Buffalo County National Bank v. Gilcrest
Buffalo County National Bank v. Gilcrest
Opinion of the Court
This was an action by the plaintiff in error in the district court for Buffalo county on the following instrument:
•“$9,875.00. Kearney, Neb., Sept. 14th, 1889.
“Ninety days after date, for value received,. I promise to pay to the order of the Buffalo County*898 National Bank ninety-eight hundred seventy-five dollars at. the Buffalo County National Bank, Kearney, Nebraska, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity until paid..
“Interest paid to December 20th, 1889.
“Clem Y. Gilcrest.”
On the back of said note are the following indorsements: P. H. Gilcrest.
“A. T. Gamble.
“E. B. JONESv
“$5,775.00 paid December 21st, 1889.
“$3,300.00 paid December 30th, 1889.”
The defendants Jones and F. H. Gilerest joined in an answer which is here set out: “That on or-about the 1st day of July, 1888, the defendants P. IT. Gilcrest. and E. B. Jones, upon the representations and at the solicitations of their co-defendant, A. T. Gamble, then an officer and cashier of the plaintiff bank, and upon his representations that the capital stock of the ‘Central Nebraska Live Stock Insurance Company’ that subsequently they, with the said A. T. Gamble and others hereinafter named, became the owners, of the whole of the capital stock of said company; that under the laws of the state of Nebraska the insurance company was required to have $50,000 of paid up capital stock before commencing business; that after the purchase of said stock it became necessary to reorganize said company and take up the old stock and pay in the said sum of $50,000 as the amount required of paid up capital stock; that to make up said required amount the defendants, P. H. Gilcrest, E. B. Jones, together with their co-defendant, A. T. Gamble, and one B. H. Goulding deposited with the plaintiff their notes as follows: One of the said A. T. Gamble
Practically the only contention at this time on the part of the plaintiff in error is that the finding is unsupported by the evidence. By a close scrutiny of the answer it will be observed that the substantial defense, indeed, the only defense there stated, is that the indebtedness to the bank had been extinguished by means of mortgage securities deliverd to and accepted by the latter in payment of the note in suit.
We have carefully read over the evidence, which is, to say the least, conflicting and apparently evenly balanced, but which is quite sufficient under the rule often recognized by this court to sustain the finding complained of. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.