stevens v. Wheeler

3 S.W.2d 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1928
DocketNo. 607.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 122 (Stevens v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Wheeler, 3 S.W.2d 122 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

GALDAGHER, C. J.

Appellant, F. L. Stevens, instituted this suit against appellees G. R. Wheeler and M. F. Wheeler, doing business under the firm name of Wheeler Bros., to recover on five promissory notes in the aggregate sum of $314, with interest and attorney’s fees. Said notes were signed by appel-lees and were payable to the Brenard Manufacturing Company. Appellant alleged that said notes were, for a valuable consideration, indorsed and delivered to him by the payee before maturity and that he was a holder' thereof in due course.

Appellees answered by general denial and by special pleas, alleging that they signed a printed order, addressed to the Brenard Manufacturing Company, subject to its acceptance, for the purchase of three certain radio receiving sets; that the notes sued on were attached to said order and constituted ,a part thereof; and that it was expressly stipulated in said order that said notes should not be detached therefrom. Appellees further alleged that said order was not accepted by said manufacturing company in the form in which it was tendered by them; that material terms thereof were without their consent fraudulently altered; that said notes were fraudulently detached therefrom, contrary to the terms thereof; and that said alterations rendered said notes void and unenforceable. They also pleaded failure of consideration.

There is little, if any, conflict in the testimony. Appellees, at the instance of a representative of the Brenard Manufacturing Company, signed an order for the purchase of certain radio receiving sets. They also signed the notes sued on, all of which were complete in themselves and contained no reference to said order. They were, however, attached thereto and were signed simultaneously therewith. A perforated line separated said notes from the order and from each other. Along the line separating said notes from said order when the same were signed and delivered by appellees to the agent of said company was the following notation: “Notes not to be detached by the Brenard Manufacturing Company.” Said order provided that it was not to be of any force or effect until it was accepted by said company. It was understood between appellees and the representative of said company that, if said order was accepted, a correct copy thereof, signed by the company, would be returned to them. Shortly after signing and delivering said order with said notes attached as aforesaid, appellees received a purported copy of the same, signed by said company, but it was not a true nor correct copy thereof, as the same was signed and delivered by appellees to the representative of said company. Said purported copy called for the issuance of a due bill in the sum of $25 in connection with each replacement order for an additional receiving set, applicable as cash on subsequent orders or redeemable in cash for one-half its face value at the. option of the holder, whereas the original order signed and delivered by appellees called for such a due bill in the sum of $50. Said purported copy also contained a stipulation' that said notes were to be detached by said company, contrary to the terms of the original instrument delivered by appellees to the representative of said company. Appellees, on the receipt of said purported, but incorrect, copy of the original order, wired the company as follows: “Hold tip shipment on *123 account of misrepresentations.” WTien the shipment arrived appellees refused to receive it and the same was returned to the company.

Appellant testified that he purchased said-notes from the Brenard Manufacturing Company shortly after their execution; that the same were included in a list of notes amounting in the aggregate to $1,662; that he paid the sum of $1,500 therefor; that he did not know at the time that said notes had been attached to and had constituted a part of an order or contract between appellees and said company. The remainder of his testimony is not material to the issue of law hereinafter discussed. Said notes were duly indorsed to him by said company.

The case w.as submitted to a jury on special issues, which issues, together with the answers of the jury thereto, are as follows:

"Issue No. 1: Were material alterations fraudulently made in the contract and the provisions thereof in question after the same had been executed and delivered by the defendant herein ? Answer: Yes.
“Issue No. 2: If you have answered special issue No. 1 ‘Yes,’ then were such alterations made without the knowledge or consent of the defendant? Answer: Yes.”

The court rendered judgment on said verdict that appellant take nothing by his suit and that the notes sued on be annulled and canceled as obligations against appellees, but that such cancellation should be without prejudice to any action by appellant against the Brenard Manufacturing Company on its in-dorsement thereon. Said judgment is here presented for review.

Opinion.

Appellant contends that the uncontradieted evidence shows that he was a holder of the notes sued on in due course and that he was, as such holder, entitled to recover thereon, notwithstanding said notes were severed from the order upon which they were based, contrary to the provisions thereof, and notwithstanding the facts found by the jury in answer to the issues submitted to them. No issue bearing on the status of appellant as a holder of said notes in due course was submitted to the jury. The judgment rendered contained a recital that, the issues of notice and good faith on the part of appellant not having been submitted to the jury, no finding on such issues was made by the court, either in favor of or against appellant. Whether appellant is or is not a holder of said notes in due course is immaterial and .a finding on such issue unnecessary if the facts relied on by ap-pellees constitute in law a material alteration of said notes, and if such alteration precludes a recovery by appellant in this case, even if it were conceded that he was such holder. Our Negotiable Instrument Act provides, in, substance, that the material alteration of such an instrument without the assent of all parties liable thereon avoids the same, except as against a party who has himself made, authorized, or assented ±<j the alteration, and subsequent indorsers. In this connection, however, said act further provides that, where an altered instrument is in the hands of a holder in due course, he may enforce payment thereof according to its original tenor. R. S. 1925, art. 5939, § 124. Said act also provides that any change or addition which alters the effect of an instrument in any respect is a material alteration. Id. § 125.

There is no contention that appellant would have been entitled to recover under the undisputed evidence and findings of the jury in this case, if said order had remained attached to said notes at the time he purchased the same, under that clause of the statute above quoted permitting a holder in due course to recover on an altered instrument according to its original tenor. The material inquiry is, therefore, whether there has been in contemplation of law such an alteration of the original order of which said notes formed a part and from which it was expressly stipulated that they should not be detached, as would prevent a recovery on said notes, notwithstanding we concede for the purposes of such inquiry that appellant was a holder thereof in due course. There is, as usual, some conflict in the authorities on this issue.

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3 S.W.2d 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-wheeler-texapp-1928.