74 Md. 591 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the appellee, as indorsee and holder, to recover the amount of a promissory note made by the appellant on the 20th of February, 1888, payable to F. N. Hook, or bearer, on or before the first of March, 1889, for $160. The note was made payable at the Union National Bank of Westminster, Md., and on failure of payment it was protested. The note itself is in ordinary form, but on the back of it there are certain printed forms of certificates or statements which have not been filled up. The purpose of one of these blank forms, it appears, was to show, when filled up, for what the note was given. The note is also indorsed in blank with the name of Francis J. Classon.
Hook, the payee of the note, was, at the time, president of the Carroll County Industrial Grain and Seed Company, and the agent who obtained the note from the defendant was a person by the name of Forney. It appears that the note was given upon an agreement on the part of the Seed Company to sell to the defendant, to be thereafter delivered, twenty bushels of hulless oats, at ten
The bond referred to in the testimony of the witnesses, and which was given to the defendant at the time he made the note sued on, is set out in the record, and is in this form:
“No. 17.
February 20, 1888.
“The Carroll County Industrial Grain and Seed Company, incorporated under the laws of Maryland, F. W. Hook, Secretary, W. A. Mikesell, Treasurer, doth hereby agree to sell 40 bushels of hulless oats for Mr. R. H. Griffith, of 7 District Montgomery County, State of Mary
(Seal of Company) F. N. Hook,
R. H. Griffith, Buyer. President. ”
The defendant then proved that he, shortly after the-date of the note and the bond, received twenty bushels of oats from the Seed Company, hut that they were in no-respect similar to the sample shown at the time of the contract. That he prepared ground "and seeded the oats,, giving them the most favorable chances for good yield, hut that the product was not more than thirty-five bushels, and that of a most inferior quality. That the oats in fact were worthless ; and that instead of being hulless. oats, they turned out to be oatless hulls,.and of no value-whatever. And this being the case, of course, there was no attempt on the part of the company to comply with the terms of its bond.
Frauds and ^deceptions of the character here complained of had become so frequent in some parts of the State that the Legislature, by the Act of 1888, chapter-415, passed only a little more than a month after the date of the note sued on, has undertaken to put a restraint upon such transactions, by bringing parties perpetrating such frauds within the purview of the penal Code. And while the provisions of that statute cannot, apply to this case, they furnish evidence of how such transactions are and have been regarded, and of the necessity of denouncing them as criminal by the law. In deciding this case, as presented on the instruction of the Court below, we must allow to the undisputed facts their full force and effect; and so treating them, no other conclusion can be drawn than that there was gross fraud per
Fraud in the inception of the note being established by incontrovertible evidence, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that the note came to him before maturity, bona fide and for value. For even though he may have paid the full face value of the note, still, if he had knowledge at the time of the fraudulent inception of the note, or of the want of consideration for the same, he would not be a bona fide holder, and could stand in no better position than the party from whom he obtained the note. This is the settled doctrine in this State, as it is elsewhere. Totten vs. Bucy, 57 Md., 446; Williams vs. Huntington, 68 Md., 591. In Stewart vs. Lansing, 104 U. S., 505, it was held by the Supreme Court, that the indorsee of negotiable paper which has a fraudulent or illegal inception must, in order to entitle him to recover thereon, prove that he is a bona fide holder thereof for value. And many other authorities to the same effect might be cited, but it is unnecessary.
Here, there is evidence to show that Classon, who obtained the note from Hook, the payee, indorsed and transferred the note to the plaintiff before its maturity. But Classon swears that he knew, at the time he obtained the note from Hook, “that it was given for hulless oats, and that said oats were worthless, and that this was the prevalent opinion in and around Westminster, where he
The note, as has been stated, was, by its terms, made payable on or before the 1st of March, 1889; and the bond to the defendant obligated the Seed Company to sell for the defendant the forty bushels of hulless oats, at ten dollars per bushel, on or before the 1st of February, 1889. And, according to the proof, the proceeds'of this sale of oats were, in part, to he applied in taking up the note.. As between the original parties to the note, and as against all who subsequently took it after maturity, or who took it by transfer before maturity with notice or knowledge of the facts of the transaction out of
Was there evidence, then, legally sufficient, that ought to have been submitted to the jury, from which they could have found that there was notice on the part of the plaintiff, at the time of obtaining the note, of the want of consideration, or of fraud in its inception? We think there was such evidence, and that there was error in not submitting it to the jury.
The plaintiff" admits that he knew of the Seed Company, and of its dealing in hulless oats; though he swears that he obtained the note innocently, and without any knowledge of the want of consideration or of fraud. He was a note shaver; and Olasson, from whom he obtained the note, swears that at the time he transferred the note to the plaintiff he told him that the note was given for “hulless oats.” ” This witness, Olasson, also .swears that he offered the note to the plaintiff at a discount of 15 per cent., but that the plaintiff would not take it at that rate, but offered to and did take it at a discount of 20
Judgment reversed, and new trial atoarded.