The plaintiff complains that the cross-examination of its witness Bortzmeyer was too broad. The court permitted the defendant to question said witness at length upon its conversations and transactions with said L. A. Williams which led up to the purchase of the note. Some of the questions which said witness was required to answer were *241probably too remote to be proper cross-examination, applying the rule strictly. But the cross-examination as a whole called for information directly connected with the purchase of the note from Williams by plaintiff.
“The adverse party may cross-examine the witness as to any matter stated in his direct examination, or connected therewith, * * ” Or. L., § 860.
Hanson v. Johnson Contract Co., 117 Or. 541, 546 (244 Pac. 875). In Ah Doon v. Smith, 25 Or. 89, 93 (34 Pac. 1093), Mr. Justice Robert S. Bean wrote:
“Under this statute, and the rule there provided, a party has no right to cross-examine a witness except as to facts and circumstances stated on his direct examination or connected therewith; but within this limitation great latitude should be allowed in conducting the examination. It should not be limited to the exact facts stated on the direct examination, but may extend to other matters which tend to limit, explain, or qualify them, or to rebut or modify any inference resulting therefrom, provided they are directly connected with the matter stated in the direct examination. It is true the party against whom a witness is called cannot, on cross-examination, go into an independent or affirmative case on his part, but must confine his examination to such facts connected with the direct examination as go to counteract so much of the case of his adversary as the direct examination tends to prove, but the fact that evidence called forth by a legitimate cross-examination also tends to sustain some defense affords no reason why it should be excluded. A party will not be permitted to glean out certain facts from his witness, which, without explanation, would give a false coloring to the matter about which he testifies, and then save his witness from the sifting process of a cross-examination by which the real transaction could be shown.”
*242The language quoted is pertinent to the issues raised by plaintiff on this appeal. The cross-examination objected to was directly connected with the testimony of the witness Bortzmeyer to the effect that he had purchased the note in good faith without knowledge or notice of any infirmities therein. Defendant was not deprived of the valuable right of cross-examination because he had pleaded an affirmative defense which was supported by the testimony of the witness Bortzmeyer adduced on cross-examination. The cross-examination tended only to inquire into the circumstances of the transfer of said note from said Williams to plaintiff and matters connected directly therewith. All of which were within the issues of the pleadings. In the case of Benson v. Johnson, 85 Or. 677, 684 (165 Pac. 1001, 167 Pac. 1014), the court says:
“ * * The testimony sought to be adduced to establish the statutory fraud created by the Bulk Sales Lav was irrelevant because there was no pleading to support it.”
The evidence adduced in the instant case on cross-examination was not only pertinent but was also directly connected with the sale and transfer of the note by Williams to plaintiff testified to by Bortzmeyer, a witness for plaintiff. The extent of cross-examination is largely discretionary in the trial court as long as it is confined to the issues joined by the pleadings. There was no abuse of discretion in this case. A case in point is Kenny v. Walker, 29 Or. 41 (44 Pac. 501). See, also, Speer v. Smith, 83 Or. 571 (163 Pac. 979).
Plaintiff requested twenty-one instructions. Six of the requests were given. The substance of some of the others was given by the court in its general instructions. Most of the instructions refused re*243ferred to the issue of estoppel attempted to be raised by the plaintiff in its reply. In this connection the instructions given by the court were more favorable to plaintiff than it was entitled to. The facts alleged by plaintiff in its reply do not constitute estoppel. The facts reliéd upon by plaintiff as constituting estoppel is stated in its reply in the following language:
“That the defendant has from time to time promised to pay the said note and on or about September 23, 1922, paid thereon the sum of $92.88 as interest and on or about August 23, 1923, and on or about September 5th, 1923, gave two certain orders on one John T. Lie Brand of McAlester, Oklahoma, relative to the payment of said note, which said orders, however, were not accepted by the said Lie Brand and by reason thereof were of no force nor effect and by reason of his repeated promises to pay the same prior to its maturity and his payment of said interest and his giving of said orders, the said defendant is, and should be, estopped and prevented from denying his liability under and upon said promissory note and the right of the plaintiff to sue thereon.”
