95 So. 445 | Miss. | 1922

Sykes, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant bank sued appellees upon their promissory note. The appellees pleaded failure of consideration, a violation of the so-called Blue Sky Laws of this state, and that the appellant bank was not an innocent purchaser for value. Mr. Forgéy, president of the bank, testified that he bought the note for the bank, at the bank, for a valuable consideration before maturity, and that he knew nothing about the consideration of the note. The note is dated February 11, 1920, and is made payable to Barney Thompson or order. Mr. Forgey was asked on examination if he did not know that the note Avas given in payment for some stock in a zinc mine, a Tennessee corporation; that Thompson had sold certain shares of stock in this mine to the appellees, Avhieh stock Avas to be issued by the corporation. This witness denied all knowledge of the consideration of the note and all knowledge of the fact that he lcneAv Thompson was selling any stock of this corporation. The Avitness further testified that he was acting within his duties as president of the bank in the purchase of this note.

One of the appellees testified that Thompson came to his house and agreed to procure for him from the zinc company a certain number of shares of stock for which this note was executed. The amount of the note represented, according to this Avitness, the par value of the shares of stock. The AAdtness testified that he knew some of the stock of this corporation Avhieh had been previously issued to individuals was being sold for one-half its par value; that Avliat he wanted was stock issued in his name by the company; that Thompson told him the reason he would have to pay *332par for the stock issued by the company was because he (Thompson) would have to pay the company this amount for the stock. This witness then, in a rather vague and indefinite way, stated a conversation alleged to have taken place between him and Thompson about Mr. Forgey and some one else. This conversation was not objected to by the appellant. The purport of this testimony was in effect that Thompson and Forgey were partners; that they divided the money from notes collected by them for purchase of this stock; that a man by the name of Mitchell was also a partner. This witness further stated that, .when Mr. Forgey came to Clarksdale to try and collect this note, Forgey told him that the reason they sent him stock issued to some other individual was in order to evade the so-called Blue Sky Laws of Mississippi.

The uncontradicted testimony showed that Thompson agreed to sell him one kind of stock in this concern, but sent him stock of a different character, which, of course, showed a failure of consideration.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, upon which judgment was entered, and from which judgment the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

On behalf of the defendant the following two instructions were given:

“The court instructs the jury for the defendant that the burden of proof in this case is upon the plaintiff to show that it is the bona-fide holder for value of said note in question, and if you believe from the evidence in the case that Mr. Forgey, president of the First National Bank of Morristown, at the time he claims to have purchased said note for said bank, knew that said note was given in payment of shares of stock in the Southern Exploration Company and knew and had reason to believe that said stock was worthless, and further knew that said stock was issued in the name of some individual other than .defendant herein, in order to defeat the laws of the state of Mississippi, then you will find for the defendant.
*333“No. 2. The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that Mr. Forgey, as president of the plaintiff’s bank knew that the defendant did not receive the stock which they contracted to buy, and knew that the stock of the Southern Exploration Company was not to be issued to defendant as purchasers thereof by said company, but that the stock of some individual was in fact to be delivered to defendants on their purchase, and knew such facts at the time he purchased the note sued on, you will find for the defendant.”

All instructions requested by the plaintiff in the lower court were refused. Among others, this instruction was refused the plaintiff:

“The court charges the jury that a purchaser for value in due course of business, and who has no notice as to the existence of any defense existing between the parties to;the note, takes the note free from these defenses, and it is immaterial what defense the maker of the note had against the person to whom the note was made payable; and in this case even the jury may believe that Leeton Bros., having a defense as against the original holder of the note, the payee, they must still find for the plaintiff, if they further believe from a preponderance of the evidence that at the time it bought the note it had no notice of any such defense.”

The plaintiff was also refused a peremptory instruction.

The first question presented by this appeal is whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to a peremptory instruction. It is earnestly insisted by appellant’s counsel that the testimony of the defendants shows in effect that when the president of this bank purchased this note he was in fact a paid owner of the note; that he knew there had been a total failure of consideration for the execution of the note, and for his own personal interest by purchasing the note for the bank he was not acting as the agent for the bank, but was in pursuit of his own fraudulent purposes to defraud either the bank or the defendants; that the principal is only chargeable with a notice of that knowledge of the agent, which knowledge it will be- presumed the *334agent will communicate to his principal; that it is never presumed that an agent will communicate to his principal his purpose to defraud either that principal or some one else.

