138 A. 768 | Pa. | 1927
Argued May 16, 1927. Use-plaintiff appeals from an order of the court below, opening a confessed judgment, which it had caused to be entered against the defendant company. The order was right; any other course would have resulted in grave error. The undisputed facts are these:
Needing some money to make good a personal deficit, Paul Klein, president of defendant, went to Henry G. Hodges, treasurer of use-plaintiff, to see if it could be *282 obtained. Hodges drew up the judgment note in suit, and, in his presence, it was signed by Klein, as president, and by B. F. Hoffman, as treasurer of defendant. It was for $7,500, was drawn to the order of Klein himself, was payable, as to $4,000 thereof, in three months, and as to the balance, in four months from date. By an assignment, also drawn by Hodges, it was transferred by Klein to use-plaintiff, he receiving its check to his (Klein's) order, for $7,050. This check he deposited in his own bank account, and a day or so later purchased from defendant a number of shares of its preferred stock. Hodges made no inquiry, unless it was of Klein himself, as to the latter's authority to give defendant's note; in fact Klein had no such authority.
Under these circumstances, if there had been no assignment, Klein, the legal plaintiff, could not have sustained a judgment entered on the note, and use-plaintiff is in no better situation, since its right depends on his having a just claim: Guaranty Trust Safe Deposit Co. v. Powell,
The order of the court below is affirmed.