The general history of the transaction connected with the execution of these notes is detailed in the cases of State Bank of Indiana v. Gates, 114 Iowa, 323, and State Bank of Indiana v. Mentzer, 125 Iowa, 101, and they need not be here repeated; but the issues are somewhat different, and the evidence is not the same. It will therefore be necessary to give this case an independent consideration.
The defendant, with others, was a subscriber to stock in the Cedar Valley Hedge Fence Company, an Iowa corporation, which was to be organized by the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company, an Indiana corporation, and the notes were given to the latter in payment for the stock thus agreed to be issued. It is practically conceded that while the Cedar Valley Company was actually organized, and its stock issued as agreed, and that defendant received the amount thereof for which he had subscribed, such stock was valueless, and therefore, without returning it, defendant may plead and prove, if he can, that the notes given by him were procured by fraud and without consideration; and, if there is evidence tending to establish these allegations, the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show that it was a purchaser for value,
It is contended for defendant that there was evidence to go to the jury tending to establish a defense in three respects : First, that the terms of the contract of subscription were never complied with, and that the notes were therefore without consideration; second, that defendant was induced to subscribe by a 'false and fraudulent representation that one Hamilton was investing $1,000 as a subscriber, whereas in fact there was a secret agreement between the representatives of the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company and said Hamilton by which he was to actually invest but one-half of the amount fon which he. purported to be a subscriber; and, third, that there was a collateral written agreement between the .representatives of the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company and the defendant that the notes in suit should not be transferred, and that defendant should not be required to pay them in money, but that they should be paid by dividends on the stock to be received by him in the Cedar Valley Company.
1. Stock subscription failure of consideration; evidence. The subscription which defendant signed, agreeing to take $500 in stock in the Cedar Valley Company, at the rate of one-half of its par value, in consideration for which these notes were given, was a somewhat elaborate instrument. We need not set it out in . . lull, but it- is enough to say that it provides for the incorporation by the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company of the Cedar Valley Company, and the delivery
2. Subscription to stock: fraud. As to the fraudulent representation that Hamilton,-was investing $1,000 in the enterprise, whereas in fact the private agreement with him was that he should only be held for $500, it may be said that, if the different subscribers were independent purchasers from the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company of stock in an existing and independent corporation, then perhaps it would be wholly immaterial how much Hamilton was to pay for the stock subscribed for by him; but it appears that the subscription by Hamilton was used as an inducement to secure subscriptions by the others, and that defendant relied upon Hamilton’s subscription as being genuine and bona fide in making his own subscription, and there is also evidence tending to show that it was a part of the scheme on the part of the representatives of the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company to secure a prominent man of influence and reputation to head their subscription, and offer him, as an inducement, stock at a much lower rate than that at which it was sold to others, concealing the fact from other subscribers, and leading them to believe that the person thus selected to head the subscription list was a bona fide investor of the amount set opposite his name. We have no doubt that such a representation may constitute fraud justifying the rescission of the contract on the part of the other subscribers. Coles v. Kennedy, 81 Iowa, 860. It is to be borne in mind that the subscription contract expressly specified that the requisite amount of stock must be subscribed for at not less than fifty per cent, of its face value, whereas, according to the evidence, Hamilton was to pay for his stock at one-fourth of its face value. We think the jury would have
3. Subscription to stock: agreement. The collateral written agreement given to the defendant, signed by the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence 'Company by a person acting as its representative in procuring the subscription of defendant, and accepting the notes exe2 i. cuted by him in pursuance of such subscription, was certainly binding on the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company. We see no reason why such a collateral agreement may not be effectual as between the parties, and this agreement, if made, would relieve the defendant from the obligation to return his stock and demand the surrender of his notes when he discovered that the contract had not been fully performed on the part of the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company, for he might well be willing to hold his stock under that condition, although unwilling to be bound unconditionally to pay therefor. Such an agreement, in our judgment, if established — and there was evidence tending to establish it, for the written instrument was introduced in evidence — would constitute, as between the parties, a full defense to an action on the notes. In short, there was evidence of fraud and want of consideration on which the jury could have found that, as between the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company and defendant, the notes were not valid as obligations to pay the amounts named therein;
4. Bills and notes: bonafide holder: evidence. The evidence tended to show that at the time the plan was made by the Iowa Hedge & Wire Fence Company to send its representative into Iowa to organize an independent corporation, to be known as the Cedar Valley Hedge Fence Company, the president of the plaintiff bank was president of the fence company, and other directors of the bank and members of its discount committee were either directors or stockholders in the fence company ; that, before the fence company came to Iowa, it was
5. Bills and notes: burden of proof. As to the collateral agreement that the notes should not' be transferred, and that they could not be' collected, save as satisfied by dividends from the stock, the burden was, no doubt, on the defendant to show that plaintiff’s officers had knowledge of such an arrangement when the notes were transferred to them; but, as to want of consideration and fraud in procuring the subscription, if shown, the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that its officers had no knowledge of these defenses, and the evi