The First National Bank of Florida, as a corporation under the laws of the United States, instituted a separate suit in assumpsit in the Circuit Court of St. Johns county against each of the four several appellants, P. S. Arnau, E. M. Alba, B. Joseph and Albert Meyerson. All four of the cases were referred by agreement of the parties to a referee for trial, and all four of the cases resulted in a judgment in favor of the bank, as plaintiff, against the said several defendants, and from each several judgment the appellants have each taken their respective appeal.
The pleadings, evidence, exceptions taken and assignments of error upon appeal are identically the same in all four of the cases, with the exception of a difieren ce in the amounts and dates of the notes sued upon in the several cases. The four causes have been submitted together by agreemgnt upon one brief, and
The declaration in each case, taking the one in the-case against the appellant Meyerson as the example, with the exception of the difference in amounts and dates of the notes sued on in each, was as follows: “The First National Bank of Florida, a body corporate under and by virtue of the laws of the United States of America, plaintiff, by John E. Hartridge, its. attorney, sues Albert Meyerson, defendant: For that on the 9th day of June, A. D. 1890, the defendant, Albert Meyerson, by his promissory note, now overdue, promised to pay to the order of George W. Gibbs, manager, five hundred dollars ($500), six months after date, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, until paid; and the said George W. Gibbs, manager, endorsed said note to the plaintiff, and the said note was duly presented for payment, but the defendant did not pay same. And in the like sum for protest fees paid out by the plaintiff. And in the like sum for money paid by plaintiff for the defendant at his request. And in the like sum for interest on divers, sums of money, before that time forborne by the plaintiff to the defendant at his request, for divers spaces of time before then elapsed. And the plaintiff claims damage in the sum of $800.” Attached to each declaration was a copy of the note sued upon in-each case-respectively, differing in amounts and in dates by a few days, but in all other material respects as follows:
“St. Augustine, Fla., June 9th, 1890.
$500. Six months after date I promise to pay to the-order of Geo. W. Gibbs, manager, five hundred dollars, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per*401 annum until paid, for value received; negotiable and payable at the St. Johns County Savings Bank and Real Estate Exchange, of St. Augustine, Fla.; and if not paid at maturity, this note may be placed in the hands of an attorney-at-law for collection, and, in that' event, it is agreed and promised by the makers and endorsers severally to pay an additional sum of-dollars for attorney’s fees. (Signed) Albert Meyerson.” Endorsed on face by George W. Gibbs, manager.
To the declaration in each case the following pleas were interposed: 1st. For a first plea the defendant says that he did not make and execute the said promissory note in the said declaration mentioned. 2d. For a second plea, and as to the second, third and fourth counts of the plaintiff’s declaration, says he never was indebted as in said declaration alleged. 3d. For a third plea, and a defense on equitable grounds, the defendant says that without any consideration whatever he made and delivered to George W. Gibbs for the express purpose of buying United States bonds to establish a national bank in St. Augustine, and for no other purpose, a certain promissory note dated the 9th day of June, A. D. 1890, for the sum of $500, payable to the order of George W. Gibbs, manager; that plaintiff received from said George W. Gibbs in payment of an antecedent debt due from said Gibbs to said plaintiff the said paper writing upon which this suit is brought which is set out by a copy thereof attached to this declaration and purporting to be the promissory note of this defendant, the same which was given by this defendant to said George W. Gibbs upon trust, and which, after an alteration had been made therein, said George W. Gibbs, in breach of faith, so sold to said plaintiff. 4th. And for a fourth
To the third plea above the plaintiff demurred upon the grounds: 1st. That the said plea does not, if true, afford any defense to the defendant in this case. 2d. Because said third plea does not, if true, show that the plaintiff herein was in any way a party to or connected with the transaction sought to be set up in said third plea, or had notice thereof. Upon all the other
The second and third assignments of error are the refusals of the referee to permit the following questions to be propounded to the plaintiff’s witness, George W. Gibbs, upon cross-examination: “Whether or not upon the day upon which this assignment was made you said in the presence of A. Meyerson, Mr. Sulzner and Dr. Alba, at the meeting upon that day, in answer to a question from Mr. Meyerson, as follows: ‘Did you not know that this bank was insolvent at the time referred to,’ the time at which these notes were discounted, you answered ‘yes’.” “Did you at the same time, and in the presence of the said gentlemen, in answer to the next question propounded by Mr. Meyerson: ‘Why in h — —1 did you put our money in there,’ say I did it to tide this bank over; I expected to be able to save this bank, and carry on the other besides’?” The objection to both of these questions was, that they were irrelevant. The objections were well taken, and there was no error in excluding the questions. The proof showed that the note sued upon in each case was negotiable and payable six months after their respective dates. That they were all made
The fourth assignment of error is the exclusion by the referee of the following question to the same witness upon cross-examination: “This (the note) is dated June the 9th, and the assignment of the St. Johns ■County Savings Bank and Real Estate Exchange was •some time in September; did the defendant at any time between June and September make any complaint to you of the delay in establishing the Ponce ■de Leon National Bank, upon the ground that he paid interest upon his promissory note?” The objection sustained to the question was because of its irrelevancy. There was no error in the exclusion of this question. So far as the plaintiff was concerned as the innocent purchaser without notice before maturinty of the defendant’s negotiable promissory note, it could make no possible difference in law what were the subsequent complaints or bickerings between the defendant and the original payee named in said notes as to the consummation of the purposes for which said notes were given, and to which the plaintiff was in no way a party.
