149 N.Y.S. 986 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The question involved was whether plaintiff was the holder of the promissory note for $2,500 in suit, in good faith and without notice of any infirmity. The maker of the note was the defendant, William S. Tevis, residing at Bakersfield, Cal. Defendant’s story is that one Charíés W. French represented to him that it was necessary to have $25,000 in order to bring about the promotion of a railroad from Bakersfield to the coast; that he already had arranged for most of the right of way, had the surveys made and reports compiled showing the probable business in
“I hand you herewith promissory notes as follows: 20 notes for $5,000.00 each, being numbers 211 to 230 both numbers' inclusive, dated San Francisco, California, February 15th, 1909, payable 6 months from date with interest at 6% perannum from maturity, payable at the National Bank of Los Angeles; also 20 notes for $2,500.00 each, being numbers 231 to 250 both numbers inclusive dated San Francisco, California, February 15th, 1909, payable 6 months from date, with interest at 6% per annum, payable at the National Bank of California, Los Angeles, being duly signed and twice endorsed.'
*317 “ Title of these notes is vested in you [you is in pen over typewritten me and Tevis swears that that alteration was made without his knowledge and after the letter had been sent to and received by French] and you are authorized to dispose of them in accordance with our understanding. These notes are executed by me and twice endorsed with the understanding that they are to be paid upon the date they are due, to-wit, the 15th day of August, 1909. On or before that day I will provide at the National Bank of California in Los Angeles a sum sufficient to redeem all of them. In other words I will deposit with the bank the sum of $150,000.00 with instructions to pay these notes upon presentation.”
The form of the note in suit is as follows:
“ $2500. San Francisco, Cal., Feb. 15, 1909.
“ Six months after date (without grace) I promise to pay to the order of myself Twenty-five hundred dollars for value received with interest at six (6) per cent, per annum from maturity until paid, both principal and interest payable only in United States gold coin.
11 (Signed) WILLIAM S. TEVIS.
“Payable at Natl. Bank of California, Los Angeles. .No. 239. Due Aug. 15, 1909.”
On its back was the following:
“For value received I, William S. Tevis, hereby waive presentment, demand, notice, protest and notice of protest and guarantee the payment t>f this note at maturity.
“ (Signed) WILLIAM S. TEVIS.”
Tevis’ story, confirmed by a large number of letters and telegrams and corroborated by testimony of others, is that French, having obtained possession of these $150,000 worth of notes upon the distinct representation that he had arranged for their discount and upon the precise promise that they should be discounted in Chicago and that $125,000 raised thereon should be immediately put to Tevis’ credit in the National Bank of California at Los Angeles, deceived him completely; that French had not made any arrangements for the discount of the notes before their receipt; that he never did transmit any credit to
Admitting that the burden of proof had been shifted so that plaintiff was required to show his bona fides, Coffin testified, in rebuttal, in substance as follows:
In 1907 he was president of the Beaver National Bank of New York city. French came to him and asked him to go to the Pacific coast to interview certain wealthy men who were interested in underwriting a concern to be organized in the steel industry, and he mentioned particularly Tevis and General Otis. “ I don’t recall that he told me specifically what Mr. Tevis’s interest was; he only said that he was a very wealthy man and like General Otis and others, he was interested * * * in the development of this enterprise. ” Coffin went west with him, met a number of people', investigated the question of the railroad and visited Tevis at his residence in Bakersfield. “Mr. Tevis said he was a joint owner in this
Before he went on the trip they had no agreement, but French told him that his “compensation would be made satisfactory, and at Los Angeles, before I started back, * * * he said I would receive $1,000.” After they returned the panic occurred and everything was then dropped. So far, then, as this first trip in 1907 is concerned, there is no ground whatever for coupling Tevis with Coffin. At that time French had no contractual or agency relations whatever with Tevis. He was approaching Tevis in the hope of getting him interested as a possible underwriter of a scheme he was devising. Coffin’s employment was solely by French and for French’s benefit.
“Q. Did he say anything about what you would get out of the discounting ? - A. No, he did not. He may have referred to that thousand dollars that was due me; I cannot recall that now. ”
He testified he did not help French to discount any of those notes; that is, he did not succeed in discounting any; that he was present at a meeting of the Windsor Trust Company about the first of May with Mr. French and Mr. Rambaut; that he was invited to be present to tell what he “knew about Mr. Tevis’s financial worth and what he told me two years before.” They were conferring with the president of the trust company about the discount of those notes. The proposition was before the Windsor Trust Company to discount those notes of $150,000 of Mr. Tevis. He also went to a private banker on Wall street to know whether he would discount them. That he read the words in the letter, Exhibit 2, “dispose of them in accordance with our understanding, ” and that he could not recall whether he asked Mr. French what the understanding was or not. That Mr. French did not tell him he was the owner of the notes, only what was in the letter.
