42 F. 2 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1890
This suit is upon an ancillary bill filed by complainants to restrain further proceedings upon a judgment for $500, recovered in this court by David Armstrong, receiver of the Fidelity National Bank, against the complainants, upon their promissory note dated June 9, 1887, and payable 10 months after date to the order of Moses F. Brown. The complainants set forth that they fully paid said note before its maturity to Moses F. Brown, and that Brown, with intent to defraud, failed to deliver it to them upon its payment, and transferred it to David Armstrong, as receiver of the Fidelity National Bank, as collateral security; that Armstrong, with knowledge that the note had been paid before maturity, after it had become due entered into an agreement with L. F. Brown, who had notice of the pajrment of the note, whereby he was to assume and pay the indebtedness of Moses F. Brown to the Fidelity National Bank for the payment of which the note above referred to and other notes were held by Armstrong as collateral; that it was further agreed that said
Upon the hearing it appeared from the record that, when Armstrong assumed the duties of receiver of the Fidelity National Bank, Moses F. Brown was indebted to tbe bank upon his discounted notes in the sum of $3,000; that in September, 1887, in response to tbe demand of the receiver, Moses F. Brown hypothecated as additional security for tbe payment of bis indebtedness to tbe bank, the $500 note made to him by the complainants, with other promissory notes. From time to time, by
With reference to the employment of Franks as attorney for Barhorst and wife, to defend the action upon their $500 note, the evidence is not satisfactory. The complainants themselves did not testify positively to such employment. • But it does appear that Franks looked into the case, and came to the conclusion that there was no defense, and therefore did not undertake to make any answer. It is clear that Franks was right in his view of the case. There was no defense to the action. It is true that the amount due upon the note had been paid to Moses F. Brown. That was a full acquittance as between Barhorst and wife and Moses F. Brown, but it did not affect the rights of Armstrong, to whom the note had been transferred, and, as Barhorst and wife paid the note without having it delivered up to them, they did so at the risk of having to pay it over again to Armstrong. Whether or not Franks attempted a defense to the action’upon the note is wholly immaterial. The judg-
This cause was submitted without argument. It seemed to be regarded by counsel as depending upon proof of notice and of fraud, as above referred to. But let us examine it a little more closely. That the collection of the $500 note by Moses F. Brown from Barhorst and wife was a gross fraud is not open to doubt. His statement when he received the last payment, and when the note was called for, that he had forgotten it, and left it in the city, was a false pretense as to an existing fact, which made the obtaining of that payment not only fraudulent, hut criminal, and punishable under the statutes of Ohio by imprisonment in the penitentiary. As has been already stated, the payment of the note created an equity in favor of Barhorst and wife, which entitled them to require Armstrong to resort first to the other collaterals which he held. That equity was not destroyed by the reduction of the note to judgment. Armstrong’s interest in tlie note was only to secure the principal notes. He had the right to take judgment upon the $500 note, but if the balance due on the principal note was paid without its being necessary to apply the judgment upon the $500 note, in whole or in part, the judgment would inure to the benefit of Moses F. Brown, for whom Armstrong would hold it in trust, and as against Moses F. Brown the equity of Barhorst and wife was complete.
Now, what was the transaction, so far as L. F. Brown was concerned? His contention is that he purchased the claim of the bank against Moses F. Brown. But can there be any doubt that the purchase was subject