Vande Veegaete v. Vande Veegaete

243 P. 1082, 75 Mont. 52, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 216
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1925
DocketNo. 5,795.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 243 P. 1082 (Vande Veegaete v. Vande Veegaete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vande Veegaete v. Vande Veegaete, 243 P. 1082, 75 Mont. 52, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 216 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant has appealed from a judgment rendered against him and in favor of the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s complaint alleged: (1) That on November 13, 1922, defendant made and delivered'to plaintiff his certain promissory note, a copy of which is set out, and which copy shows that the note was payable on or before March 1, 1923, for the sum of $800, with interest at the rate of four per cent per annum, and with the usual provision for attorney’s fees, and it does not appear therefrom that payment thereof was secured; (2) that the defendant has not paid the note nor any part thereof; and (3) that the plaintiff is the owner and holder of the note. Paragraph 5 of the complaint then alleged that, at the time of the delivery of the note, defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff a certain chattel mortgage as security for the payment of the note, and by paragraph 6 it was alleged that, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff, defendant sold and disposed of all the property mentioned in the chattel mortgage.

On September 26, 1924, defendant filed and served upon plaintiff notice that on the first day of October, 1924, he would move the court to strike paragraphs 5 and 6 from the *54 complaint, on the ground that the allegations thereof were “irrelevant, redundant, and surplusage.” Thereafter defendant answered, admitting the execution and delivery of the note, “which by its terms was made payable to” plaintiff, and denying all other allegations of the complaint. Defendant then set up two special defenses: (1) That the note was given without consideration; and (2) that plaintiff’s husband, Alphonse Yande Yeegaete, was in fact the owner of the note, which was made 'payable to Mary Yande Yeegaete at the request of her said husband and to protect him from other creditors; that three Yande Yeegaete brothers had for years been engaged in a joint venture, and that, as a result of their operations, the said Alphonse Yande Yeegaete had become indebted to defendant in a sum in excess of the amount due on the note, but that this fact was not ascertained by defendant until after the making and delivery of the note, and that, had be known the condition of their account in March, 1922, he would not have given the note. These affirmative allegations of the answer were denied by reply thereto.

Over defendant’s objection, the plaintiff was permitted, in her case in chief, to introduce evidence in support of the allegations of her complaint respecting the mortgage.

The plaintiff was not present at the time of the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage, but, according to her contention, was there represented by her husband, Alphonse Yande Yeegaete, who testified that such was the fact and that such fact was then known to defendant; whereas the defendant testified that the transaction was with the husband personally and that, at the request of Alphonse, the note and mortgage were drawn in the name of plaintiff to protect him from his creditors. The defendant further testified in substantiation of the allegations of his special defenses, which testimony was contradicted by Alphonse Yande Yeegaete, and, in part, by other witnesses for plaintiff.

The testimony of the two principal opposing witnesses — the defendant and Alphonse Yande Yeegaete — was sharply con *55 flicting in every material particular; so much so, in fact, that the jury could but find that one or the other had deliberately testified falsely. While the testimony of Alphonse Yande Yeegaete was corroborated in many particulars, principally by the plaintiff, his wife, that of the defendant was practically uncorroborated.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and judgment was entered thereon.

Defendant specifies error on the rulings of the court in (1) refusing to strike paragraphs 5 and 6 of the complaint; (2) admitting evidence in support of those allegations as a part of plaintiff’s case in chief; and (3) in refusing to give defendant’s offered instruction No. 3, and in giving in lieu thereof the court’s instruction No. 8.

1. The record contains the notice of intention to move to strike heretofore referred to and nothing more. It does not appear from the record that any motion was ever presented to or ruled upon by the court; from all that appears in the record, defendant’s intention to move to strike was abandoned. “This matter, therefore, is not before us for review.” (Hefferlin v. Karlman, 30 Mont. 348, 76 Pac. 757.)

2. Counsel for defendant has argued his assignments num bered 1 and 2 jointly; he contends that the allegations of paragraphs 5 and 6 should have been stricken as surplusage, and that the evidence introduced in their support was “incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial,” and in support of his contentions cites 8 Corpus Juris, 865; Brophy v. Downey, 26 Mont. 252, 67 Pac. 312; State Savings Bank v. Albertson, 39 Mont. 414, 102 Pac. 692; Bank v. Blackburn, 2 Cal. App. 146, 83 Pac. 262; Clark v. Eltinge, 34 Wash. 323, 75 Pac. 866 — all to the effect that, under the circumstances of the particular case, it was not necessary to so plead or to introduce evidence, except in rebuttal.

The text of the Corpus Juris citation is but the statement of a general rule which prevails in the absence of statutory provisions to the contrary.

*56 In the case of Brophy v. Downey, the plaintiff sued on a promissory note which did not disclose upon its face that it was secured by mortgage; the defendants answered setting up the fact that it was so secured; the plaintiff did not reply. On the trial plaintiff proved the allegations of his complaint, but on cross-examination admitted that the note was originally secured by mortgage, and was then not permitted to show that the security had, without fault of the plaintiff, become valueless, whereupon judgment of nonsuit was entered against him. The question before the court .on appeal was as to whether this latter proof was admissible in the absence of a reply. The court held that no obligation rested upon the plaintiff to state whether or not there was a mortgage ; that the allegation thereof in the answer was an affirmative defense and not a counterclaim; and that consequently no reply was required; that the defendants should have proved this new matter in making out their case and not by cross-examination; and that the plaintiff should have been permitted to prove, if he could, that the security had so become valueless, declaring that such' evidence was “both relevant and material. ’ ’

For reasons hereinafter stated, neither the case of State Savings Bank v. Albertson nor Clark v. Eltinge has any application to the question before us.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 1082, 75 Mont. 52, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vande-veegaete-v-vande-veegaete-mont-1925.