180 Mich. 171 | Mich. | 1914
In this case Anna M. Weiss has appealed from a decree of the circuit court of Lenawee county, rendered on a bill of interpleader filed by the city of Adrian, for the purpose of protecting itself against conflicting claims of defendants, and to have determined which of them is entitled to receive the principal and interest due and to fall due on two sewer bonds for $1,000 each, issued by said city of Adrian on November 1, 1906, to bearer, and payable on the 1st day of November, 1923, with interest at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually.
The two bonds in question, numbered 99 and 100, were, at the time of issuing the series to which they belonged, purchased by Frank X. Weiss, since deceased, and by the terms of his will became the property of defendant Anna M. Weiss, his daughter-in-law. The bonds of that issue were in short and simple form, appropriate for sale to the general public; the portion material here being as follows:
“The city of Adrian, a municipal corporation, hereby promises and agrees to pay to bearer the sum of one thousand dollars, together with interest thereon at the rate of four per cent, per annum as evidenced by the annexed interest coupons.
*173 “This bond is one of a series of seventy-five thousand ($75,000) dollars bonds for public sewer purposes, said bonds being numbered from 1 to 124 inclusive.
“The same is due and payable at the city treasurer’s office of the city of Adrian on the 1st day of November, 1923.
“Pay to the bearer the amount of each of the interest coupons hereto attached, as the same shall severally become due.”
On November 1, 1910, the Whitney Central National Bank, of New Orleans, La., presented the coupons then due upon the two bonds in question to the Adrian city treasurer for payment, making claim that it was the lawful holder, in due course, of said bonds and coupons. Previous to this, the city treasurer had received two letters from defendant Anna M. Wiess claiming said bonds had been stolen from her, and requesting that, if any one presented them .for payment, they should be taken up, and the party presenting them arrested.
Payment being refused, the Whitney Central National Bank commenced an action at law against the city of Adrian in the circuit court of Lenawee county to recover the amount due on the two coupons, which had become due and payable. Complainant, declaring itself ready and willing to pay the amount due on said bonds to the proper parties, filed this bill, asking the aid of the court to determine who is entitled to demand and receive payment, and that in the meantime an injunction issue restraining further prosecution of said suit instituted against it to recover the amount of said coupons. Both defendants answered.
The Whitney Central National Bank claimed to have become the holder of said bonds and coupons in due course of business, in good faith, for value, without any notice of infirmity or defect of title in the party negotiating the same; said party being one E. C. Gray, the apparent owner, who presented said
Defendant Anna M. Weiss, answering, claimed that the bonds belonged to her, and were taken from the safe of a hotel in New Orleans at which she was a guest, without any authority from her and under such circumstances as to make the taking larceny; that she was subsequently informed the clerk or manager of said hotel took them from the safe and “put them up with the Whitney Central National Bank as collateral to his note for a loan to pay a gambling debt to one of the officers of said bank.” She also requested in her answer that the issue be tried by jury. A jury was called, but, it being subsequently agreed between counsel that the case should be heard and determined by the court, the services of the jury were dispensed with.
The testimony shows that E. C. Gray, who negotiated the bonds with defendant bank, was then manager of the De Soto Hotel in New Orleans, having assumed that position some time in June, 1910, going there from Detroit, where he had held a position in the Detroit Club. Defendant Anna M. Weiss was a resident of the city of Adrian, and quite intimately acquainted with him. She testified that she had known him for about a year before he went to New Orleans, and had joined him at the De Soto Hotel under a previous arrangement that she was to go down there and have a position as cashier; that there was an understanding between them they might some time be married, although she knew he had a wife and child living in Detroit, but he had assured her he would get a divorce from his wife; that she took her
As to the circumstances of the negotiation, it appears undisputed that on the 6th of August, 1910, Gray applied at the bank to negotiate a loan of $750, stating that he was manager of the De Soto Hotel in that city, and would give as collateral for the loan the bonds in question, which he produced. He further stated that he was related to a Mr. Smith, assistant to the president of the First National Bank of Detroit, Mich., that these bonds represented money which he had saved in the past, and, having temporary need of money, he desired to borrow, using the bonds as collateral. After examining the bonds and discussing the matter with him, the president of the bank telephoned the De Soto Hotel and ascertained that Gray was manager there, as he had represented. Relying upon the information thus obtained, believing Gray’s statements, and knowing that bonds of this character were sought after and considered desirable, as they were payable to bearer, and there were no suspicious
On the 8th of October, 1910, Gray presented to the Whitney Central National Bank a check drawn on Adrian State Savings Bank for $300, payable to bearer, and purporting to be signed by Anna Weiss. He indorsed this check, and the bank cashed it for him. The bank then forwarded the same through the usual channels to the Adrian State Savings Bank for collection, and payment was refused because the genuineness of her signature was questioned.
