208 N.W. 24 | Minn. | 1926
This action is to recover upon a $2,500 note purporting to have been given by defendant to the Hendrum State Bank. It was indorsed without recourse and became a part of plaintiff's assets. The note is dated December 31, 1923 and is a renewal of a note originally given in 1921 which the Hendrum State Bank transferred to plaintiff for a note of one Knutson of $2,500. In these transactions the banks were represented by their respective cashiers. Most of the transactions are evidenced by letters. Whether the notes were excess loans is not important. It cannot be said that the original payee of the notes owned them after the transfer. Renewals were made to the original payee and transferred, but no reason appears for thinking this unusual. In fact by this procedure the patron does not necessarily learn that his note is being carried by some one other than the original payee. It has since developed that the original note and its renewal were the outcome of Nelson's fraud. He executed them. By falsehood he procured the signature of defendant's president to the note. Evidently he took from the bank, of which he was cashier, $2,500 either for this note or for the Knutson note. Defendant got nothing for it, and never authorized its execution. Upon the trial it was admitted that the note was obtained by the Hendrum State Bank from defendant by fraud and that the note is void as between defendant and the payee. The trial court submitted to the jury the question as to whether plaintiff had notice of the defect or had notice of sufficient facts to put it upon inquiry before it acquired the note within the provision of G.S. 1923, § 7099. The jury found for plaintiff.
Fraud in the inception of the note being conceded, the plaintiff's burden of showing that he is a holder in due course is not fully met merely by proof that he acquired it before maturity and for value. It must show that it acquired the note in good faith, i.e., in ignorance of the fraud. G.S. 1923, § 7102; First Nat. Bank v. Carey, *402
In this transaction Nelson acted adversely to plaintiff. He represented the bank of which he was cashier. As far as the fraud was concerned he was acting in his own behalf and in hostility to the plaintiff. He was not the sole representative of plaintiff in the transaction. His knowledge under such circumstances could not be imputed to plaintiff by virtue of his being its president. State Bank of Morton v. Adams,
Affirmed. *403