Wicks v. Hutschenreiter

80 P.2d 429, 53 Wyo. 215, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 16
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1938
Docket2051
StatusPublished

This text of 80 P.2d 429 (Wicks v. Hutschenreiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wicks v. Hutschenreiter, 80 P.2d 429, 53 Wyo. 215, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 16 (Wyo. 1938).

Opinion

*217 Kimball, Justice.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment for defendant sued as maker of a promissory note. The case was tried without a jury. The only question necessary to be decided on the appeal is whether there is substantial evidence to support a finding that defendant did not sign the note.

The note is for $700, dated October 16, 1933, due January 17, 1934, payable to Economy Oil Co., Inc., or order. Defendant’s name is signed twice, thus:

“Fred W. Hutschenreiter
“Evanston, Wyo.
“F. W. Hutschenreiter”

Plaintiff obtained the note on October 18, 1933, from F. A. Fisher, an itinerant stock salesman who claimed to be president of the Economy Oil Company, payee in the note, whose shares of stock he was selling. Plaintiff is a physician and surgeon. He is also president of *218 the Stockgrowers Bank of Evanston, but was not acting for the bank in his dealings with Fisher and defendant. He testified that he first met Fisher on October 18,1933, when Fisher called twice at plaintiff’s office and tried unsuccessfully to interest him in the purchase of stock. Later, after office hours on the same day, Fisher called at plaintiff’s home and requested a loan of $650, which he said he needed immediately, offering as security the note in suit and a diamond ring belonging to defendant, which Fisher then exhibited stating that the note was for stock sold to defendant and the ring was a pledge to secure the note. Plaintiff made the loan (evidenced by a promissory note for $650, dated October 18, 1933, due November 10, 1933, payable to plaintiff, signed by Economy Oil Company, by Fisher as president) and accepted the offered security. It may be inferred that Fisher left Wyoming the following day, and has never returned.

About November 1, 1933, defendant was informed that plaintiff held the pledged note and ring. Defendant promptly called at plaintiff’s office, asked to see the note, examined it, denied that he had signed it, and for the purpose of comparison wrote his name on a prescription blank three times, once as F. W. Hutschen-reiter and twice as Fred W. Hutschenreiter. Plaintiff and defendant then went to the First National Bank, where defendant did his banking business, and submitted the note and the three signatures on the prescription blank to the cashier. The cashier told defendant he “thought that was his signature” on the note. Defendant said he didn’t think so, and, according to the testimony of plaintiff and the cashier, added that “he must have been drunk when he signed it.”

Defendant continued to assert that he had not signed the note, and he and plaintiff, who had been friends for many years, joined efforts in trying to have Fisher *219 brought back to Wyoming to face criminal charges. Fisher was not brought back, but it seems that the criminal charges were instrumental in causing him to make a payment of $200 on the note of October 18. Plaintiff brought this action in April, 1936, seeking to recover as pledgee of the note of October 16, and the ring. The trial court found generally for defendant, and ordered the ring returned to him. It is stipulated that the specifications of error challenging the part of the judgment that gives the ring back to defendant are abandoned.

Defendant is an engineer and has been employed for many years by the. Union Pacific Railroad Company. He testified that on October 16, 1933, Fisher, in company with A. C. Christensen, called at his house, and that Fisher, by various false representations and promises, induced defendant to agree to buy 1000 shares of the stock of the Economy Oil Company, for $1 a share. During the negotiations, when defendant said he did not feel he could afford to buy, Fisher proposed that if defendant would let him have the diamond ring, which he had seen on defendant’s finger, as security for 300 shares, the balance could be paid in instalments of $25 per month without interest, and defendant would be made a member of the board of directors of the company and receive $12 a month for attending meetings of the board. The stock certificates were to be delivered on October 18, two days later. Defendant testified that he accepted this offer, and Fisher then prepared a memorandum of the agreement to which defendant signed his name twice, first as Fred W. Hutschenreiter and then as F. W. Hutschen-reiter. Fisher than left with the ring and the memorandum.

Christensen, living in Utah, was a friend of defendant, was interested in the Economy Oil Company, and had been traveling about with Fisher, to whom he had *220 mentioned defendant as a possible buyer of stock. He testified that he was with Fisher at defendant’s house on October 16, and that he heard and saw all that took place there. Both he and defendant testified positively that the only paper signed by defendant was the memorandum of the contract.

The cashier, already mentioned, and the assistant .cashier, of the First National Bank, had seen defendant sign his name, were familiar with his signature, and as witnesses for plaintiff, gave the only opinion evidence that need be noticed.

The cashier was of opinion that the first signature on the note was defendant’s, and thought the second signature “is the same handwriting though there is a variance.” Further, as to the second signature, he testified that it “might or might not be” the signature of defendant; that it would not “pass” at the bank, but a better signature would be required, except possibly on a check for a trivial sum.

There were available for comparison five admitted signatures of defendant; the three written on the prescription blank and two on checks. These five signatures show only those variations that can reasonably be accounted for in a group of signatures of a rather unskillful writer. The cashier did not undertake to make a detailed comparison of the admitted and disputed signatures. The reason he gave for his opinion as to the genuineness of the first signature on the note was that it resembled the admitted signatures “in the general swing and slant.”

The assistant cashier handled the checks, and had had more opportunity than the cashier to become familiar with defendant’s signature. He testified thát the first signature on the note “bears quite a similarity to defendant’s signature.” Asked if it Was defendant’s signature, he said: “The only way I can answer . . . *221 is that if it was written on a small check I would cash it.” As to the second signature on the note he testified that if it was defendant’s it was a very poor one; “it is quite balled up”; it “might be” defendant’s, but it “was written entirely different” from defendant’s usual signature, and that he, the witness, would not “pass” it on a check for any amount. His opinion as to a resemblance between the first signature on the note and the admitted signatures was based on similarity in the “swing,” which he thought “means more than anything else.” He admitted that it was not his custom in comparing signatures to compare the separate letters.

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

Related

State Board of Law Examiners v. Strahan
8 P.2d 1091 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 429, 53 Wyo. 215, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wicks-v-hutschenreiter-wyo-1938.