114 Tenn. 467 | Tenn. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Complainant exhibited this bill against the defendants, Henry 0. Brown, Fred Laitenberger and Jesse Trinum, as individuals, and as a partnership using the firm name of H. C. Brown & Co., against the First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, and the Chattanooga Savings Bank. The principal object of the bill was to enjoin the Chattanooga Savings Bank against the payment of two certificates of deposit which that
“13493. Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct. 7, 1902.
“C. N. Woodworth, trustee, has deposited in this bank $994.97, payable to the order of same, twelve months after date, with interest to maturity only at the rate of four and one-half per cent, per annum, upon the return of this certificate properly indorsed. Not subject to check.
‘R. W. Bake, Cashier.”
“Chattanooga Savings Bank.
“No. 13704. Chattanooga, Tenn., March 21, 1903.
“C. N. Woodworth, trustee for Betty Ford, has de*470 posited in this bank thirteen hundred and seventy-five and fifty-five one-hundredths dollars ($1375.55), payable to the order of same twelve months after date, with interest to maturity only at the rate of four and one-half per cent, per annum upon the return of this certificate properly indorsed. Not subject to check.
“E. W. Babe, Cashier.”
The Chattanooga Savings Bank answered the bill and averred that it had issued the certificates, but had refused to pay the same, because they were not due and because it had received notice from -Betty Ford not to pay them; that it had no interest in the controversy, but was willing to pay the certificates to whomsoever the court might adjudicate they should belong.
The defendants, H. C. Brown & Co., also. answered the bill denying all of its material allegations.
The First National Bank of Nashville also answered denying all knowledge upon its part of the gambling transactions, and all knowledge of the relations between Woodworth and Betty Ford, and denied any knowledge that its codefendants had conducted any gambling establishment or rooms; denied all knowledge of the intoxication of Woodworth or of his transaction with H. C. Brown & Co. with regard to said certificates. It admitted, however, that on April 24, 1903, these certificates of deposit were presented by H. C. Brown & Co. to the First National Bank at Nashville for discount, and avers that it purchased said certificates from H. C. Brown & Co., and paid their face value in cash, and
The court of chancery appeals finds that C. N. Wood-worth, having possession of these certificates, brought them to Nashville, Tennessee, and on or about the 22nd or 23rd, or possibly the 24th or 25th of April, 1903, he went to the gambling-house located over the Climax saloon on Cherry street, in Nashville, Tennessee, and there engaged in gambling. It is shown he drank heavily and lost large sums. While thus drinking and gambling he not only lost a large amount of his own money, but he also indorsed and transferred these certificates of deposit belonging to the complainant, upon which he obtained money and chips to be used in gambling. ■ He lost and gambled away all of the money and chips so obtained except about the sum of six or seven hundred dollars, which the gamblers in charge of the place offered to repay him, but which he at the time declined.
That court further finds that H. C. Brown & Co. came into possession of these certificates, and on the 25th of April, 1903, took them to the First National Bank of Nashville, and there sold and disposed of them to the First National Bank for cash. The bank, overlooking the fact that the certificates were not due, took them for cash, as H. C. Brown & Co. were among their regu-
It further appears that when these certificates were first presented to the First National Bank they bore the indorsement of complainant C. N. Woodworth and the indorsement of H. C. Brown & Co., but at that time the First National Bank refused to take the certificates because one of them was not properly indorsed, that is to say, it was simply indorsed by C. N. Woodworth, when it should have been indorsed as it was payable on its •face, by “O. N. Woodworth, Trustee for Betty Ford.” Thereupon H. C. Brown & Co. took the certificates back and returned with them in a short time properly indorsed.
The court of chancery appeals finds as a matter of fact that this new indorsement was made by C. N. Woodworth. After the indorsement was corrected the certificates were taken back to the First National Bank and on the 25th of April, the teller of the bank bought the certificates in question from H. C. Brown or H. C. Brown & Co., paying cash therefor, overlooking the fact that the certificates were not due. The officers of the
The court of chancery appeals further finds there is no evidence in the record from which we are justified in finding that the officers of the bank had any knowledge in regard to the gambling carried on over the Climax saloon.
