234 Mass. 161 | Mass. | 1919
The promissory notes in suit, which were made by the Carolina Coast Products Company and indorsed by the defendant, although differing in amount are payable either on demand or one year after date and their execution by the maker and the indorser, and due presentment and subsequent protest, are conceded. But the answers severally aver that the defendant’s indorsement was obtained “ in reliance upon and in consequence of certain representations made . . . with respect to the earnings and liabilities of the Carolina Coast Products Company, and that, after the note had been indorsed, the same was placed in the hands of one Cooper upon the condition that the indorsement should not take effect and that he should retain possession of the said note until the defendant should have verified said representations and should
The transactions having taken place in the State of North Carolina, the law of which as shown by the statute introduced in evidence appears to be the same in substance and effect as the law of this Commonwealth relating to commercial paper found in It. L. c. 73, the plaintiffs rest their right of recovery on the familiar ground, that, having in good faith before maturity acquired the legal title for a valuable consideration in the usual course of business from one capable of transferring it or in possession of the notes with an apparent right of transference and without notice of any infirmity in the instrument, they are holders in due course. Smith v. Livingston, 111 Mass. 342. Massachusetts National Bank v. Snow, 187 Mass. 159. Fillebrown v. Hayward, 190 Mass. 472, 479,480. See R. L. c. 73, § 68.
We do not deem it material to refer at length to the dealings between the defendant and the holders of a majority of the capital stock of the company which the defendant, in order to secure control, sought to acquire in connection with and as part of the project to purchase the plant, and to continue the business as a going enterprise. The jury upon conflicting evidence, including the evidence of the company’s secretary and treasurer and the statements of liabilities and of notes and bills payable, which were properly admitted, would have been warranted in finding that Cooper knew of the company’s financial condition and impending insolvency when he exhibited to one Orth, the defendant’s presi
It further could be found on the testimony of Orth that, relying on the accuracy of the “orange statement,” he had been induced by Cooper to go on with the proposed trade and to indorse the notes in question, which were to be used to retire outstanding overdue notes of the company indorsed by the sellers of the stock. And, notwithstanding the agreement of indemnity and the receipt or letter given by Cooper to Orth, the jury also were to determine whether, as Cooper testified, there had been an unconditional delivery or whether Orth’s evidence was to be followed, that after some imperfections in the title had been discovered by defendant’s counsel, he placed the notes in Cooper’s hands with the express understanding that he was to retain them until the title had been perfected, which never has been done.
It follows thatj if the delivery was conditional Cooper himself could not have enforced payment of the notes. Watkins v. Bowers, 119 Mass. 383. Wilson v. Bowers, 131 Mass. 539. Young v. Hayes, 212 Mass. 525, 531. And the plaintiffs’ seventh and eighth requests could not have been given in terms but were properly modified by the instructions, while the ninth request, and requests 9-a and 9-b being founded on assumptions of a partial view of the evidence were denied rightly.
The defendant in each case having obtained a verdict under instructions to which no exceptions were saved (Morrison v. Holder, 214 Mass. 366), the final inquiry is whether requests 9-e and 9-d and 10 and 11 were rightly denied. The requests were
The jury could find that within ten days after Cooper received the notes, Orth upon examination of the company’s books was convinced that he had been materially deceived and defrauded as to the financial condition of the company, and thereupon notified the owners of the stock and Cooper that he would not consummate the trade and tendered the certificates of stock to the sellers and made demand on Cooper for a return of the notes. To this demand Cooper replied that he had parted with the notes, but declined to furnish any information whereby the holders could be ascertained. The jury accordingly could say that the notes had been fraudulently put in circulation.
The Merchants National Bank in the meantime had received the note sued on from Cooper and had given him credit for the amount. But as Cooper had not drawn against the account before the bank, as the jury could find, had received notice from the defendant of the infirmity of the note, it is not a holder for value and cannot recover. Emerson v. Burns, 114 Mass. 348. Thompson v. Sioux Falls National Bank, 150 U. S. 231. The Continental Trust Company also, as the jury could find, before it received notice from the defendant of the invalidity of the notes declared on, had not given any value therefor, and for reasons just stated it cannot recover.
The Bank of Southport of which Cooper was president held
The Palmetto Grocery Company, Incorporated, of which a brother of Cooper was treasurer, and who is described in the evidence as “practically” owning the company and running it holds the remaining note in dispute. The evidence shows that some time in December Cooper sent the note to his brother with a request that he give a check for it. But, upon being informed that this could not be done, Cooper asked for the plaintiff’s note for a like amount payable at the same time, which was given about the middle of January, 1915, in which month Cooper’s personal account in the American National Bank was credited with the proceeds of the note. And when the plaintiff’s own note became due its account at this bank was charged with the amount. It seems plain that the plaintiff gave value for the note, and the judge so instructed the jury, to which instruction the defendant took no exception. Goodwin v. Masseschusetts Loan & Trust Co. 152 Mass. 189, 199. National Revere Bank v. Morse, 163 Mass. 383. But, even if the note was taken for value and before maturity, the jury, as we have said, could find that it had been fraudulently put in circulation. The burden therefore was on the plaintiff to show that on all the evidence it had no actual notice or knowledge of the fraud. Fillebrown v. Hayward, 190 Mass. 472,480. Merchants’ National Bank of Lowell V. Haverhill Iron Works, 159 Mass. 158, 160. If, for the reasons
The judge properly refused to give the rulings requested, and, finding no error of law, the exceptions in each case must be overruled.
So ordered.