Wills v. Bank of Nevada

42 P. 490, 23 Nev. 59
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1895
DocketNo. 1431.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 P. 490 (Wills v. Bank of Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wills v. Bank of Nevada, 42 P. 490, 23 Nev. 59 (Neb. 1895).

Opinion

By the Court,

Bonnifield, J.:

This action was brought by the appellant as plaintiff against the respondent as defendant in the District Court of the Second Judicial District, in and for Washoe county, to recover the sum of $642 50, balance due for hay sold by plaintiff to the defendant and delivered to James Mayberry at the defendant’s request, as alleged in the complaint. The answer consists of specific denials of the allegations of the complaint. The case was tried by the court sitting without a jury. The court dismissed the action and gave the defendant judgment for its costs. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, designating in his notice of motion as one of the grounds the “insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision made hy said court and the judgment entered in the action,” and in his statement on motion for new trial he specifies several particulars in which he claims the evidence is insufficient to justify the decision. His motion was denied. This appeal is taken from the judgment and the order of the court denying a new trial. The court filed no findings of fact. No question was raised by counsel for the defendant in the court below as to any variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proofs, and no variance was suggested by the court until the time of its oral decision of the case, and then the case was not decided on that ground, but it was based on the ground, in effect, that the promise of the defendant to the plaintiff was a verbal promise to answer for the debt of Mayberry, and was within the statute of frauds. As we have come to a different conclusion from the court *62 below, from the evidence in the case, we here give the material portions of the testimony of the plaintiff and James May-berry and all the testimony of M. 0. Ward, taken from the record, to wit:

The plaintiff testified that in November, 1891, James May-berry came to him to purchase his hay, and said he would buy the hay if it suited him; that he went, looked at the hay and returned to plaintiff’s house and plaintiff asked him about the pay; that Mayberry said that he would give him a check on the Bank of Nevada, and the bank would pay it in thirty days; that the plaintiff need not take his word for it, but he could go and see Mr. Ward; that the plaintiff went and saw Mr. Ward, and told him what Mayberry said; that Ward said: “ Get Mayberry’s checks and in thirty days the bank would cash them ”; that the bank paid the first and second checks; “that the second check was paid before the time was up, but payment of the third and last check was refused.”

Mayberry testified, in substance, that he was indebted to the bank; that he went to the bank primarily to make arrangements with it to enable him to buy hay, and did make such arrangements; that his arrangements were: That as soon as the hay he purchased was delivered on the cars he would give to his several vendors checks on the bank for the price of the hay bought, payable in thirty days, and deliver to the bank the shipping receipts for the hay he shipped for it, to collect for his sales and to pay his said several checks, the profits to be applied on his debt to the bank; that he bought and sold hay from different parties and deposited the shipping receipts with the bank; that all the returns for the sales of the hay were made to the bank; that it collected for all the sales of the hay and collected for the sale of the Wills hay and paid for all the hay except the last check presented by the plaintiff; that when he went to buy the plaintiff’s hay the plaintiff asked him “ What about the pay?” that he told the plaintiff “to go to the bank and see if everything is all right”; that he could not have bought hay if the bank had not obligated itself to pay his checks; that he could not have bought the plaintiff’s hay if the bank *63 had not promised to pay his checks for it, for the plaintiff refused to let him have it.

He also testified “that the checks given on the bank payable in thirty days gave time for the returns to come in for the hay,” and also “ that the hay business was profitable, and the bank made it all; that he owed the bank less at the end of his hay operations than he did at the beginning.”

Mr. Ward testified that he was vice-president of the corporation defendant.

By Summerfield: Q,. — Did Mayberry have but one agreement with the bank with regard to the purchase of hay? A. — Mayberry wanted the bank to guarantee the payment of his checks. I was a director in the board and was vice-president also, and I was a worker in the bank.

Q. — Do you know of any transactions between Mayberry and Wjlls, the plaintiff in this case, and the bank relative to hay purchases from Wills? A. — Yes, sir.

Q. — State to the court what arrangements existed between the Bank of Nevada and Wills and Mayberry with regard to such transactions. A. — Mayberry wanted to purchase hay, and he wanted the bank to guarantee his checks that he might be able to purchase hay.

Q. — Did you have but one agreement — did the bank have but one agreement with Mayberry about the purchase of hay.? A. — Only one.

Q. — State what that agreement was. A. — Osburn and myself, as cashier of the bank, acting under the board of directors, upon the receipt of the shipping receipts, after the hay was baled and on board of the cars to guarantee the. payment of Mayberry’s checks in thirty days from the time the checks were accepted by us, under the expectation that the money from the sales of the hay would be returned to the bank within thirty days’ time after the receipt of the shipping receipts, but we always credited all receipts of money to Mayberry’s account.

Q,. — That was the agreement and that was the order that you worked under? A. — Yes, sir. The bank was to guarantee the payment of checks given by Mayberry when the shipping receipts were in and the checks were accepted by us, within thirty days from that time.

*64 Q. — Do you remember the transaction with Wills? A. — I remember it in a general way, on account of the business at the time.

Q,. — State what you remember about the payment of the first check testified to here. A. — The check was presented and guaranteed and in thirty days it was paid.

Q,. — Did the shipping receipt accompany it? A. — Wills came into the bank when the second check was paid and the cashier was inside and I was outside, and I heard him say to Osburn: I have a check from Mayberry for hay; when will it be paid? ” and Osburn said, “ we will pay it now,” and it was paid.

In this connection witness testified that Osburn acted contrary to the order of the board of directors in paying that check before due. Direct examination resumed by Summer-field: Q. — Have you made a careful examination of the books of the bank with reference to that payment in order to refresh your recollection? A. — I have.

Q. — Do you remember any further conversation with Wills about the hay? A. — Yes, sir. I remember that Wills informed me later on that his had all been paid for and that there was more hay that he had on hand, and I said to him to be careful, that Mayberry’s account was not good at the bank, and I remember distinctly that he said he had got paid for the other, and he would take chances on this. The bank had no account with Wills.

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Related

McMillan v. Torre
445 P.2d 160 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
42 P. 490, 23 Nev. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wills-v-bank-of-nevada-nev-1895.