Wilson v. Kelso

The appellee, Scott Kelso, recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court for Washington County for the sum of $1,146.33 against Francis R. Wilson, and from that judgment the defendant has brought this appeal.

The record presents three bills of exceptions. Two relate to the rulings of the Court upon questions of evidence, and the other to the rejection of the defendant's seventh prayer.

The Court sustained a demurrer to the defendant's fifth plea, and overruled a motion in arrest of judgment. The correctness of these rulings is also presented by the record.

The evidence shows that the defendant and twelve other persons executed a promissory note in the following words and figures:

"FLINTSTONE, MD., February 15, 1906.

$1000.00.

Two years after date for value received we, or either of us, promise to pay to H.P. Reynolds Co., or bearer, One Thousand Dollars at the Second National Bank of Cumberland, Md., with interest at 6% per annum, interest payable annually."

H.P. Reynolds Co., the payees named in the note, were horse dealers residing in Pennsylvania, and the note sued on was one of three joint and several promissory notes each for one thousand dollars given to Reynolds Co. for a German coach stallion sold to the defendant and others.

The note was endorsed by H.P. Reynolds Co., and delivered to the plaintiff, and was duly presented for payment and was dishonored. The makers refused to pay the note, and the plaintiff brought suit in the Circuit Court for Allegany county against the defendant and ten other makers of the note.

The case was removed to the Circuit Court for Washington County where trial was had, and the judgment recovered.

No mention is made of the motion in arrest of judgment in the brief of the appellant, nor was it adverted to in the oral argument of his counsel at the hearing in this Court. We think the motion was properly overruled. *Page 168

The record shows that by an agreement of counsel the Court ordered the clerk to take the verdict. The jury announced a verdict in these words: "verdict for plaintiff and assess the damages at the full amount." The clerk refused to receive this verdict, and directed the jury to return to the jury room and state the amount of the damages. They then found their verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed the damages at $1,146.33. This verdict, which is in proper form, was received by the clerk and recorded.

The objection that the clerk had no power to order the jury to correct the form of the verdict is without merit. They did voluntarily correct the form of the verdict, and the objection complained of is merely the correction of an informality.

The Court will not arrest a judgment, except for substantial error apparent upon the face of the record. The correction which the jury made was one which they had a perfect right to make under the circumstances stated.

The plaintiff before the trial entered a non pros as to the other ten defendants, and the case was tried against the appellant as the sole defendant. He pleaded the general issue pleas, and four special pleas setting up fraud in the procuring of the note by Reynolds Co., and notice of fraud by the plaintiff before he purchased or paid for the note. The case was tried upon issues joined upon the general issue pleas, and upon issues properly framed upon replications to the special pleas.

We find no reversible error in sustaining the demurrer to the defendant's fifth plea, which alleged that the payees did not endorse the note to the plaintiff, and that the signature on the back of the note was not the signature of Reynolds Co., nor made by their authority.

This defense was available to the defendant under the general issue pleas, and, therefore, no injury was done by the ruling on the demurrer. There is not a particle of evidence in the record tending to support the allegation of this plea, and there seems to be no doubt that the note was *Page 169 properly indorsed by Reynolds Co., as alleged in the declaration.

The plaintiff was called as a witness in his own behalf, and was shown the note sued on. He testified that he was the holder of the note, and that it had not been paid. The note was then offered and admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendant, and this ruling constitutes the first exception.

Where the obligation is joint and several, an ancient and familiar rule of law forbids it to be treated as several as to some of the obligors, and joint as to the rest. The obligee has the right of choice between the two methods of proceeding; but must resort to one or the other exclusively, and can not combine both. He must proceed either severally against each, or jointly against all. When the contract is several as well as joint, the plaintiffs at liberty to proceed against the parties jointly, or each separately though their interest be joint. 1 Chitty Pl. 143; Merrick v. Bank of Metropolis, 8 Gill, 74; PoePleading, 2 Ed. section 382.

This rule has been somewhat modified by section 2, Article 50, Code 1904, which provides that "No person shall institute more than one suit on a joint and several bond, promissory note, penal or single bill, when the persons executing the same are alive and reside in the same county; and if more suits than one be instituted on any such bond, promissory note, penal or single bill, judgments of non pros shall be entered against the plaintiff in such suits."

The plaintiff by dismissing the suit as to all the other defendants elected, as he had a right to do, to pursue his remedy on the note against the defendant alone, and the best evidence of the defendant's liability on the note was the note itself, which by the pleadings he admitted that he had signed.

The plaintiff, being the holder of the note, must be treatedprima facie as a holder in due course, and, therefore, entitled to recover. *Page 170

The objection to the introduction of the note in evidence is that it discloses a variance between the allegation and the proof. In every litigated question the pleadings must apprise the parties of the specific nature of the questions to be tried, and as this object would be defeated if either party were at liberty to prove facts essentially different from that alleged on the record as constituting the claim on the one hand, and the defense on the other, hence the necessity of the general rule that the evidence must correspond to the allegations, and that the Court must decide secundum allegata et probata; but there can be no variance unless there be a disagreement between the allegation and the proof in some matter which, in point of law, is essential to the charge or claim.

As the plaintiff elected to hold the defendant separately liable, and as the note was evidence of that liability, there was no variance, notwithstanding the fact that the note when produced showed that there were other joint and several makers whom the plaintiff might have sued. To hold otherwise would be to tell the holder of such an instrument as the one sued on that he is at liberty to sue any one of the makers separately, and then deprive him of the power to prove his case by the application of the rule of evidence mentioned.