The exclusion by the referee of the following questions to the defendants in each of said causes are assigned as the fifth, seventh and eighth errors: “Did Mr. Gibbs ever tell you that he did not need the money
The ninth assignment of error is the exclusion by the referee of the following question propounded on behalf of the defendant in each of said causes to one G. A. Crocker, a witness for the'defendants, who-had testified that he was a book-keeper, and that after the assignment of the firm of Gibbs, Hopkins and.
The tenth assignment of error is the exclusion by the referee of the following question propounded on behalf of the defense to the plaintiff’s witness George W. Gibbs on cross-examination: “At the time you made this explanation did you not know that the St. Johns County Savings Bank was insolvent then?” The question was objected to on the ground of impertinence and irrelevancy. There was no error in this ruling. The witness had just detailed that when these notes were made to him he had explained to the makers that there would be no interest for them to pay on the notes, as he or his bank would pay the interest accruing thereon. How these explanations or promises between the makers of the notes and the original payee therein, or the solvency or insolvency of the payee’s private bank can effect the liability of the defendants to pay their negotiable notes in the hands of an innocent endorsee thereof without notice, and before maturity, who is not shown to be a party to, or to have any knowledge of, any of the mala fldes of the payee of said notes while acting as the trusted agent of the makers thereof, we can not and do not see.
The eleventh assignment of error, the overruling of the defendant’s motion for new trial, involves and includes the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth assignments of error, the motion for new trial being upon the grounds that the judgment of the referee was contrary to the evidence and to the weight of the evidence, and contrary to the law of the case, and because there are no findings of the referee pre
It is contended that the proofs show that the plaintiff took said notes in payment of an antecedent debt due it by Gibb’s banking firm, and that it did not pay out any money therefor, and that its knowledge of the purpose for which said notes were given rendered this a fraud on defendants, and stripped the plaintiff of the character of an innocent holder without notice. There is no proof even tending to prove the conclusion upon which this contention is based; on the contrary, the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff’s cashier is pointed and positive that the notes sued upon were not taken for any antecedent debt due the plaintiff by Gibbs or his firm; but, on the contrary, that all but a small amount of the proceeds of its purchase of said notes was paid over upon the checks of Gibbs. It is further contended that there was no proof that the notes sued upon were endorsed to the plaintiff. There is no merit in this contention. Each note introduced in evidence showed the endorsement on its face of the-payee Gibbs, and though this was in blank, no question was raised as to the genuineness of his signature-of endorsement thereon, and the proof is abundant that he delivered them to the bank endorsed by him as they appeared in proof, and that the bank paid him for them; but besides this there is no issue raised as. to the alleged fact of endorsement, either by plea, or at the trial when the notes were offered; but, on the con
It is contended further that the judgment should be reversed because “there are no findings preceding or connected with the judgment of the referee.” In the record in each of said causes we find a formal set of “findings” signed by the referee and dated on the same day with the formal judgment rendered by him in each cause. Th9-, judgment in each cause was dated July 14th, 1891, and was filed in the clerk’s office July 15th, 1891. The referee’s findings were dated with the judgments on July 14th, but do not appear to have been filed in the clerk’s office until Jnly 27th, on which latter date the defendant’s motion for new trial was also overruled. Section 4, p. 858 McClellan’s Digest, in force when these causes were tried, does not undertake to direct or dictate when the referee who tries a cause shall file his findings and judgment in the clerk’s office, but directs that whenever he does file them he shall give notice of such filing to the respective parties; and, from the date of such notice, the parties were allowed ten days in which to make a motion for new trial or in arrest of judgment. In construing the effect of this statute in Stewart vs. Mathews, 19 Fla. 752, it was held by this court that the parties were not prejudiced by the judgment or report of the referee until such notice had teen given, and that until the lapse of ten days from the giving of such notice by the referee his judgment did not become the judgment of the Circuit Court for execution. Under this construction of the statute, that we entirely adhere to, it was the right of the defendants in these causes to have waited until the referee gave them notice of the filing in the clerk’s office of his findings and judgment before making their motions
It is further contended that the judgment of the referee is inconsistent with and contradictory to the findings of the referee. There is no foundation in fact for this contention. We are unable to discover any
Finding no errors in the judgments appealed from, the said judgments in each of the said four causes are-hereby affirmed.