The president of the bank, Mr. Forgey. testified that he was authorized by the bank to purchase notes. Under his testimony he knew nothing whatever for what the note was given, was in no wise concerned in the zinc company, nor a partner in any way with Thompson and Mitchell.

Pretermitting all questions as to the admissibility of the testimony of the defendants, from it the jury were authorized to believe that Forgey, Mitchell, and Thompson were partners in the ownership of this note; that it was their intention and purpose to have the bank purchase the note through Forgey, its president, and thereby defraud either the bank or the makers of the note. The note was indorsed by Mitchell and sold by him to the bank which acted through its president, Forgey, in the purchase of the note.

Counsel for appellant has called our attention to many authorities, some of which apparently sustained his contention, but which upon closer investigation are not in point; while others in point of fact do sustain this conten - tention. There are other authorities, however, to the contrary. The express question here in issue has not heretofore been decided by this court. * {-

One of the well-known exceptions to the rule that notice to an agent is notice to the principal is that where an agent has been guilty of an actual fraud contrived and carried out for his own benefit,' by which he intended to defraud and did defraud his own principal as well as perhaps the other party, and the very perpetration of such fraud involved the necessity of his concealing the facts from his own client, then, under such circumstances, the principal is not charged with constructive notice of facts known by the attorney and thus fraudulently concealed. 2.Pomeroy’s Equity, section 675. In a note to this text on page 1360, this distinguished author states that — “Whether this ex*335ception can apply to directors, presidents, and other managing officers of a corporation through whom alone a corporation can act may, I think, be doubtful” — citing authorities which hold banks liable under these conditions.

There are a great many cases to be found to the effect that, where an agent represents two principals and concocts a scheme to defraud one of them for the benefit of the other, it will be presumed that he did net disclose to the principal he intended to cheat the means by which he sought to effect his purpose, and consequently that the principal was not charged with this fraudulent intent or notice. A case along this line is that of Gunster v. Power Co., 181 Pa. 327, 37 Atl. 550, 59 Am. St. Rep. 650.

In the instant case the president of the appellant bank was not the agent of any one except the bank. He did not act for his alleged copartners. Mitchell was representing the owners of the note, and Forgey the bank, in the nego-. tiations for its purchase. In this case the ones to be defrauded were either, first, the makers of the note, the defendants in this case, or second, the bank. Forgey was not the agent of the defendants.

In the case of Lilly v. Bank, 102 C. C. A. 1, 178 Fed. 53, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 558, the general principles here involved are fully discussed. In that case one of the directors of the bank offered a note in the directors’ meeting for discount, but during the consideration of the question by the other directors he withdrew from the meeting. Under a number of decisions of other courts it has been held that in this instance, where the director does not participate in the question of the acceptance of the note, then he is not acting for the bank, but is dealing with the bank as a stranger. There is a well-considered note discussing the authorities to this case.

In the case of Scott County Milling Co. v. Powers, 112 Miss. 798, 73 So. 792, the facts in that case show that the agent was representing two principals. It will also be noticed from the facts which are stated in the opinion that he ordered the flour as the agent of the Harding Door *336Company from the milling company. In that case it was held that the milling company was not charged with his knowledge. In the case of Cooper v. Robinson Investment Co., 117 Miss. 108, 77 So. 953, it was held that a bank which secured a deed from its president in settlement of a debt due by him to the bank was not chargeable with the president’s knowledge of a prior unrecorded deed. In making this deed to the bank its president was not acting for the bank, but for hiihself individually. Neither of these Mississippi cases is in point.