The second exception was taken during the course of the examination of James A. Ash, a witness for the defendant. This witness gave evidence of certain conversations and transactions between himself and a man named Harman respecting a sale of a horse, and it was proposed to prove "that Harman told witness that the reason Harman came to witness was that Mr. Kelso recommended witness." This was objected to by the plaintiff.

The Court ruled that it would admit this in evidence if the defendant would follow it up by testimony to show that Harman was there representing the plaintiff. Ash then testified that Harman had asked witness to take him out and introduce him to several farmers; that witness was at two *Page 171 places where a sale was made; that Harman wanted to sell a share to witness, but witness did not buy; that finally Harman said to witness that there was a share to give away, and that he would give his share to witness; that Harman said he would give witness a check for two hundred dollars when witness signed the note; that he did give witness check when he signed the note, and that witness got the money for it; that the check was either signed H.P. Reynolds or H.P. Reynolds Co.

Counsel for plaintiff moved the Court to strike out the testimony of Ash, quoted above, to the effect that Harman told him that Kelso had recommended him to the witness, and that was the reason he had come. Whereupon the defendant offered to prove "that Harman told witness that if he would take a share of two hundred dollars in the horse mentioned in evidence, he would give him a check for two hundred dollars, and did give him a check for two hundred dollare, for which he (Ash) got the money, and then offered to prove by said James A. Ash that at the time of this transaction Harman told said witness that the plaintiff (Kelso) had sent him there to sell the horse, and proffered to follow it up by the evidence of Mr. Hendershot that the plaintiff (Kelso) told him (Hendershot) that he (Kelso) had given two hundred dollars to Ash to effect the sale."

The Court struck out the testimony objected to, to wit, "that Harman told witness that the reason Harman came to witness was that Mr. Kelso recommended him."

This ruling constitutes the second exception.

The testimony stricken out was clearly inadmissible unless it was shown that Harman was an agent of Kelso. This agency could not be shown by the mere declarations of Harman.

In National Mechanics Bank of Baltimore v. National Bank ofBaltimore, 36 Md. 20, the Court said: "Declarations of a broker or agent are not per se evidence of agency; but when evidence of facts in pais tending to show the relation of principal and agent existing has been offered directly *Page 172 or circumstantially, it is then the province of the jury to determine whether there is such proof of agency as to make the declarations of the supposed agent binding on the principal. * * * In Rosenstock v. Tormey, 36 Md. 182, this Court alluding to the practice of allowing parties to introduce evidence which was irrelevant per se, by assurance of counsel it would be followed up by evidence that would make it relevant, remarked: "We are not aware of any decision that has applied the rule to the case where declarations or acts of agents are offered for the purpose of binding principals. On the contrary, it is plainly said inMarshall v. Haney, 4 Md. 511, that the declarations of an agent are not admissible to bind the principal under any circumstances until the agency is first clearly established, and the language of the Court in Atwell v. Miller, 11 Md. 359, is to the same effect."

There was no proof to show that Harman was the agent of the plaintiff and the testimony was properly stricken out. Furthermore, Mr. Hendershot, who was subsequently called by the plaintiff, did not support the offer made with respect to the testimony stricken out. We find no error in this ruling.

This brings us to the consideration of the action of the Court in rejecting the defendant's seventh prayer, which was as follows: "The jury are instructed that in considering the question of notice it is not necessary that the plaintiff have knowledge or notice of any particular fraud, but that it is sufficient that the plaintiff have notice that there was fraud in the obtention of the note sued on by the payee therein from the makers thereof." Every holder of a negotiable promissory note is deemed a prima facie holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated the instrument was defective, the burden is on the holder to prove that he, or some person under whom he claims, acquired the title as a holder in due course. (Code Article 13, section 78. *Page 173

In Cover v. Myers, 75 Md. 419, the Court said: "Where a negotiable instrument is originally infected with fraud, invalidity, or illegality the title of the original holder being destroyed, the title of every subsequent holder which reposes on that foundation, and on no other, falls with it. But if any subsequent holder takes the instrument in good faith, and for value, before maturity, he is entitled to recover on it;" andsection 75, Article 13, of the Code provides that "to constitute notice of an infirmity in an instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith."

The defendant offered evidence tending to show that the signature of some of the makers of the note were obtained by the fraud of H.P. Reynolds Co. It was then incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that he took the note in good faith, for value, and before maturity, and without any actual knowledge of any infirmity or defect in the instrument. He offered evidence tending to show that he took the note under these circumstances, and the jury, under the instructions of the Court, accepted as true his evidence on these points. The Court granted six prayers on behalf of the defendant. An inspection of these prayers, which will be set out in the report of the case, will show that the case of the defendant was submitted to the jury as favorably and as fairly as he had a right to expect upon all the issues raised by the pleadings.

The question of notice presented by the defendant's seventh prayer was fully covered by the granted prayers of the defendant, particularly by the fifth prayer, in which the jury were told that they were at liberty "to consider all the facts and circumstances given in evidence in this case in determining whether the plaintiff at the time he purchased the note sued on bought the same in good faith and without notice of fraud in obtaining the execution of said note." *Page 174

Finding no reversible error in any of the rulings, the judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed, with costs to the appellee.