This was an action by the appellants, as plaintiffs, against the .appellees, as defendants, upon a promissory note, of which the following is a copy:
*335“$200. Deming, Ind., April 29th, 1876.
“ Six months after date, I promise to pay John Holloway, or order, two hundred dollars, and five per cent, thereon for attorney’s fees, value received, without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. Negotiable and payable at the Meridian National Bank of Indianapolis, Indiana, with ten per cent, interest until paid. (Signed,) Joseph L. Jennings.”
Endorsed in blank: “ John Holloway,
“R. H. Pilcher.”
The appellants alleged, in substance, in their complaint, that the note was endorsed by said John Holloway to Rufus H. Pilcher, and by said Pilcher to the appellants; that the appellee Joseph L. Jennings did not pay said note when due, upon due presentment and demand at the place where payable, of which the endorsers had due notice; and that the note-was due and wholly unpaid. Wherefore, etc.
To this complaint, the appellee Joseph L. Jennings answered in four paragraphs, in substance as follows:
1. A general denial;
2. That the note in suit and a written instrument, a copy of which was therewith filed, were executed by the appellee Jennings at one and the same time, as evidence of one and the same contract; that, to induce the appellee Jennings to execute said written instruments, an agent of a real or pretended firm, doing or pretending to do business under the name and style of John Holloway & Co., falsely and fraudulently represented to the appellee Jennings that said firm desired to constitute him, said Jennings, their sole agent to sell R. S. Caldwell’s Vertical Cradle, for White River and Jackson townships, in Hamilton county Indiana, and that said John Holloway & Co. would furnish him one hundred of said cradles to sell in said townships, in the course of two weeks, and that all the appellee Jennings would have to do would be to sell said cradles and account to John Holloway & Co. for one-*336half the net profits and the wholesale price of said cradles, viz., four dollars for each furnished; that the appellee Jennings would not he required to pay out any money, or be at any expense of any kind, for the p.urchasemoney of said cradles, unless he sold them; that said note and contract were required as evidence of the contract and agency; and that, if he failed to sell said cradles after a reasonable effort, then the said John Holloway & Co. would take said cradles back, free of all expense to the appellee Jennings; that the appellee Jennings relied upon said representations and believed them to be true, and that, by reason of said false and fraudulent representations, he was induced to and did execute said note and contract; that said John Holloway & Co. failed and refused to furnish any of said cradles, -unless he, Jennings, would pay four dollars for each one of them in advance, and that they had wholly failed to furnish him, Jennings, any of said cradles, pursuant to their representations; that the appellee Jennings was illiterate, and read written or printed matter with great difficulty, and did not understand the meaning of the words used in said written contract; that he, Jennings, attempted to read said writings, but they were partly written and partly printed, and drawn up in a peculiar form, and he could not succeed in reading and understanding their meaning, so that he called upon the agent of said John Holloway & Co. to read said writings; that said agent did read the contract and note, according to their said verbal understanding, and not as they really were, but he falsely and fraudulently read them differently from the way they were written; that by means of said false reading he, the said Jennings, was induced to execute said writings; that he was poor and unable to furnish the money, two hundred dollars, in advance, as required by the writing filed with said paragraph, and did not intend to sign any such contract and note, and pay two hundred dollars absolutely, whether he sold said cradles or not. Wherefore *337the appellee Jennings said that the consideration of said note had wholly failed; that the appellants were not innocent holders of the note in suit, but that they had full knowledge of all the facts set out.in this paragraph, when they purchased said note;
3. The appellee Joseph L. Jennings said, that the original ptayee of the note in suit, while yet the owner thereof, and before the endorsement of said.note to the appellants, he and the payee of said note, for a valuable consideration, mutually rescinded the execution of the note sued on, and the then payee of said note agreed to deliver up the same in one week, or as soon as he could procure the same, it then being some distance away, all of which facts the appellants well knew at the time they purchased said note. Wherefore the appellee Jennings demanded judgment, etc.; and,
4. That the appellee Jennings executed said note without any consideration whatever, of which fact the appellants had full knowledge when they purchased said note. Wherefore the appellants, asked to be hence dismissed.
The appellants demurred to each of the second, third and fourth paragraphs of the answer of the appellee Joseph L. Jennings, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a defence to their action, which demurrers were severally overruled, and to these decisions they excepted They thou replied by general denial to said paragraphs of answer.
The issues joined were tried by a jury, and a general verdict was returned for the appellees. With their general verdict, the jury also returned into court their special-findings on particular questions of fact submitted to them by the appellants, under the direction of the court, as follows:
“ 1st. Does it appear, from the evidence in this cause. *338that the plaintiffs purchased the note sued on for a valuable consideration, before due?
“Answer. Yes.
“ 2d. Does, it appeal’, from 'the evidence in this cause, that, at the time of said purchase, plaintiffs had notice or knowledge of any defence to said note, which defendant has alleged?
“Answer. No.
“ 3d. "What is the amount of the principal and interest of the note sued on ?
“Answer. .Two hundred arid sixteen dollars and seventy cents ($216.70).’’
The appellants moved the court for a judgment in their favor, on the special findings of the jury, notwithstanding their general verdict, which motion was overruled, and to this decision they excepted. Thereupon the court rendered a judgment on the general verdict, from which judgment this appeal is now prosecuted.
In this court, the appellants have assigned as errors the several decisions of the court below, adverse to them. In our view of this case, however, it is only necessary for us to consider the alleged error of the court in overruling the appellants’ motion for judgment in their favor on the special findings of the jury, notwithstanding the general verdict.
In this action, as we have seen, the appellants, as endorsees, have sued the appellee Joseph L. Jennings, as the maker, of a promissory note payable to order in a bank in this State. In section 6 of “ An act concerning promissory notes, bills of exchange,” etc., approved March 11th, 1861, it is provided, that such notes “ shall be negotiable as inland bills of exchange, and the payees and endorsees thereof may recover as in case of such bills.” 1 R. S. 1876, p. 636.
It is well settled, that, under the law merchant, which governs the negotiability bf inland bills of exchange and fixes the liabilities of the parties thereto, the purchaser *339and endorsee, for a valuable consideration, before maturity .and without notice, of such a note as the one sued on in this action, will take such note free from any equities or defences which might exist as between the maker and the payee thereof. Murphy v. Lucas, 58 Ind. 360.
In section 337 of the practice act, it is provided, that, -“When the special finding of the facts is inconsistent with the general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court shall give judgment accordingly.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 172. Thompson v. The Cincinnati, etc., R. R. Co., 54 Ind. 197, and Eckleman v. Miller, 57 Ind. 88.
In the case at bar, the jury found specially, that the appellants purchased the note in suit before its maturity, for a valuable consideration, and without any notice or knowledge of any defence to said note. It needs no argument, we think, to show that the special findings of the jury in this case were utterly inconsistent with their general verdict. It follows, therefore, logically and legally, that the court below erred in overruling the appellants’ motion for judgment in their favor, on the special findings of the jury, notwithstanding their general verdict. Nebeker v. Cutsinger, 48 Ind. 436, Cutsinger v. Nebeker, 58 Ind. 401, and Cornell v. Nebeker, 58 Ind. 425.
The judgment is reversed, at the appellees’ costs, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to the court below to render judgment in the appellants’ favor, on the special findings of the jury, notwithstanding their general verdict, with interest thereon from the 2d day of March, 1877, the date of the return of such special findings.