Anniston National Bank v. School Committee

24 S.E. 792 | N.C. | 1896

The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of Associate JusticeFurches.

In deference to the opinion of his Honor, who intimated at the close of the testimony that the plaintiff could not recover, the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit and appealed. This is an action by plaintiff to recover a debt originally due from defendant to the Ruttan Manufacturing Company and by it assigned to the plaintiff; and the first matter that demands our attention is a motion of defendant to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that the record has not been printed, as the rules of this Court require. Upon examination of the printed record we find that it is not as complete as it should have been for our convenience; but there seems to be nothing omitted that is required by the rules, unless it be that plaintiff has failed to print some exhibit or other part of the record referred to in the case on appeal which is necessary for us to examine in considering it. Wiley v. Mining Co.,117 N.C. 489. We do not find this the case, and the motion is denied.

It is not denied that the defendants owed the Ruttan Company the debt sued on, but the defense is that C. C. Taylor, to whom the Ruttan Company owed a debt, brought suit against that (385) company, and on 4 March, 1893, attached and garnisheed this debt due the Ruttan Company and recovered judgment thereon; and in that action this debt was condemned and paid to Taylor under the order of the court. Plaintiff, not denying this, alleges that defendant had notice that the Ruttan Company had assigned this debt to plaintiff before the attachment proceeding, and garnishment was served on the defendant; and this is the only question presented by the appeal for determination.

W. A. Guthrie was a member and chairman of the school committee, and he and O. F. Tomlinson and C. C. Taylor composed the building committee and made the contract with the Ruttan Company, out of which this indebtedness arose. The plaintiff offered in evidence the *239 following assignment, endorsed upon the contract: "Anniston, Ala., 11 August, 1892. For value received, we hereby transfer and assign the within contract to the Anniston National Bank." (Signed by the Ruttan Company.) The plaintiff, for the purpose of showing notice of the assignment, introduced in evidence the following letter, dated at Anniston, 28 September, 1892, and addressed to W. A. Guthrie, Durham, N.C.: "Dear Sir: We have received your statement, showing a balance still due on our contract with the graded school committee of $331.11, and our superintendent writes us you do not wish to pay that until cold weather. This would be satisfactory to us, but we have assigned the balance to our bank here, with the statement that it would be due on our completing our work. Now, if you desire to retain this amount till cold weather, and will pay 8 per cent interest on the same from date of completion till paid — say not later than 15 November — we can probably arrange with them to hold it till then. Our superintendent (Mr. Stapel) states that he gave your committee a test which ought to satisfy them, and that (386) they were much pleased. The writer begs to thank you for all assistance you have rendered us, and hopes that you will look at this matter fairly and not make us pay interest for money which is due us. We hope to soon be `out of the woods.' With kind regards of the writer," etc. (Signed by Ruttan Manufacturing Company, South; M. W. Hammond, secretary and treasurer.)

This letter was a part of a correspondence between the Ruttan Company and Mr. Guthrie about the business transactions of the Ruttan Company with the defendant school committee, out of which this indebtedness grew, and in which Mr. Guthrie was informed that this debt had been assigned to the Anniston bank. This letter antedates the attachment about five months, and if it was notice to defendant the attachment is no defense, and plaintiff is entitled to recover.

The general rule is that notice to the agent is notice to the principal; and Mr. Guthrie being the agent of defendant, notice to him was notice to the defendant. Bank v. Burgwyn, 110 N.C. 267. The exception to this general rule is where the agent is acting for himself in a transaction with the principal, in which his interest is in antagonism to that of the principal. Then the presumption of knowledge does not apply, as it cannot be presumed that the agent would give information which would be against his own interest. Bank v. Burgwyn, supra, bottom of p. 274. Mr. Guthrie, in this matter, was not acting for himself in a transaction with his principal where his interest was in opposition to the interest of his principal. And the letter of 28 September, 1892, quoted in this opinion, was notice to the defendant. *240

It was contended on the argument that Mr. Guthrie, being the attorney of Taylor, had no right to communicate information (387) received by him from Taylor, it being in evidence that Taylor told him, when he retained him to bring the action and attachment proceeding, that the debt had been assigned to the plaintiff. We certainly do not intend to decide, or to say anything that can be construed as deciding, that an attorney should use or communicate to others to be used against his client any communication he had received in the confidential relation of attorney and client. Mr. Guthrie was in this case substantially the defendant, and as such, on 4 March, 1893, the day the attachment proceeding was taken out, accepted service of the same, signing his name "Wm. A. Guthrie, chairman." Whether this is a case where the confidential relation existing between attorney and client should apply, or not, we will not discuss or decide, as it is not necessary for us to do so. But his becoming Taylor's attorney in March, 1893, did not relieve him from his duty to his principal in giving them information that he had received five months before that time; nor does it relieve the defendant from the burden of the constructive notice it had through the notice given to Mr. Guthrie in September, 1892.

There is error, and the judgment of nonsuit must be set aside and a new trial awarded.

Error. New Trial.

Cited: Shields v. Durham, post, 455; Bank v. School, 121 N.C. 108;Neal v. Hardware Co., 122 N.C. 106; Britt v. Penny, 157 N.C. 114;Corporation Commission v. Bank, 164 N.C. 358; Miller v. Tel. Co.,167 N.C. 316.

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