All officers of the bank who had anything to do with making these loans testified that they never heard or had any intimation of Gray’s gambling or of any
If, at the time Gray hypothecated the bonds which she had put into his hands, she, with her intimate acquaintance and knowledge of him, believed him honest and trusted him implicitly, as she states, she is, at least, at a disadvantage in urging that the bank
Several bank officials of Adrian testified in behalf of defendant Weiss as expert witnesses to the effect that custom and good usage in the banking business demanded greater precautions than those shown to have been taken by the defendant bank; the contention upon that proposition being stated in her counsel’s brief as follows:
“We have shown by the testimony that in the usual and ordinary course of banking business, that the appearance of a stranger in a bank with bonds such as these bonds was a circumstance in itself which has come to be recognized by bankers as a danger signal, and that good bankers in due course do not purchase or loan money to strangers upon bonds of which they have no knowledge, either as to the title or as to the value.”
In support of which is cited Smith v. Mechanics’ & Traders’ Bank, 6 La. Ann. 610. The facts in that case are not in harmony with those under consideration. There the plaintiff, a broker, discounted, without inquiry, for an entire stranger a forged bill purporting to be drawn on and accepted by a commercial house of New Orleans, and gave a check on the defendant bank payable to the order of the supposed acceptors of the bill. The broker, the bank, and the commercial house were all located in the city of New Orleans. It was held the plaintiff did not exercise due caution in taking the bill from a stranger without inquiry, and that making out his own check to the order of the supposed acceptors of the bill instead of the party to whom the bill was discounted was not in the usual course of business. Here the party presenting the bonds was ascertained to be a resident of the city, occupying a responsible business position. He
“The bonds being negotiable, the promise to pay runs to the holder, and, if he has acquired them bona fide and for value, the plaintiff’s title is gone, and the promise is satisfied by the payment to the holder according to their tenor.”
The law is well settled by abundant authority that a purchaser of stolen negotiable bonds before maturity, without fraud or bad faith, obtains good title thereto. Welch v. Sage, 47 N. Y. 143 (7 Am. Rep. 423) ; Seybel v. National Currency Bank, 54 N. Y. 288 (13 Am. Rep. 583) ; Evertson v. National Bank, 66 N. Y. 14 (23 Am. Rep. 9).
The cardinal principles upon this subject have been condensed and crystallized into statute law in many States by the uniform negotiable instrument act. This has been enacted in both Michigan (Act No. 265, Pub. Acts 1905, 2 How. Stat. [2d Ed.] § 2672) and Louisiana (Gen. Assem. Acts 1904, No. 64). The rights of the contesting parties here are to be determined by the provisions of this statute, which, however, this court has held, introduced no change in the rules relative to a holder in due course. Graham v. Smith, 155 Mich. 65 (118 N. W. 726).
It is claimed in behalf of defendant Anna Weiss that the bank failed to prove that it was “a holder in due course;” it having the burden of proof on that question under section 61 of said negotiable instrument act, which provides as follows:
“Every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated the instrument was defective, the burden is on the holder to prove that he or some person under whom he claims acquired the title as a holder in due course.”
Section 54 of said act provides:
“A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: First, that it is complete and regular upon its face; second, that he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact; third, that he took it in good faith and for value; fourth, that at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.”
Section 58 provides:
“To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument, or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.”
The numerous authorities upon a holder in due
In Jones on Corporate Bonds and Mortgages (2d Ed.), § 200, using the following language, quoted with approval by this court in Toledo, etc., R. Co. v. Peters, 177 Mich. 76 (143 N. W. 18), it is said:
“A purchaser may have had suspicion of a defect of title, or knowledge of circumstances which would excite such suspicion in the mind of a prudent man, or he may have disregarded notices of stolen bonds; and yet, if he has purchased for value in good faith, his title cannot be impeached.”
In this case the evidence is conclusive that the bank officials had no such suspicion, knowledge, or notice at the time the bonds in question were negotiated.
Testing the obligations, duties, and risks of the defendant bank by the statute and authorities cited, in the light of the facts and circumstances proven, we are constrained to hold that it is shown to have acted without bad faith, and to be the holder of said bonds “in due course.”
The result reached by the learned circuit judge is well supported by reason and authority, and his decree is affirmed.