170 P. 419 | Cal. | 1918
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action upon a promissory note executed by the defendants and transferred to the plaintiff's assignor before maturity. The answer of the defendants admitted the execution of the note, but proceeded to set forth that in the making and delivery thereof to the persons by whom it was transferred to the assignor of plaintiff they were misled by certain false and fraudulent misrepresentations as to the present and prospective value of the stock of a certain corporation known as The Western Underwriting and Mortgage Company, in which stock they were thus induced to invest, giving the note in question as a portion of its purchase price. Upon the issues thus tendered the cause came on for trial before a jury. The plaintiff produced the note with evidence showing its transfer to plaintiff's assignor before maturity in the regular course of business at a discount amounting to one per cent per annum upon the rate of interest specified in the note, and that the plaintiff's assignor issued in payment therefor its negotiable certificate of deposit for the full value of said note payable six months after date, which said certificate of deposit, after passing through the hands of several indorsees, had been paid when due. The defendants, on their behalf, offered proof to sustain the alleged infirmities attending the execution and delivery of the note, and also as to the worthlessness of the stock for the purchase of which it had been given. At the conclusion of the trial the plaintiff moved the court for a directed verdict, in its favor, upon the ground that the uncontradicted evidence in the case showed that the plaintiff's *258 assignor was an innocent purchaser of the note for value before maturity and without notice of any equities in favor of its makers. The court granted said motion and the jury returned a verdict in plaintiff's favor in response to said direction, and from the judgment thereupon rendered and entered the defendants prosecute this appeal.
In the briefs of counsel for appellant much space is devoted to a review of the evidence presented at the trial in support of their conclusions as to the infirmities attending the making of the note in question, and as to certain alleged errors of the trial court in the admission or rejection of evidence touching these infirmities; but in view of the order of the trial court directing a verdict in plaintiff's favor upon the sole ground that according to the undisputed evidence it was the assignee of an innocent purchaser of said note before maturity for value and without notice of the defendants' equities, these alleged errors of the trial court became immaterial, unless it shall first be determined that its said order was erroneous, and this, therefore, is the only material issue before us upon this appeal.
On behalf of the appellants it is contended that in addition to showing that the plaintiff's assignor had become the purchaser of said negotiable note in the usual course of business for value, the plaintiff was further bound to affirmatively show that its said assignor had taken said note without notice of the defendants' equities; or, in other words, that the defendants having offered evidence tending to prove that they had been induced to make and deliver said note through such fraudulent representations on the part of the original holders thereof as would have sufficed to have defeated the same in the hands of others than innocent holders thereof, they had by such proofs cast upon the plaintiff the burden of proving that its assignor took the same without notice; and that the plaintiff had not tendered sufficient proofs to sustain the burden when, at the conclusion of the evidence, the court made its order directing a verdict in its favor. The chief authority upon which the appellant relies in support of this contention is the case of Union Collection Co.
v. Buckman,
*261 [35 P. 873], as above set forth. We are further of the opinion that there is no real conflict between the cases ofEames v. Crosier, and of Union Collection Co. v. Buckman. The rule requiring bona fides on the part of purchasers of negotiable paper subject to such infirmities as were shown to have existed in the making of the instrument herein sued upon is correctly stated in both of these cases. In the latter case the court contented itself with the general statement of the rule which, it may be noted, it was not required by the facts of that case to do; while in the former case the court went further to the extent of stating just what proof would suffice to sustain the holder's burden of showing his bona fides in the transaction, and at what point the burden of proving that the plaintiff, or his assignor, had actual notice of the original infirmities of the note would be shifted to the defendant. We are satisfied from a careful examination of the record before us that the uncontradicted evidence before the trial court in this case at the time its order directing the jury to render a verdict in plaintiff's favor was made showed that the plaintiff's assignor had purchased the note in question in good faith, before maturity, in the usual course of business, for full value; and that there was no evidence showing, or tending to show, that the note was purchased by the plaintiff's assignor, or taken under circumstances which would give rise to the presumption that plaintiff knew, or should have known, the facts impeaching its validity. Such being the state of the case we are constrained to hold the trial court committed no error in directing a verdict in plaintiff's favor herein. This view removes from our consideration the questions which the appellants present as to any errors which the trial court may or may not have made in the admission or rejection of evidence touching the infirmities of the original transaction.
No other questions being presented for our consideration the judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., and Sloss, J., concurred. *262