“Q. Well, did you in going there [referring to the Windsor Trust Company] believe that you were going there in Mr. Tevis’s interest ? A. Certainly I did, so far as it was advancing the Windsor Trust Company-. Q. To enable him to get the money on those notes, wasn’t that it ? A. Yes, and the underwriting that the Trust Company was considering. Q. Oh, and that too? A. Yes.”
He also testified that French asked him if he would make another trip to the Pacific coast to see these parties again and other parties that were interested in the development of this enterprise. French said he would pay his expenses and would give him a note for $2,500 in payment of the $1,000 due for the first trip and to pay for the services on the second trip.
It is quite clear that Coffin was employed by French to go upon this second trip, as he had been employed by bim to go upon the first trip in 1907, for the benefit of French in the prosecution of the scheme or enterprise which French was attempting to put through, and that he was not, and did not claim to be, either directly or indirectly employed by Tevis for that purpose. Whatever claim he had, therefore, was against French. When he received the note in suit he took it, not in payment of any services he had rendered to Tevis or at his request, but for services rendered to French and at his request.
Knowing all this, he took one of the notes of this set three months after its date and with three months yet to run, not by way of discount, not in the ordinary course of business, but from a man who he knew was the agent of the maker of the note, for the purpose of getting them discounted, in payment of services rendered two years before to that agent individually and for services to be rendered thereafter to him. The whole transaction was of such a character that it seems to us that, not only was the plaintiff put upon notice, but that he must have known and did know that in giving him said note French was diverting it and that he was being paid a personal debt due from the agent by the paper of his principal which had been intrusted to him solely for that principal’s use and benefit.
Everything in this record tends to show that French was the principal in this whole scheme of western development, and that Tevis, at best, was a prospective underwriter in case the scheme materialized.
Section 91 of the Negotible Instruments Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 38; Laws of 1909, chap. 43) provides: “ A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: * * * 3. That he took it in good faith and for value; 4. 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 95 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
It seems to us that, within those statutory provisions, the plaintiff cannot be considered to be the holder in due course. Where an agent or other fiduciary uses the property or funds of his beneficiary to pay his own debt, the person taking the same with notice of the agent’s personal interest acts at his peril.
In Gerard v. McCormick (130 Y. Y. 261) an agent paid a personal debt with a check signed as agent. In affirming a judgment in favor of the principal against the person who had received said payment, the court said: “A person who'knowingly receives the money or property of a principal from an agent in payment of the latter’s debt, does so at his peril; and if the agent acted without authority, the principal may, on proof of these facts, recover his money,” and held that the form of the signature to the check was sufficient to put the defendant upon inquiry.
In Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Forty-second St. & Grand St. Ferry R. R. Co. (139 N. Y. 146, 151) the court said: “It is an old doctrine, from which there has never been any departure-, that an agent cannot bind his principal, even in matters touching his agency, where he is known to be acting for himself, or to have an adverse interest.”
In Rochester & C. T. R. Co. v. Paviour (164 N. Y. 281), where corporate checks were given by the treasurer in payment of his individual liability, the court said: “If the defendant knew or believed, or had good reason to believe, that, in giving the checks, Briggs was appropriating the money of the plaintiff to the payment of his own debt, or one that he treated as his own, • he had no right to accept them without inquiry. While he.was not bound to be on the watch for facts which would put a very cautious man on his guard, he was bound to act in good faith. * * * Even if his actual good faith is not questioned, if the facts known to him should have led him to inquire, and by inquiry he would have discovered the real situation, in a commercial sense he acted in bad faith and the law will withhold from him the protection that it would other
In Ward v. City Trust Co. (192 N. Y. 61) it was held that the form of the check g-ave notice that a private liability was being paid by corporation funds. The court said: “ The effect of such notice was to put the trust company upon inquiry to see whether it was about to accept money from one to whom it did not belong in payment of its own claim.”
The case at bar seems to us to present stronger evidence of notice than in those cited, where it depended upon the form of a signature to establish the agency. Here the agency was known and admitted, and the principles above laid down are all the more applicable.
It follows that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.