The evidence on behalf of plaintiff tended to support the statement of facts quoted from the reply. It will be noticed that there is no statement to the effect that the plaintiff was injured or its right of action in any way jeopardized by reason of the acts and representations of the defendant. An estoppel always involves the element that the party claiming its benefit has been misled to his prejudice or into an altered position by the conduct or representations of the party claimed to be estopped. There is no allegation of that kind in the reply, and there is no evidence tending to prove that the plaintiff altered its position or changed its conduct in any way by reason *244of the alleged promises of the defendant to pay the note or the orders given by defendant on his ag'ent for that purpose. There is neither allegation nor evidence that the plaintiff was to any degree hindered or injured by the alleged conduct of the defendant. Estoppel en pais is a rule of evidence and is defined by our Code:
“"Whenever a party has, by his own declaration, act, or omission, intentionally and deliberately led another to believe a particular thing true, and to act upon such belief, he shall not, in any litigation arising out of such declaration, act, or omission, be permitted to falsify it.” Or. L., § 798, subd. 4.
The general rule of estoppel is substantially the same: 21 C. J. 1113-1116, §§ 116, 117 and 118; Bank of Idaho v. Malheur Co., 30 Or. 420, 427 (45 Pac. 781, 35 L. R. A. 142); State v. Portland General Electric Co., 52 Or. 502 (95 Pac. 722, 98 Pac. 160). The acts and words relied upon as estoppel occurred long after plaintiff claims to have bought the note. There is no pretense of injury to plaintiff as a result of the conduct and promises set up.
The instructions requested are involved and lengthy. Those not given are not applicable to the facts in the instant case. There was evidence that the note sued upon was delivered to the payee to be held by him until a corporation should be organized and then it should be delivered to the said corporation for its value in stock thereof; that .the payee had no authority or right to do anything with the note or to make any use of it until the corporation had been organized, or rather the branch of a foreign corporation with headquarters at Medford. There was positive testimony, given by the defendant himself and by a Mr. Bennett, who was interested in organizing the branch of the corporation and who is a dis*245interested witness, that Bortzmeyer, the president and active manager of the plaintiff corporation and the very person who represented the corporation in the purchase of the note, was informed before he purchased the note that it was held by the payee to be delivered to the branch corporation when it should be organized; that the payee had no authority or right to transfer the note, except for the purpose for which it was given. Plaintiff insists, because he claims the testimony of the witness Bennett was inconsistent and in some minor details contradictory to the testimony of the defendant, that there was no evidence. The credibility of the witnesses must be determined by the jury.
Plaintiff also complains because of some testimony on the part of both the defendant and said Bennett that other notes were given by parties at Medford under the same conditions and for the same purpose and that all those notes had been returned. We think this evidence was admissible for the purpose of establishing that there was no consideration for the note sued upon. It was necessary for the defendant to establish that fact and further in order to relieve himself of liability on the note that the plaintiff knew that to be a fact before it purchased the note. The proposed branch of the corporation was never formed or organized and nothing came of the efforts to accomplish that. There was then no consideration for the note. The witnesses were not allowed to g’o into detail about the other notes but simply testified about the circumstances under which the note sued upon was given. This was a part of defendant’s affirmative defense. The court instructed the jury that defendant was liable on the note, notwithstanding that there was no consideration for it, unless the plaintiff knew the infirmities in the *246payee’s title in the note. Plaintiff’s knowledge regarding that matter was practically the only issue involved in the trial.
For the petition, Mr. G. M. B,oherts. Contra, Mr. N. W. Borden and Mr. W. B. Gaylord.Williams, payee of the note involved, did not attend the trial. The record does not disclose whether or not any attempt was made by either party to produce him.
The case of Bank of Jordan Valley v. Duncan, 105 Or. 105, 121, 122 (209 Pac. 149), is not in point because it was there held that there was no evidence that the holder of the note who purchased it before maturity for value had any knowledge or notice of the alleged infirmity in the title of the payee who transferred it to the holder. In the instant case there was positive evidence that the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the infirmity of the payee’s title. Defendant’s liability, therefore, became an issue of fact about which the jury was the final arbiter.
These considerations dispose of the motion for a directed verdict and require the affirmance of the judgment. It is so ordered. Affirmed.
Burnett, C. J., and McBride and Band, JJ., concur.