179 P. 432 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
This action was brought by respondent to recover judgment against appellant on a promissory note made and executed by appellant to one E. E. Hewlett, dated March 21, 1913, for the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, due nine months after date. Defendant appeals from the judgment.
The plaintiff sued as pledgee of the note, alleging that the same had been indorsed and delivered to it by Hewlett as security for certain notes executed by him. The trial court found that the consideration for the Armstrong note, as between the defendant and Hewlett, had wholly failed; and also held that that was a negotiable instrument, and that the plaintiff, as pledgee, acquired the same as an indorsee in due course.
The note in question is similar to one which came before this court in Eastman v. Sunset Park Land Co.,
On May 14, 1913, Hewlett executed to plaintiff a note for eleven thousand dollars. This was done in consideration of the cancellation of an unsecured eleven thousand dollar note previously executed by Hewlett to the All Night and Day Bank, which had been assigned and delivered by that payee to the plaintiff. Hewlett had executed to the All Night and Day Bank two other unsecured one-day notes, of which one was for nine thousand dollars, dated May 1, 1912, and the other was for two thousand five hundred dollars, dated February 1, 1913, both of which had been transferred to the plaintiff. The eleven thousand dollar note of date May 14, 1913, executed by Hewlett to the plaintiff, referred to the security given by Hewlett as follows: "I hereby pledge to and deposit with said bank as collateral security for the payment of this or any other liability or liabilities of mine to said bank when due, or to become due, or may hereafter be contracted, the following property: Note of Le Roy Armstrong dated March 21, 1913, due 9 months, for $25,000, and certificate No. 30 for 187 shares of the capital stock of the Pacific Coast Motor Car Company, the market value of which is now __________ dollars."
On May 14, 1913, when Hewlett executed the eleven thousand dollar note in favor of the plaintiff, he indorsed and delivered with it, to the plaintiff, the twenty-five thousand dollar note sued on in this case, together with said certificate of stock of Pacific Coast Motor Car Company. The certificate was issued to Le Roy Armstrong and bore date March 21, 1913. It carried a blank assignment, dated May 13, 1913, signed by Armstrong. The transaction of May 14, 1913, between Hewlett and the plaintiff, was conducted on the part of the plaintiff by C. R. Bell, who was the secretary of the plaintiff. He testified that he was secretary of the All Night and Day Bank from June, 1912, until it was merged with plaintiff in April, 1913, and that prior to June, 1912, he was cashier of the All Night and Day Bank. He testified that he did not distinctly remember his conversation with Mr. Hewlett at the time of the transaction of May 14, 1913. There is no evidence showing that Hewlett informed the plaintiff that the certificate of stock which he was pledging to the plaintiff was held by him in pledge or as security for the Armstrong note. There is not contained in that note, nor in the certificate of stock, nor in any document received by the plaintiff, any statement showing or indicating that the certificate of stock *486 was held by Hewlett as security for the twenty-five thousand dollar note.
It was a fact, as the court correctly found from the evidence, that Hewlett held the certificate of stock only as pledgee and as security for the twenty-five thousand dollar note; that the stock was without value; that the consideration for the twenty-five thousand dollar note had wholly failed; and that as between Hewlett and Armstrong the act of Hewlett in pledging the note and certificate to the plaintiff was an act of bad faith on the part of Hewlett toward Armstrong, and was contrary to an agreement which Hewlett had made with Armstrong.
Appellant claims that the evidence was insufficient to prove that the plaintiff was the owner of the notes which were found to have been assigned to the plaintiff by the All Night and Day Bank, especially in this, that there was no evidence of delivery of the instrument of assignment from the All Night and Day Bank to the plaintiff. We think that the evidence was sufficient. The plaintiff produced in evidence an instrument in due form whereby the All Night and Day Bank purported to transfer to the plaintiff all of its notes, etc., and all assets of the All Night and Day Bank. The evidence is sufficient to prove that this instrument, together with the notes, was in the possession of the plaintiff on and before the fourteenth day of May, 1913. The court did not err in overruling defendant's objection to the admission of this instrument in evidence.
Appellant, in his answer, denied that the hypothecation of his note to the plaintiff was made to secure the nine thousand dollar note or the two thousand five hundred dollar note. His contentions in support of this denial are not only that those notes had not been transferred by the All Night and Day Bank to the plaintiff, but also that the words contained in the twenty-five thousand dollar note, which we have quoted, referring to the pledge, were not sufficient to constitute a hypothecation covering those two notes. The judgment rendered herein against appellant was for a sum a little less than twenty-five thousand dollars, being the aggregate of the principal of the three notes made by Hewlett, with interest and attorney fees thereon. Appellant contends that if he is liable at all to the plaintiff, he should not be held for anything more than the new note of eleven thousand dollars made payable to *487 the plaintiff. In support of these contentions counsel for appellant claims that the words "when due or to become due or may hereafter be contracted," are not sufficient to cover past-due obligations held by the plaintiff; also that the nine thousand dollar note and two thousand five hundred dollar note were not taken in the ordinary course of business and therefore cannot be deemed secured by the pledge of the Armstrong note. We think that the words above quoted from the Armstrong note are sufficient to cover past-due obligations. Also, we are of opinion that appellant is not concerned with the matter of the manner in which those notes were acquired by the plaintiff, there being no claim that Hewlett had any ground of defense against them. It is only with respect to the Armstrong note that the plaintiff was obliged to show that it was taken in the ordinary course of business.
Appellant next contends that the Armstrong note was transferred to plaintiff for collection only; and that by reason of the pledge agreement contained in the note made by Hewlett to plaintiff the assignment of the Armstrong note to plaintiff becomes not a general or special indorsement, but one upon a special contract; that for these reasons plaintiff holds the Armstrong note subject to the defendant's equitable defenses. The authorities cited by appellant in support of these propositions (Hays v. Plummer,
Appellant further contends that the note in controversy at the time of its transfer to plaintiff, accompanied by the certificate of shares pledged by Armstrong to secure it, was by reason of the pledge sufficient to put the plaintiff upon inquiry as to the contract of pledge, thus binding plaintiff by all the *488
conditions relating to that contract and the execution of the note. The bare fact that the certificate was pledged to Hewlett to secure the Armstrong note, even if known to plaintiff, did not affect the negotiability of the note. (Civ. Code, sec.
In the case at bar the plaintiff proved that it acquired the note in suit, before maturity, and for value and in the usual course of business. "When this is done, unless the evidence shows that the note was taken by the plaintiff under circumstances creating the presumption that he knew the facts impeaching its validity, the burden is east upon the defendant to show, if he would defeat the plaintiff in his action, that the latter took the instrument with notice of the defendant's equities." (Eames v. Crosier,
Appellant takes the position that because the shares of stock, notwithstanding the blank assignment indorsed upon the certificate of stock, stood in the name of Armstrong on the books of the corporation, the bank had no right to assume that the shares belonged to Hewlett. In Fowles v. National Bank ofCalifornia,
The judgment is affirmed.
James, J., and Myers, J., pro tem., concurred.