Woods v. Curry

202 P. 86, 109 Kan. 677, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 12, 1921
DocketNo. 22,949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 202 P. 86 (Woods v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Curry, 202 P. 86, 109 Kan. 677, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 345 (kan 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

The action was on a promissory note for $5,000. The defense was that the note was given for usury in connection with a loan. The plaintiffs prevailed and the defendant appeals.

Plaintiffs are officers of the First National Bank of Liberal, C. E. Woods being cashier. On September 17,1913, Woods and George made a loan to L. S. Curry of $25,000 and took his note for that amount due in sixty days and payable to their order, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum. The note was secured by deeds to real estate which Curry executed and delivered to the payees under a written agreement. Curry’s account with the bank was credited with the face of the note [678]*678less the interest. There was an agreement between the parties that Curry was to pay George and Woods a bonus of $500 for making the loan. The bonus had not been paid when the note fell due. Curry wanted the note renewed and after several weeks of parleying, an agreement for an extension was made and a new note was executed for $25,000 payable to the plaintiffs which Curry has since paid with the full ten per cent interest. During the negotiations for the extension of the loan, the parties agreed that Curry should pay a bonus for the extension, and also pay the $500 bonus on the original loan.

One of the questions in the case is, What was the amount of the second bonus agreed upon? Curry’s positive testimony is that he agreed to pay $3,000 in addition to the $500 he owed as a bonus. Woods testified that the amount agreed to be paid was $1,000, but his testimony in respect to this is, to say the least, equivocal. On the other hand, Curry offered in corroboration of his statement a written instrument executed in duplicate and signed by him- during the negotiations for the renewal of the $25,000 note. The fact that this agreement was written and tendered to Woods and George for them to sign is admitted by Woods, who was the only witness for plaintiffs. The instrument reads as follows:

“Liberal, Ks., 11-20-13.
“It is hereby mutually agreed by & between L. S. Curry, J. E. George & C. E. Woods that a certain contract by & between the above named parties dated Sept. 17-1913 shall be. extended for 90 days, said Curry hereby agreeing to pay 10% int. on the $25000.00 & a bonus of $3000.00 for said extension and $500.00 bonus which is due on the original contract.
“Witness our hand the day and year first above written.
“L. S. Curry.”

Curry testified:

“Mr. George said he would like to have something to show for the agreement to pay the bonuses. Would like to have a note or contract or something, so I wrote out a couple of contracts. ... I wrote up these papers and after I had written one, Mr. George read it while I was writing the other. Mr. Woods came in and picked it up and read it. Mr. George had picked up a pen and was about ready to sign it but Mr. Woods came back and beckoned him and when he came back he did not sign it. . . . I wrote these papers on letter heads in the bank and kept them both.”

Woods testified that Curry was in the bank, and—

“We told Mr. Curry that if we could get the money we would but we [679]*679would want something to secure the loan some place else because we were borrowing the money and we did borrow it.
“Q. And then what did Mr. Curry say about that, about getting the money for him? A. He wanted to fix it up.
“I can’t say just when it was fixed up. He was in there and wrote out a piece of paper, something he would do, and showed it to us, and I told him we would rather have the money at that time, didn’t want to sign anything. We wanted to know whether we could get the money or not before we signed anything. That was in November. He wanted us to sign these papers, but we declined to do it. Mr. George had to have money for some cattle.”

This occurred on November 20. Eighteen days afterwards when plaintiffs had succeeded in arranging to borrow from another bank the money Mr. George required in the purchase of cattle, they were ready to agree to extend Curry’s loan and on that date, December 8, they took Curry’s note for $3,500, and later the $25,000 note was renewed. Curry claims this $3,500 note was given for no other consideration except in payment of the bonuses. Woods testified repeatedly that the note sued on for $5,000 is a renewal of the $3,500 note, and that both were given in connection With the loan transaction. He offered no suggestion of any reason why Curry would make an offer in writing -to pay plaintiffs $3,500 in bonuses if the agreement was to pay but $1,500. The only reason he gives for their refusal to sign the contract which Curry tendered them on November 20 was that they were not yet ready to agree to an extension until they could arrange to obtain money elsewhere for Mr. George to buy cattle.

When the renewal of the $25,000 note matured, Curry had moved away from Liberal. At that time the bank also held a note against him which was past due. Curry was in Cowley county and Woods went there to see him and threatened foreclosure unless the three notes, including the $3,500 note were renewed. Curry told him that just as. soon as he could he would go to Liberal, and on October 21 he drove there, arriving after banking hours. He saw Woods at the bank and gave another renewal note for the $25,000 loan, renewed the note, held by the bank, and also renewed the $3,500 note, although it was not due for fifteen or twenty days. He testified that the notes were in the vault at the time, and that he was not sure whether the one he signed in renewal of the $3,500 note was [680]*680filled out or not. He introduced in evidence the canceled notes which Woods mailed to him a few days afterwards. Woods testified that the $3,500 note was filled out when it was signed. In explanation of how it came to be increased $1,500 he said that it included the $500 and $1,000 bonuses. He was asked to explain why he made Curry take up the note and put it in the $5,000 one fifteen days before it was due. His answer was:

“Well, sir; if he was out here and the note is about due^ — few days before it was due, and this other twenty-five thousand dollars; I wanted them fixed up and I had it all fixed at once I guess.
“Q. Mr. Woods, he fixed up the twenty-five thousand dollar note on the same day? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Why did you ask him to take up the thirty-five hundred dollar note fifteen days before it was due. A. Probably fixed them both up while he was here.”

Again, on cross-examination, he testified:

“Q. That five hundred dollars that he agreed to give in the first place, and this one thousand dollars, does it go to make up part of the five thousand dollar note? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Then the note of thirty-five hundred dollars to C. E. Woods and J. E. George, December 8, 1913, what was that for? A. In connection with this other deal.
“Q. With the twenty-five thousand dollar deal? A. Yes, sir.
. “Q. That matter ran along until December 8, 1913, when Mr. Curry gave a note for thirty-five hundred dollars? What is that for? A. I can’t say.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 86, 109 Kan. 677, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-curry-kan-1921.