98 Ill. App. 399 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1901

Hr. Justice Waterman

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee urges that the notes under consideration were put in circulation fraudulently, and that such being the case the burden Avas upon the plaintiff to shoAv that it took the notes in good faith and for value, in the usual course of business. In support of this contention it calls attention to the Hide and Leather Bank v. Alexander, 184 Ill. 416, same, 82 Ill. App. 484; Hodson v. Eugene Glass Co., 156 Ill. 397; Charles v. Rennick, 156 Ill. 327; Wright v. Brosseau, 73 Ill. 381; and to Vol. 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d Ed., 321.

Heither of the cases cited is like" the present. In Hide and Leather Bank v. Alexander, Hrs. Alexander, the owner of the note, merely left it with Theodore Schintz in order that he might obtain from Gotfred Schmid a neiv note in the place of that left with Schintz. Schintz had neither interest, right nor title to the note, and no authority to do anything except to surrender it upon obtaining from its maker a new note upon its maturity. Schintz fraudulently converted the note to his own use, embezzled it, was guilty in respect to it, under the statutes of this State, of larceny. Such being the facts, the burden of proof was thrown upon the bank receiving it from Schintz to show that it took it in good faith, for value, before maturity, and in the usual course of business.

In the case of Charles v. Bennick the note under consideration was executed in the firm name by one Gold th waite, for his individual purpose, after he had ceased to be a member of the firm; was a fraudulent transaction as to it. Such being shown, the burden was thrown upon the banker who took the note to show that he received it in good faith, for value, and in the usual course of business.

In the case of Iiodson v. Eugene Glass Company it appeared that Fleming, the president of the company, executed to himself its note upon a mere pretense that the company was indebted to him in that sum. Fleming thus having by fraud obtained the company’s note, it was held that the holder thereof was bound to show that he acquired it in good faith, for value, in the usual course of business, and in such a way as not to create a presumption of knowledge of its invalidity.

In the case of Wright v. Brosseau, one of the partners of the firm of Brosseau, Martin & Company had fraudulently issued, in the firm name, its note. Such being shown, it was held that an indorsee of the note could not recover thereon, unless he came by the note fairly, without knowledge of the fraud, and paid a consideration for it.

The citation from Yol. 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law is merely as to illegality or fraud in the inception of a negotiable instrument and not as to fraud committed after the maker of the note had, with full knowledge of what he was doing, parted with it.

In the present case the defendant, Draper, testified that Mr. Howard came to him and asked him if he had any objections to taking the title to a piece of property, and introduced him to Mr. Giddings; that Mr. Giddings told him that the notes were secured by real estate in Holstein; that he intended to build upon some vacant lots there, and being in the mortgage and banking business, he did not desire to make the instruments himself; and that for and in consideration of his signing the notes, Giddings gave him five dollars; that Giddings told him there was no liability on the notes as the person taking the notes would first have recourse on the property and that the property was worth twice the amount of the trust deed and notes that he gave on the property; that a "warranty deed of the property was given to him, Draper, and he at the same time executed a warranty deed conveying it back, and also a trust deed securing the notes, and left these deeds with Giddings, who promised to record them; that he, Draper, had been in the real estate business and was familiar with it and knew exactly what he was doing "when he signed these notes for Giddings; that he was signing $16,000 worth of what purported to be mortgages on real estate property and was signing $16,000 worth of notes; that Giddings said he did not want to sign them himself; but he probably might want to sell them; that he went to Giddings’ office of his own accord and went there to sign these notes, because he was going to get five dollars for signing them; that he was willing to state to the jury that at that time he was willing to sign $16,000 worth of notes and give them to a man whom he had only met two or three times, for five dollars; that the warranty deed conveying the property to him was handed to him and he looked over the description in it and compared it with the description in the trust deed; that he does not know whether he | got the property thereto or not, for he handed the deed' back to Mr. Giddings, handed it back voluntarily, as the whole transaction was voluntary. “ Ho, it was practically compulsory. There was an understanding that I was com-' polled to, or I could not get the five dollars, unless I did. It was not voluntary. I got the five dollars; that was all I wanted to get.” That he does not know whether Giddings afterward failed in business or not. “ After I got my five dollars, I let him alone. I don’t know whether he failed or not.” “ From the time of this transaction, I had no knowledge of these notes until Mr. Plum mentioned them to me and Mr. Giddings had told him that the}7 had been destroyed.” This testimony of the defendant was undisputed and not qualified by any other witness. Indeed, he is the only witness who testified to the circumstances of his execution of the notes.