The court of chancery appeals finds that H. C. Brown & Co. were affected with full notice, and had knowledge of this embezzlement on the part of Mr. Woodworth and of this violation of his trust, and had full knowledge of his want of legal right and capacity to transfer this property. They must have known and did know that they were taking the certificates in violation of this trust and taking funds which Woodworth was practically embezzling. As to the First National Bank, there is no proof to show that the officers of the bank had any knowledge of these transactions, or even that H. C. Brown & Co. conducted gambling rooms over the Climax saloon, and hence the rights of the First National Bank must depend upon the facts disclosed upon, the face of the paper itself and the indorsements thereon.
As already stated, one of these certificates was paya
That court further finds that these certificates were sold and transferred by H. 0. Brown to the First National Bank of Nashville on the 25th day of April, 1903. On the 24th of April, 1903, at 7:45 a. m., O. N. Wood-worth had telegraphed the cashier of the Chattanooga Savings Bank, which had issued these certificates not to pay them. So, when the certificates were sent to Chattanooga for collection, the Chattanooga Savings Bank refused to pay them on the ground that they were not due and on the further ground that Betty Ford contested the right of the First National Bank to them. It appears, therefore, that before the First National Bank took these certificates, all the authority which C. N. Woodworth had, if any, to transfer them had been revoked by Mrs. Ford. It does not, of course appear that
The court of chancery appeals was of opinion that these certificates not being due and being made payable to O. N. Woodworth, trustee, in the one instance, and to O. N. Woodworth, trustee for Betty Ford, in the other, and so indorsed, destroyed the negotiability of the paper to the extent of giving notice that they constituted trust funds and that the purchaser must inquire into the right of the trustee to dispose of them.
We have no doubt of the correctness of the conclusion of law reached by the court of chancery appeals upon the predicate of facts found by them.
In the case of Bank v. Looney, 99 Tenn., 278, this question was considered by this court, and it was said by the chief justice, who delivered the opinion, that in a controversy between a beneficiary of a trust fund and the holder of a paper disposed of by a trustee in violation of his trust, the word “trustee,” appearing upon the face of the paper, is sufficient to put any taker upon notice. The court in that case [on page 291] referred to the authority of Duncan v. Jordan, 15 Wall., 175, in which it was held that the word “trustee” gave notice of the existence of a trust and that the party taking the paper was charged with the duty of ascertaining what, if any, restrictions were imposed upon the trustee.
The court also cited the case of Third National Bank of Baltimore v. Lange, 51 Md., 138.
This court further remarked that “The correctness of
To the same effect is Food v. Bank, decided by the court of chancery appeals, and reported in 35 L. R. A., 678, in which Judge Wilson stated as follows: “In the contest between the beneficiary of these notes (assuming that Anderson was not their real owner) and the transferee of Anderson, the fact that the notes, on their face, appeared to be payable to him as trustee would put the transferee on notice and the claims of the beneficiaries would be superior.” Alexander v. Alderson, 7 Bax., 403; Covington v. Anderson, 16 Lea, 310; Caulkins v. Gaslight Co., 85 Tenn., 684.
It is insisted, however, on behalf of the appellants that'the rule announced in Bank v. Looney, 99 Tenn., 278, and the other Tennessee cases, on this subject, has been modified and entirely superseded by what is known as the Negotiable Instruments Law, which provides in section 56 as follows: “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.”
This section of the Negotiable Instruments Law was
It is then stated in tbe opinion that tbe rule of constructive or implied notice bad been abrogated by tbe Negotiable Instruments Law, enacted in April, 1899, and what may be called tbe majority rule was adopted by tbe enactment of section 56, which bas already been quoted.
It will be observed that tbis section provides that a party “must have bad actual knowledge of tbe infirmity
In Unaka Bank v. Butler, 5 Cates, 574, the court was dealing with a check which did not carry on its face any notice of defective title, but notice of the infirmity was sought to be fixed by the surrounding facts and circumstances. It will be observed that, in the present case, each of these certificates of deposit was indorsed by O. N. Woodworth as trustee and we are of opinion that such an indorsement prima facie and presumptively fixed the purchaser with actual knowledge of want of authority in the trustee to dispose of the paper for his own benefit.
