93 P. 823 | Or. | 1908
Opinion by
It having been admitted by the pleadings that the check was given in consideration of a gambling debt, the burden of proof is with the plaintiff to establish all of the elements necessary to constitute him a holder in good faith for value: Owens v. Snell, 29 Or. 483 (44 Pac. 827); Kenny v. Walker, 29 Or. 41 (44 Pac. 501); Brown v. Feldwert, 46 Or. 363 (80 Pac. 414). The check sued on was offered in evidence, and is in the following form:
“Pendleton, Oregon, Dec. 12, 1906. No.The First National Bank $400.-— order Pay to L. Swagard or bearer Four Hundred Dollars J. Scheuerman.”
Plaintiff testified that he had lived in Pendleton for 30 years and had been acquainted with Scheuerman for 20 years; that he was a man who did a great deal of business about town, of which plaintiff had more or less knowledge; that he had frequently seen defendant’s checks in circulation in the community, and now held one of them, and that he, plaintiff, was the present owner and holder of the check sued on; that he bought the check from Swaggart, who at the time indorsed the same to him; that no part of the check had been paid, and that he, plaintiff, gave his check for $400 for it, and that his check, so given to Swaggart, was cashed at the First National Bank, and the amount charged to his account by the bank; that within two or three days after he got Scheuerman’s check he demanded, payment thereof of the
“That day about 12 o’clock I was going home to my lunch, and I met Mr. Swaggart on the corner of the Boston store, and he stopped me and said, T have a check of Scheuerman’s which he asked me to wait two or three days for, and I may need the money,’ and I said: ‘All right. Give me the check, and I will give you my check for it, and you can go to the bank and get the money.’ And he signed the check, and I went to my lunch and came back from lunch, and went to the hotel and got a blank check and gave it to John Endicott.”
Knowing that Endicott was well acquainted with Swaggart, he asked him to hand the check to the latter, which he did. Endicott, it appears, had been interested with Swaggart in the results of the gambling game; but plaintiff swears he knew nothing of that. The plaintiff’s evidence further shows that he is vice-president of the First National Bank, and was in the bank on the morning of the 13th, but he did not then learn that Scheuerman had ordered payment on his check stopped; that he presented the check at the bank for payment on' the morning of the 14th, which was refused; that he made no inquiry at the bank to ascertain whether the check he had issued to Swaggart in exchange therefor, had been paid or not, nor did he notify Swaggart of the nonpayment of the Scheuerman check, but he immediately gave it to his attorney for collection; that on the 15th Swaggart cashed at the bank the check received by him
“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”: B. & C. Comp. § 4458.
The lack of good faith arises, it is asserted, from the facts shown that the transfer took place in the near vicinity of the bank on which the check was drawn, and of which Matlock was vice-president; that he and Swaggart were brothers-in-law; that no inquiry was made at the bank before purchase; that Matlock after getting his lunch, went to the hotel, and there procured a blank check in which he wrote the amount of $400, payable to Swaggart and signed and delivered it to Endicott for delivery to Swaggart. But none of these facts amount to proof of actual knowledge.
There must, however, be a debt, either precedent or contemporaneous, to make the rule applicable.
“Drawing the check without having funds to meet it, and having no right to expect payment of it, was a fraud and imposition on the payee.”
For the same purpose the case of Harrington v. Johnson, 7 Colo. App. 483 (44 Pac. 368), is cited. There one Hoblit, who was the cashier of a bank, purchased of the mortgagee a note and mortgage, which had been fraudulently given, and gave a check on his bank for the price. A suit in equity was brought to set aside the conveyance for fraud, and the defense of bona fide purchaser for value was set up. Fraud was found; but the lower court held that Hoblit purchased without notice,
“That the plaintiff was not bound to make inquiry at the bank, or ascertain whether or not his check had been presented or paid at the time he presented the Scheuerman check for payment. Neither was it necessary for plaintiff to stop payment on his check, if at the time he presented the check to the bank for payment he was a*61 bona fide holder thereof. The fact that his own check had not yet been cashed would make no difference.”
And error is also assigned for the refusal to give and the giving of these instructions. If defendant’s theory is correct as to what constitutes payment, and when it took place, then Matlock received notice of an infirmity in the instrument before he paid value, and he would be bound at his own peril to stop payment of his own check. But we have already held that, where there is an exchange of commercial paper, as there was in this case, each instrument is a sufficient consideration for the other,, and such an exchange is an independent obligation, not conditioned on the payment of the other, unless such condition is expressed in it. It necessarily follows thati the non-payment of the Scheuerman check would not be a defense to Matlock in an action against him on his own check brought by Swaggart. “It is true,” as stated in Wooster v. Jenkins, 3 Denio (N. Y.), 187:
“That so long as the securities are in the hands of the original parties they will balance each other. But it is by way of set-off, and not on the ground that they are invalid.”
Even the defense of set-off would be lost by assignment of the check. As between Matlock and the bank, he could doubtless have stopped payment' of his own check, when denied payment of the Scheuerman check, but that would not have relieved him of liability on his own check, either in the hands of Swaggart or of a third party as assignee.
The court permitted the jury to consider all of the surrounding circumstances given in the evidence, which included plaintiff’s failure to notify Swaggart of the nonpayment of the defendant’s check, and his failure to demand and enforce payment against Swaggart, to ascertain plaintiff’s good faith in taking the check. We think that is all that defendant was entitled to, and there was no error in refusing the other requested instructions, not specifically considered herein.
These considerations, we think, dispose, of the errors assigned, and result in an affirmance of the judgment.
Affirmed.