Zook v. Simonson

1 Ind. L. Rep. 44
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ind. L. Rep. 44 (Zook v. Simonson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zook v. Simonson, 1 Ind. L. Rep. 44 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Mr. Justice Howk.

This was a suit by the appellants against the appellee, upon a promissory note, of which the following is a copy:

“ $112. Vigo, Indiana, June 9, 1875.
“ One year after date, I promised to pay to Walker & Cornell, or order, one hundred and twelve dollars, negotiable and payable at the Vincennes National Bank, in Vincennes, Ind., for value received, without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, until paid. The drawers and indorsers severally waive presentment for payment, protest and notice of protest, and nonpayment of note. [Signed.] “ John Simonson.”

In their complaint the appellants alleged that the note was indorsed to them by the payees thereof, and that the note and interest remained due and wholly unpaid.

The appellee answei'ed in three special or affirmative paragraphs, to each of which the appellants’ demurrer, for the want of sufficient facts, was overruled by the court, and to these rulings they excepted. They then replied to appellee’s answer, by a general denial thereof. The issues joined were tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned for the appellee, and the appellants’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, aüd their exception saved to this ruling, the court rendered judgment on the verdict.

In this court, the appellants have properly assigned, as errors, the decisions of the Circuit Court jn overruling their demurrers to each of the paragraphs of appellee’s answer, and their motion for a new trial.

In his argument of this cause, in this court, the appellants’ counsel has complained chiefly of the decision of the court in overruling the demurrer to the second paragraph of appellee’s answer; and as this paragraph contains a fuller statement than either of the other paragraphs of answer, of the facts upon which [46]*46the appellee relied as a defense to this action, we will give a summary of its allegations of fact in this connection. The ap-pellee alleged in substance, in the second paragraph of his answer, that the payee of the note in suit procured the appellee to execute said note to them, by fraud and covin, in this, to-wit: The said payees, at the time the note was executed, falsely and fraudulently represented to the appellee, that they, the said payees, were learned, experienced, and skilled fruit-growers, and skilled in the art and business of engrafting fruit trees; and that, in consideration of the execution of the note in suit, they would engraft two thousand grafts of thrifty growth, and capable of bearing good and abundant fruit, into appellee’s apple trees, on his farm in Knox county, Indiana ; that appellee was wholly ignorant of the art and business of fruit-growing and the grafting of trees, and relying upon the representations of said payees and their promises so made to him, he did execute the said note to them, in pursuance of their said representations and agreement; that thereupon, the said payees engrafted five hundred worthless sprouts and twigs of apple trees only into his said orchard, in such an unskillful and unworkmanlike manner that the same would not and did not grow; but, on the contrary, greatly injured and damaged the appellee’s orchard, and they were the only grafts put in by said payees; that at the time the note in suit was executed, and at the time said trees were so engrafted, the said payees, instead of being skilled and experts in the art of engrafting apple trees, were wholly ignorant and unskilled in such business; and that the appellants, at the time they procured the note in suit to be assigned to them, and at the time it was assigned to them, had full knowledge of all the facts stated in said second paragraph of answer; wherefore, etc.

Of this second paragraph of answer the appellants’ counsel says: “ It is clear from the repeated decisions of this court, that the second paragraph is bad, unless the closing part pf it, which alleges that the plaintiff had knowledge of the matters precedently stated in said paragraph, at the time of the assignment of the note, makes it good.” Doubtless, this may be regarded as a correct statement of the effect of the decisions of this court, in relation to notes payable at a bank in this State, [47]*47and negotiable as inland bills of exchange, in suits between the indorsers of such notes and the makers thereof. In such cases, the general rule in this State is, that the indorsee of such a note before its maturity, in good faith and without notice, will take and hold the note freed from all equities and defenses existing between the maker and payee thereof. Murphy v. Lucas, 58 Ind. 360; Bremmerman v. Jennings, 61 Ind. 334; Maxwell v. Merchant, 66 Ind. 301, and McCoy v. Lockwood, decided at this term.

In the case at bar, however, it was alleged in the paragraph of answer now under consideration, after having stated matters which would have constituted a complete defense to any action on the note by the payees thereof, that the appellants had full knowledge of all such matters, at the time they procured the note to be assigned to them, and at the time it was so assigned to them. Under these allegations of facts, which must be taken as true against the appellants, as the question is now presented, we are of the opinion that they took and held the note sued upon, subject to all equities and defenses existing between the makers and the payees thereof, and that the facts alleged in the second paragraph of answer, therefore, were amply sufficient to withstand the demurrer thereto.

The important and controlling questions in this cause, as it seems to us, are properly presented for our decision by and under the alleged error of the court in overruling the appellants’ motion for a new trial.

On the trial of the cause, the record shows that the appellants objected at the proper time to the introduction by the ap-pellee of any evidence which tended to prove the facts alleged in the second paragraph of answer impeaching the consideration of the note in suit upon the ground that it had been fraudulently obtained from the appellee by the payees thereof, until the ap-pellee had first shown, as he had alleged in said paragraph of his answer, that the defendants had full knowledge of these facts at the time they procured the note to be assigned to them and at the time it was so assigned to them. But the court overruled the appellants’ objection, and, over their exceptions, permitted the appellee to first introduce his evidence in relation to the consideration of the note sued upon, and the alleged fraudulent [48]*48manner in which the note had been obtained from him by the payees. The decisions of the court, in overruling these objections were assigned by the appellants as cause for a new trial in their motion therefor, and they are complained of as erroneous, by their counsel, in his argument of this cause in this conrt.

It seems to us that the appellants’ objections can only be regarded as objections to the order in which the appellee proposed to introduce his evidence. As a general rule, a party may introduce his evidence in the order he may prefer, subject only to the discretion of the trial court.

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Related

Rogers v. Morton
12 Wend. 484 (New York Supreme Court, 1834)
Harbison v. Bank of Indiana
28 Ind. 133 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1867)
Ginn v. Collins
43 Ind. 271 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1873)
Murphy v. Lucas
58 Ind. 360 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1877)
Heilman v. Shanklin
60 Ind. 424 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Bremmerman v. Jennings
61 Ind. 334 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Maxwell v. Morehart
66 Ind. 301 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1879)
Burns v. Harris
66 Ind. 536 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ind. L. Rep. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zook-v-simonson-ind-1881.