In this case the highest officer of the bank, its president, purchased the note for the bank. If the knowledge possessed by him of the defenses to the note is not notice to the bank, then to-whom should this notice have been given? The cashier is not as high an officer as the president. A corporation must act through its officers and agents; notice to the corporation is obtained through the knowledge or notice of its officers'or agents. If any one had come to this bank for the express purpose of notifying-it that this note was not a valid obligation, they would most naturally have asked for the officer intrusted with the power of purchasing notes, and in this instance that officer would have been its president who actually purchased the note. The bank could not through him purchase this note without having notice of the knowledge actually possessed by him. These questions are very well'discussed in the case of Atlantic Cotton Mills v. Indian Orchard Mills, 147 Mass. 268, 17 N. E. 496, 9 Am. St. Rep. 698. In that case the leading authorities bearing upon this question are fully discussed. Another well-considered case sustaining our views is that of Cook v. American Tubing & Webbing Co., 65 R. I. 41, 65 Atl. 641, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 193. In this case the court quotes as follows from the case of First National Bank v. Blake (C. C.), 60 Fed. 78:

“Cornish held a promissory note as a pledge to be redelivered upon a certain contingency. He ivas president and general manager of the plaintiff bank, and, as such, dis*337counted the note for himself. The court held that the knowledge of the condition was imputable to the bank, and in accordance therewith the bank was ordered to surrender it the note. The court, after recognizing the cogency of the exception, says:
“ ‘But there is no room for the application of this principle where the agent is the sole representative of both parties in the transaction. If Cornish was the sole representative of the bank in the transaction with himself, there was no one from whom information could have been concealed or to whom it could have been communicated. If he was the sole representative of each party, each must have had equal knowledge. ‘As the representative of the bank, his knowledge was not affected by his private interests, however much his conduct may have been. He necessarily knew as much in one capacity as he did in the other. The bank is charged with the knowledge which Cornish had.’ ”

This opinion then goes on to say: “We are constrained to hold with these cases, upon grounds of public policy which require that a corporation shall be held responsible for the knovdedge Avhich is possessed by those whom it appoints to represent it. From the nature of its constitution, it can have no other knowledge than that o f its officers, and, in dealing with such officers, as with the corporation itself, third parties have a right to consider that what they know it knows. Indeed, when the presiding officer of a corporation is intrusted with the transaction of its business, with full power to bind the corporation in respect to such business, it seems more proper to call the knowledge which he has actual knowledge of the corporation rather than to say it is imputed.”

We thoroughly agree with this enunciation and that the knowledge of the president of the infirmity of the note in this case is really the knowledge of the bank itself. To the same effect is the opinion of the court in the case of First National Bank v. Burns et al., 88 Ohio St. 434, 103 N. E. 93, 49 L. R. A. (N. S.) 764. This opinion thoroughly dis- ' *338cusses the authorities, and there is a note thereto referring to other authorities.

There is also another well-recognized ride of law which impels us to hold that in this case the knowledge of the president of the hank is the bank’s knowledge, and that is that where one of two innocent persons must suffer because of the fraudulent conduct of a third person, this loss or suffering should fall upon the one who by his acts has clothed the third party with the power to commit the fraud; or, as stated in the case of Loving v. Brodie, 134 Mass. 453:

“The loss by such transactions must fall on that principal who has enabled his agent to commit the fraud.”

This, of course, is the generally recognized rule.

The court was correct in refusing the peremptory instruction asked by the plaintiff.

It is contended by the appellant that the alleged statements or omissions made by Mr. Forgey at the time he went to Clarksdale to try and collect these notes were inadmissible. These statements, however, were made about the business he was transacting in Clarksdale, and for this reason were admissible.

The court erred in refusing the sixth instruction requested by the plaintiff. This instruction merely announced the well-known rule with reference to a negotiable instrument. Unless the president of the bank had knowledge of the infirmity of the note, the bank was a purchaser for value without notice and is entitled to recover in this case and this in effect is what this instruction states.

The first instruction given the defendant is erroneous.' According, to the testimony of the defendant, there was no violation whatever of the alleged Blue Sky Law of the state. This law is contained in section 4127 et seq., Hemingway’s Code. There was no violation shown of any of the sections of this law. Under this testimony the zinc company was not attempting to increase its capital stock, nor was Thompson its agent.

*339Even if there had been a violation of this law, this would not constitute a defense to a negotiable instrument in the hands of an innocent purchaser for value without notice. The issues in this case should not have been beclouded in the instructions by reference to this law. This instruction is further erroneous because it makes some reference, to the stock in the mining company as being worthless. The testimony does not show such fact, neither does the testimony show any representations as to its actual value.

The only issue presented by this record is whether or not the bank was an innocent purchaser for value without notice of this note.

Reversed and remanded.

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