Turkenkoph v. Te Beest

232 P.2d 684, 55 N.M. 279
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1951
Docket5376
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 684 (Turkenkoph v. Te Beest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turkenkoph v. Te Beest, 232 P.2d 684, 55 N.M. 279 (N.M. 1951).

Opinion

COORS, Justice.

'The material facts in the case were ■established by substantial evidence and are undisputed. All of them (except a few ■hereinafter specifically mentioned) were •contained in the trial court’s findings of fact. We therefore deem it wholly unnecessary here to state all the evidence or facts, but only those few which are pertinent to the question of law to be decided.

The only question of law necessary to a ■decision is this: In an action brought by the last assignee and holder of a negotiable promissory note transferred to him by an assignor in good faith and upon valuable consideration but after maturity, can the maker of the note who is sued establish a set-off or counterclaim, whether matured or not, if mature when pleaded, which set-off or counterclaim existed in favor of the maker against the assignor of the party suing, before notice to the maker of the assignment ? If the answer to this question is no, then the maker is not entitled to plead such a set-off and the judgment of the trial court was correct. If the answer is yes, then the maker is entitled to plead, claim and obtain such a set-off and the judgment of the trial court is clearly erroneous and should be reversed and set aside.

Plaintiffs and Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph, on September 18, 1948, executed and delivered to Morgan their promissory note for $3,025.00 secured by a real estate mortgage and also a chattel mortgage. On July 14, 1949, after maturity of said note, defendant Te Beest secured a transfer and assignment of said note and mortgages from Morgan to himself by paying the total amount of the principal and interest to Morgan, the larger part of which Te Beest had gotten from an advancement of money made by Defendant and Cross-Complainant Vernon H. Ove. Defendant Te Beest held the note and mortgages until October 7, 1949, at which time he transferred and assigned them to Defendant and Cross-Complainant Vernon Ove. This assignment was of course after maturity of the note. Between June 6, 1949 and September 2, 1949, Te Beest became liable and indebted to Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph on collateral matters in the sums of $1,500.00 and $3,400.00, or $4,900.00 for the two items, and all of this was justly due and owing to • Plaintiff and Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph from Defendant Te Beest on September 2, 1949, and thereafter. The trial court correctly found these two items of $1,500.00 and'$3,400.00 were owing by Te Beest, and that on account thereof, if the note was in the. hands of Defendant Te Beest, the Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph would have a valid defense to the payment of said note, that Te Beest is the assignor of said note after maturity and that said counterclaim, set-off and defense of $1,500.-00 and $3,400.00 existed in favor of Plaintiffs and Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph prior to the assignment and prior to any notice of assignment of said note, and that Te Beest was not a holder in due course but took the note after maturity. The trial judge in various and numerous ■findings of fact and conclusions of law may have inferentially found that in addition to the $1,500.00 and $3,400.00 items above mentioned, the Defendant Te Beest also justly owed Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph $5,000.00 which was the amount of the consideration Defendant Te Beest agreed to pay Cross-Defendants Turkenkoph in the oral contract made about June 6, 1949 for a partnership interest in the Ruidoso Bottling Company business, which consideration Te Beest has wholly failed and refused to pay, and which was justly owing by him to Turkenkoph on and since June 9, 1949; and that this also constituted a counterclaim or set-off in favor of plaintiff against Te Beest if the note was or had been sued upon, by Te Beest. These facts were clearly proved by all the evidence, were undisputed, and should have been specifically included in the findings of fact and conclusions-of the trial court.

The trial judge recognized the right of set-off against Te Beest, the assignor of Ove, providing Te Beest had brought the action, but refused to allow such set-off against Ove who was Te Beest’s assigneeafter maturity and who was not a holder in due course.

Wa-s this ruling by the trial court so wrong that a reversal is necessary ?’ It is argued that there is great division of authority on the question of allowing set-off and counterclaim and that the courts-are in almost hopeless' discord in reaching; decisions determining when set-offs' and counterclaims will be allowed in connection; with negotiable instruments. This discord, may 'seem to exist by a casual examination; of authorities, but when the authorities and' decisions are thoroughly studied it will be-discovered that while the courts in various; states may reach different conclusions, the-statutes on set-off and counterclaim in the-various states the courts are called upon to construe differ greatly in the way, the manner, the extent and scope in which set-off or counterclaim may be available or used, and the circumstance and conditions under which it may be available and by what parties it may or may not be pleaded. Set-off and counterclaim were unknown to the common law and owe their existence entirely to statutory law. The occasion for set-off arises when one who is sued may have no defense to the exact cause of action sued upon, but he may have a cause of action against the person suing hjm, and he asks the court to allow him in the same action to set up his cause against the party suing him so as to try to balance his cause against the suit filed against him, and so that the court .hearing the suit containing the cause and the counter-cause may determine what is the liability of each and set off one liability against the other and give judgment to the party found to have the largest claim for the difference or balance between thé two claims adjudicated.

The statutes on set-off and counterclaim •may be rather generally divided into four classes or types. The first type consists of the earlier statutes which were very restricted in their application. They authorized set-off and counterclaim only in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff, first when the counterclaim arose out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint or connected with the subject of plaintiff’s action and, second, when plaintiff’s action arose on contract and defendant’s arose on contract and existed at the time plaintiff’s suit was commenced. Some states amended their set-off statutes and enlarged their application and scope. Consequently a second type of statute broadened the right to set-off and allowed the set-off to be pleaded by the defendant against the plaintiff even though defendant’s cause of action in the nature of set-off did not arise out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint, or when the plaintiff’s cause did not arise on contract nor the defendant’s set-off arose on contract. It allowed a claim of set-off even though it was based on and arose out of collateral or different independent transactions. A third type of statute is that which greatly enlarged the rights to set-off by allowing the person sued to not only invoke a claim he has against the party suing him, but if the party is suing on a chose in action assigned to him, the party sued is allowed to plead a claim- he had against the assignor even as a set-off against the assignee. This type of statute usually provided it did not apply to negotiable instruments. Then there is the fourth type of statute which is the more modern and most liberal in extending the right and use of set-off and counterclaim.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Community Bank v. Ell
564 P.2d 685 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)
United Overseas Bank v. Veneers, Inc.
375 F. Supp. 596 (D. Maryland, 1974)
State v. Montiel
241 P.2d 844 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 684, 55 N.M. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turkenkoph-v-te-beest-nm-1951.