147 A. 759 | Conn. | 1927
Plaintiff's cause of action is based upon a trade acceptance in the sum of $200, drawn by The Otis Oil Burner Corporation upon the defendant under date of September 1st, 1925, and accepted by him on that date, payable sixty days after date. It was transferred to the plaintiff by indorsement without recourse on September 12th, 1925. The answer alleges that the execution of the trade acceptance was procured by false and fraudulent representations made by The Otis Oil Burner Corporation in connection with a certain contract entered into between such corporation and the defendant, and that the plaintiff took the paper with knowledge of that fact. Upon the trial counsel for the plaintiff admitted that the instrument was procured by the fraudulent representations of The Otis Oil Burner Corporation, and the case was submitted to the jury upon the issue of whether the plaintiff was the holder of the instrument in due course. As relevant to that issue the jury could reasonably have found the following facts: The plaintiff was a so-called "finance company," incorporated about May 1st, 1925. The Otis Oil Burner Company was incorporated June 22d 1925. In this transaction the plaintiff was represented by its president, Alexander Koenig. Koenig first met a representative of the Otis Company in August, 1925, who at that time offered to sell him certain trade acceptances including that of the defendant which was undated when signed by him, but bears the date of September 1st, 1925. Koenig purchased for the plaintiff from the Otis Company trade acceptances of the face value of about $30,000 during August and September, *149 1925, the first purchase being made August 19th, 1925, and the last on September 17th, 1925. The acceptance in suit was one of the fifth lot of acceptances purchased by the plaintiff from the Otis Company on September 12th, 1925, being acceptances of a face value of $4,000, for which plaintiff paid $2,679.26. The last lot of acceptances purchased on September 17th, 1925, was of a face value of $10,000, for which plaintiff paid $5,000. A few months later, plaintiff put the Otis Company into bankruptcy. Plaintiff at the time of the purchase of this acceptance had received a report from a mercantile agency upon the Otis Company to the effect that it maintained a small office which was locked upon the occasion of calls, that there was no stock of materials in evidence, and that investigation elicited no information as to amount of capital involved or extent of financial responsibility. Plaintiff had also received reports from a mercantile agency, a trade authority, and a bank as to the financial responsibility of the defendant, which were to the effect that he was doing a good business, carried a satisfactory bank balance, and was good for his credit requirements. So far as appeared, plaintiff made no inquiry as to the circumstances under which these trade acceptances were given to the Otis Company.
The plaintiff, as the holder, is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course but, it being conceded that the instrument came to it from one having a defective title, the burden under the statute was upon the plaintiff to prove that it was a holder in due course. General Statutes, § 4417. This provision abrogates, so far forth, the general rule that it is for him who pleads facts to prove them. Parsons v. Utica Cement Mfg.Co.,
That plaintiff became the holder of this paper before maturity was not disputed, but it was contended by *150 defendant that the evidence disclosed facts and circumstances in connection with the purchase which justified a finding that the plaintiff was chargeable with notice of the infirmity in the instrument because of its knowledge of such facts, that its action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith. General Statutes, § 4414. Chief among these was the admitted fact that this instrument, with others of like character, was bought by plaintiff at a substantial discount from face value.
The payment of the full face value of a bill or note is not necessary to make one a holder for value. Nor does the fact alone that it was bought at a discount charge the purchaser with notice of existing equities. The consideration paid for the note is, however, a fact to be considered upon the question of good faith, and inadequacy of the consideration may, in connection with suspicious circumstances, justify a finding of bad faith. 8 Corpus Juris 486, 508, 509.
In Harris v. Johnson,
In the present case, the deduction of so large a sum from the face value of these trade acceptances, which so far as appeared were those of solvent makers, the failure of the plaintiff to prove that it made any inquiry as to the circumstances under which they were given, together with the inferences which the jury were entitled to draw from the testimony regarding the relationship between the plaintiff and the Otis Company, and the circumstances surrounding the purchase of this paper, were sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the plaintiff had failed to sustain the burden of proving that it was a holder in due course. The verdict was not so manifestly against the evidence as to warrant interference by the court.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded to the City Court of New Haven with direction to render judgment for the defendant on the verdict.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.