Utah State Nat. Bank v. Livingston

254 P. 781, 69 Utah 284, 1927 Utah LEXIS 76
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1927
DocketNo. 4462.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 254 P. 781 (Utah State Nat. Bank v. Livingston) 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
Utah State Nat. Bank v. Livingston, 254 P. 781, 69 Utah 284, 1927 Utah LEXIS 76 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

CHEERY, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note for $5,000', the execution and delivery of which were admitted, but which defendants pleaded and attempted to prove had 'been paid. The action was tried twice in the district court. The first time was before a jury and resulted in a verdict for defendants. Upon plaintiff’s motion the verdict was set aside, upon the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and a new trial granted. At the second trial, also before a jury, the court, at the conclusion of the evidence, directed a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered and from which defendants have separately appealed.

Appellants complain that the action of the trial court in setting aside the verdict in favor of defendants and granting a new trial was an abuse of discretion and error, for which the judgment appealed from should be reversed and judgment ordered entered upon the first verdict. Such a claim was sustained in Hirabelli v. Daniels, 44 Utah, 88, 138 P. 1172, but upon a record and state of facts *287 quite dissimilar from the case at bar. The granting of a new trial rests so largely in the discretion of the trial court that its action in that regard will not be disturbed unless there is a clear abuse of discretion. Valiotis v. Utah Apex Mining Co., 55 Utah, 151, 184 P. 802. The evidence at the first trial of the instant case was very similar in its general aspects to the evidence at the second trial presently to be considered. Without reviewing the evidence taken at the first trial it is sufficient in this connection to state that upon the essential matter in dispute the evidence was substantially conflicting. As was said in the.case last above cited:

“In such a case this court must hold as a matter of law that no abuse of discretion is shown.”

The contention that the trial court abused its discretion by granting a new trial is therefore denied.

The important and serious question in the case arises out of the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the plaintiff at the second trial. Appellants insist that the evidence of payment of the note sued upon was sufficient to be submitted to the jury, and that the court erred in its peremptory instruction to find a verdict for the plaintiff. To illustrate the point to be decided the facts may be summarized as follows:

The note sued upon was executed by defendant Livingston as sole maker, upon which defendant McCornick was an accommodation indorser before delivery. Livingston was indebted to the plaintiff bank upon numerous other notes, aggregating a large sum. Under general pledges as collateral security for Livingston’s indebtedness to it the bank held certain shares of corporate stocks of the Abraham Irrigation Company and United States Fuel Company. While Livingston was liable on other notes to the bank, the controversy here concerns seven notes of the total principal amount of $47,912.62. Upon six of these notes Livingston alone was liable, and, as before seen the other note here sued upon was indorsed by McCornick. It was admitted that McCor- *288 nick and Livingston had transferred certain stocks to the bank in payment and satisfaction of notes, but the parties are in dispute as to which particular notes were thereby paid. The bank claims that six notes aggregating $42,912.62, principal amount, and upon which Livingston was alone liable, were the only notes discharged by the transaction, while the defendants assert that there was an agreement by the bank to accept the stocks transferred in payment of seven notes aggregating $47,912.62, principal amount, including the note sued upon. Defendants produced evidence that during the summer of 1921, the bank was pressing Livingston for payment of his obligations; that Livingston called upon Mr. W. R. Wallace, a former officer of the bank and an individual creditor of Livingston, to aid him in arranging a settlement with the bank. At the time McCornick and Livingston had pledged in another bank (Zion’s Savings Bank & Trust Company) 80,000 shares of stock of the United States Fuel Company to secure the payment of a note for $45,000. This stock was worth considerably more than the note for which it was pledged. After conferring with Livingston, and at his request, Wallace stated to the vice president and cashier of the bank that Livingston desired to pay his personal obligations by getting McCornick to release the 80,000 shares of stock which were at the Zion’s Savings Bank & Trust Company and use them, together with other collateral already pledged therefor, in payment of his personal obligations at the Utah State National Bank.

Livingston testified to a conversation with the cashier and vice president of the bank, wherein he explained that the 80,000 shares of stock were in the other bank; that McCornick had an interest in it; and that it would be necessary to get McCornick to assign his interest in it in order to use it in payment of the notes in question. There were several conversations along this line between Livingston ston and Wallace and the officers of the bank. Livingston testified that during the negotiations the cashier of the bank furnished him by telephone a list of his *289 personal notes, seven in number, and making a total of $47,912.62. This included the note in question. Thereafter an agreement in writing was entered into, whereby it was agreed that Livingston should endeavor to procure an assignment from McCornick of all of his interest in the 80,000 shares of stock pledged to the Zion’s Savings Bank & Trust Company for the benefit of plaintiff bank, and plaintiff bank agreed that when said assignment was made it would release to Livingston 1,420 shares, and to Wallace and Bennett, who were also creditors of Livingston, 510 shares of the stock of the Abraham Irrigation Company then held by the plaintiff bank as security for Livingston’s indebtedness. In this agreement there is a recital that Livingston is “indebted to said bank in the sum aggregating $42,912.62 upon promissory notes.” The figures quoted were written in ink, while the rest of the agreement was in typewriting. Livingston testified that when he executed the agreement the figures denoting his indebtedness were not contained in the writing, but that the space where the figures later appeared was blank. However, the agreement did not refer or relate to the subject of payment or application of payment, but merely provided for the release of certain collaterals upon the assignment of McCornick’s interest in the stock referred to. In such case the reference to the amount of indebtedness was a mere recital and could not be conclusive upon the question of the agreement for payment and discharge which existed, if at all, independent of this writing. Thereafter the bank’s attorney prepared a form of assignment for the transfer of MeComick’s interest in the 80,000 shares of stock referred to, which Livingston procured McCornick to sign and deliver for the 'benefit of the plaintiff. Upon the question of what the parties agreed upon relating to what particular notes were to be paid by the transaction, Livingston testified that the plaintiff bank still had 25,849 shares of stock of U. S. Fuel Company previously pledged by him; that in his discussion with the bank’s representatives he

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Bluebook (online)
254 P. 781, 69 Utah 284, 1927 Utah LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-state-nat-bank-v-livingston-utah-1927.