In Third National Bank v. Lange, 51 Md., 138, the note was payable to a trustee and indorsed in the same style by the trustee. The court said: “In the case of the present note, it cannot be read understandingly without seeing on its face that it is connected with a trust and is part of a trust fund. It was the duty of the bank before purchasing to have made inquiry into the rights of the trustee to dispose of it. This it wholly failed to do and, as it turned out, he was disposing of the note in fraud of his trust, the bank must suffer the consequences of the risk it assumed.”
In Show v. Spencer, 100 Mass., 382, the court in speaking of the effect of the word “trustee,” says it means trustee for someone whose name is not disclosed and there is no greater reason for assuming that a trustee is authorized to pledge for his own debt the prop
It has already been seen that one of the certificates of deposit in the case at bar was payable to C. N. Wood-worth, trustee for Betty Ford, and indorsed in the same style, but actual notice to a purchaser of the fiduciary character of a paper is no more effective in the one case than in the other.
In the case of Swift v. Smith, 102 U. S., 442, it is said: “There is nothing in the case to show that Smith’s purchase was not in good faith. There was nothing upon the note nor anything in the indorsement thereon to notify him that it did not belong to Jackson both legally and equitably. It was a mercantile paper and not due. . . . It is true that, if the bill or note be so marked on its face as tó show that it belongs to some other person than the one who offers to negotiate it, the purchaser will be presumed to have knowledge of the true owner and its purchase will not be held to be tona ■fide.”
These authorities sustain our position that the word, “trustee,” in an indorsement of this character, is express notice to a purchaser that there is a cestui que trust or beneficiary, and that his rights may not be sacrificed by the trustee in the sale or pledge of the note for his own
Now, it is-very true, as said by Mr. Perry in his work on Trusts, vol. 1, sec. 225: “The mere fact that- the word “trustee” is on the face of the securities cannot put a purchaser to any inquiry beyond ascertaining whether the trustee has power to vary the securities. If he has such power, a purchaser in good faith will be protected, although the trustee use the money for his private purposes. But, if a purchaser takes securities from a trustee, with the word “trustee” upon their face, in payment of a private debt due from the trustee, the sale may be avoided by the cestui que trust, or the purchaser may be held as trustee.”
As stated in Bank v. Looney, 99 Tenn., 278, supra, the rule is that he who takes a security from a trastee with the fiduciary character displayed upon its face, is bound to inquire of his right to dispose of it, but if upon inquiry it is found that there is no restriction upon the trustee’s power of disposition, or it may be added, there is nothing in the nature of the transaction to indicate any abuse of his trust, then the title of a purchaser in good faith for value and before maturity will be protected.
It appears that our Negotiable Instruments Law is a substantial reproduction of a similar law enacted by the State of New York in the year 1896. In the year 1903 with that law' on the statute books, the court of appeals
Again in West Virginia, where a Negotiable Instrument Law similar to our own prevails, the supreme court of that State, held, in the case of Hazeltine v. Keenan, 54 W. Va., 600, that a negotiable note, payable on its face to a payee, with the word “attorney” suffixed to his name, indicates an interest in other parties and puts the purchaser upon inquiry as to their rights and the right of the payee to sell the note.
In addition to all this the certificates show on their face that they bear interest to maturity only at the rate of four and one-half per cent per annum, and further that they are not subject to check, but are interest bearing certificates of deposit. It further appears that they are time certificates of deposit, one of them having al
All these facts disclosed on the face of the paper, including the express indorsement of C. N. Woodworth, trustee, etc., gave actual notice to the bank that this paper represented a trust fund and obliged the bank to inquire into the right of the trustee to dispose of it. If the bank had made such inquiry is could easily have ascertained that the paper had been embezzled and the money lost in a gamgling transaction by the trustee; and further the bank would have discovered that, before the paper had been purchased by it, all right and authority of the trustee to act had been withdrawn.
We are therefore of opinion that the indorsements and recitals of these certificates communicated actual knowledge to the bank that they represented, a trust fund and, even under the Negotiable Instruments Act, no title was acquired by the bank to the paper.