67 P. 1036 | Cal. | 1902
This action was founded on two promissory notes made by defendant to his own order, indorsed by him to the Riverside Banking Company, and upon the same day indorsed by the bank to the respondent, who was its cashier. No question arises over the making or indorsing of the notes by appellant, nor over the pleaded fact of nonpayment, but defendant, by way of counterclaim, urged as offset certain certificates of deposit of the Riverside Banking Company, which had been assigned to him before the commencement of the action for a valuable consideration. In *598 this connection appellant insists that the respondent, as cashier, had no right to indorse the notes to herself without a special authority from the directors of the bank; that the bank was therefore still the owner of the notes, and, as a consequence, that he has a right to set off the certificates of deposit against the amount of the indebtedness evidenced by his paper. The bank, it is stipulated, went into insolvency on or about the 1st of December, 1895, and has been insolvent ever since. The defendant purchased the certificates of deposit of this insolvent institution after the insolvency, and purchased them to use as an offset to his notes. It was nearly four years after the insolvency of the bank before defendant purchased the certificates.
That the defendant in such an action as this may not urge as a set-off against the debt which he owes to the defunct bank claims against that bank which he has bought since its insolvency, is not here and cannot be seriously questioned. (Conroy v. Dunlap,
As the set-off which appellant sought to urge against his notes was therefore not available to him under any aspect of the case, it becomes immaterial to consider the question of the validity and sufficiency of the indorsements made by the cashier to herself. It is sufficient to say that the general rule is, that, in the absence of mala fides, which is not here urged, plaintiff's prima facie title from possession may not *599
be rebutted by the debtor by evidence that the title is in some other party, so long as he is protected against the claim of such party by the payment of the judgment which may be rendered against him. (Giselman v. Starr,
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.