Stevenson v. Good

37 P.2d 41, 140 Kan. 318, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 3, 1934
DocketNo. 31,664
StatusPublished

This text of 37 P.2d 41 (Stevenson v. Good) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Good, 37 P.2d 41, 140 Kan. 318, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 63 (kan 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment on two notes. The principal legal questions involved in the defense were ambiguity, accommodation makers, suretyship, material alteration of notes, and statute of limitations.

Fifty-six defendants in this case appeal from a judgment rendered against them in the district court on two notes signed by sixty-four individuals. The petition alleged that said notes were executed and delivered by these defendants on May 13, 1921. One of the notes was made payable to the plaintiff herein, and the other, for the same amount, to his father, which was later assigned to the plaintiff. The petition alleged that the defendants borrowed the money from the plaintiff for the use and benefit of the Farmers Union Cooperative Association of Dennis, Kan. A copy of both the notes was attached to the petition as exhibits A and B. These fifty-six defendants moved to make the petition more definite and certain in several matters, particularly with reference to a notation appearing on each of the exhibits in the following words: “Extended to May 13, 1923.” Upon this motion being sustained by the court, the plaintiff amended the petition in several respects and particularly with reference to this notation on the notes by adding the following to each of the counts:

“That at the time and date of the execution and delivery of said note, the following language now appearing upon the face thereof, to wit: ‘Extended to May 13, 1923,’ was not upon said note, and the indorsements of the payment of interest thereafter made on said note were not at the date of its delivery thereon.
“That at the delivery of said note the words appearing now upon the face of said note in typing, to wit: ‘Extended to May 13, 1923,’ were not upon said [320]*320note. This plaintiff further alleges that some time after the execution and delivery- of said note, the exact date he cannot recall and cannot state more definitely, he left said note with the Dennis State Bank, of Dennis, Kan., for the receipt of interest and payment of the note when due, and for safe-keeping. That said note remained in said bank until said bank closed some time in 1926, a more exact date this plaintiff is unable to state, and at which time plaintiff removed said note from said bank, and at which time he first learned and discovered the above and foregoing words had been indorsed on the face thereof.
“Plaintiff further alleges that he_ never authorized or in any manner consented to the indorsement of ‘Extended to May 13, 1923,’ upon the face of said note, and was without any knowledge whatsoever that said indorsement had been made upon said note until he received said note from the officers of the Dennis State Bank when the same was being liquidated and closed some time in 1926. That plaintiff has diligently inquired for the purpose of ascertaining who indorsed said words thereon, but has been unable to learn who indorsed the same upon said note, and plaintiff further avers that he cannot more specifically or definitely allege the facts in reference thereto than as herein-before stated.”

The defendants moved to strike plaintiff’s amended petition from the files, which was denied, then demurred to the petition, and that was overruled. The answer of the defendants to the amended petition, in addition to being a general denial, alleged the nonexistence of the Dennis association on the date the note was executed, denied that the signers were members of the Dennis association, denied the execution of any instrument due May 13,1923, and pleaded the statute of limitations. The reply was a general denial. Evidence was introduced, and extended findings of fact were made by the trial court. The substance of the earlier ones is that local unions could become members of the Farmers Union Cooperative Association at Parsons, Kan., and that on and prior to the date these notes were executed there existed at Dennis, Kan., such a local union or unit, called the Osage local, and that most if not all the defendants in this case were members of that local union; that the association at Parsons, Kan., at that time had a station and elevator at Dennis, and C. N. Stafford was the local manager thereof; that the notes were signed at a meeting of the local union at Dennis for the purpose of procuring a loan of money to be used to enlarge the business of the Farmers Union Cooperative Association, and then follows Findings Nos. 10, 12 and 13, which, being of special importance in this case, are copied herein and are as follows:

“10. That the defendants, together with others, did make, execute and deliver to F. M. Stevenson their certain written promissory note, dated May 13, 1921, for the sum of SI,250, due one year after date, with interest thereon at the [321]*321rate of 6 per cent per annum from date until paid,, interest payable semiannually, and which note was executed and delivered for an actual cash consideration of $1,250 paid by the said F. M. Stevenson, and that at the date of the execution and delivery of said note, identified as plaintiff’s Exhibit ‘D,’ the following, to wit: ‘Extended to May 13, 1923,’ now appearing on the' face of said note, was not on said note, and that the aforesaid memorandum now appearing on the face of said note was not on said note until after it became due and payable, and from all of the evidence in the case, the court finds that said memorandum to wit: ‘Extended to May 13, 1923/ was not placed upon said note with the knowledge or by the consent of the payee of said note nor of the indorsees thereon, and that this plaintiff, Arthur Stevenson, did not know that said memorandum had been placed on said note until the latter part of 1926 when the Dennis State Bank of Dennis, Kan., was closed and placed in the hands of a receiver and he went to obtain said note from said receiver, said note having theretofore been left with said bank for safe-keeping, but for no other purpose.”
“12. That said money evidenced by said notes was borrowed by the individuals who executed said notes and in their individual capacity, and that it was understood between them and the lenders of said money that said loan was to be and is the obligation of the individuals executing said notes, and that said defendants were and are the makers of said notes and are the principals thereon and at the time said loans were made the individual responsibility and liability of the signers of said notes was expressly understood between the payees of said notes and said defendants as makers thereof.
“13. That after said notes were executed and delivered the semiannual interest thereon was paid on or about the due date thereof by C. N. Stafford, manager of the unit of Dennis, Kan., of Farmers Union Cooperative Association, out of the funds of said association, and the same were continued to be so paid from the funds of said association until on or about the 5th day of April, 1922, when many of the defendants and some members of Osage local applied for and obtained a charter from the state of Kansas to do business at Dennis, Kan., as a corporation under the corporate name of ‘The Farmers Union Co-op. Ass’n, Dennis, Kan./ being a separate and distinct corporation from the Farmers Union Cooperative Association with its principal office and place of business at Parsons, and after the organization of The Farmers Union Co-op. Ass’n of Dennis, Kan., the semiannual interest was paid by C. N.

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Gordon v. Russell
158 P. 661 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
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262 P. 573 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P.2d 41, 140 Kan. 318, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-good-kan-1934.