The testimony of the defendant shows there was no fraud in the inception of the notes; that they were not obtained from him by duress, fraud or circumvention; that so soon as they were taken away by Giddings, they, being each made payable to the order of Draper and by him indorsed, were negotiable instruments, valid, without proof other than their introduction in evidence in the hands of an indorsee thereof, and were not merely alleged notes, as they were described five times in an instruction given by the court at the instance of the defendant.

The fact that Giddings, after Draper had gone away, retaining the notes in his possession, failed to record the various deeds by which they purported to be secured, did not affect the validity of them, nor throw upon the plaintiff the burden of establishing the fact that it took them in the usual course of business, without notice and for value.

Fraud in the execution of a note, in order to render it a defense against a bona fide holder for value, must have been such that a party signing was deceived as to the effect of his act. Gehlbach v. Carlinville Nat. Bank, 83 Ill. App. 129; Richelieu Hotel Co. v. Int. Met. Co., 140 Ill. 248.

Possession of a negotiable note indorsed in blank is prima facie evidence of title and the holder of such instrument is presumed to have taken it in good faith for value, before maturity, in the usual course of business and without notice. 4th Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d Ed., 318; 1st Smith’s Leading Cases, 780.

The fact that Giddings was a director of the Dime Savings Bank did not charge it in this transaction had with him, with notice of what he knew concerning the circumstances under which the note was given. Notice to an officer of a corporation is not notice to it in transactions where the officer is dealing with the corporation in his own interest and not in the interest of the corporation. Higgins v. Lansing, 154 Ill. 387; Seaverns v. Presbyterian Hospital, 173 Ill. 420; Waynesville National Bank v. Irons. 8 Fed. Rep. 1.

Nor did the fact that the notes appeared upon their face to be secured by a trust deed affect their negotiability or require the bank to make inquiry as to whether the statement concerning security was true. Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188; Biegler v. M. L. & T. Co., 62 Ill. App. 560; Howry v. Eppinger, 34 Mich. 29; Buehler v. McCormick, 169 Ill. 269.

It is urged that the conduct of the bank in taking a note without inquiry and its failure to bring suit upon the same as soon as it could, tend to show bad faith upon its part and warranted the jury in finding that it acted in bad faith. The uncontradicted evidence was that at the time it received these notes from Giddings, it had been and was then loaning to him large sums of money, he being in good credit and repute, and it not having then, nor until long after this transaction, lost a dollar by him, he having always protected all paper he gave to it; and that the bank had an agreement with him that he would, as he was accustomed to do, protect all paper he gave to the bank. Under these circumstances, in the usual course of business, it took these notes from him, giving him in exchange certain other notes which he had left with it and which were then about to mature or had just matured. Some of these notes surrendered to Giddings in exchange for these, it appeared upon the trial, were made under circumstances similar to those existing when the notes in question were executed, save that it does not appear whether these notes were or were not actually secured by trust deeds or mortgages on real estate.

' As to most of the notes given by the bank to Giddings in exchange for these, according to the bank’s register, they were secured upon real estate, were taken by the bank in the usual course of business for value, without notice. The ba'nk gave value for them and the evidence shows that it had reason to and did believe they were valuable assets, the payment of all of which was guaranteed by Giddings. Doubtless, the bank’s officers were negligent in not having abstracts of title given to it, showing that all the notes it received from Giddings purporting to be secured by real estate were actually so secured upon property of an adequate value. But this negligence in this regard does not show want of good faith upon its part.

The defendant testified that at the time he executed these notes, he was financially irresponsible. What inducement could there have been for the bank to obtain his unsecured paper, if its officer did not believe, as its cashier testifies, that in dealing with Mr. Giddings they were transacting business with an honest and responsible citizen, whose word they could rely upon and whose conduct had always been that of promptly discharging all his obligations? Moreover, if the officers of the bank were guilty of carelessness or even gross negligence, toward whom were they so negligent?

The defendant, of his own free will, had executed two notes, each for $4,000, and given them to Giddings, with authority to negotiate if he saw fit.

The officers of the bank did, indeed, owe a duty to its depositors who trusted them with their money, but they owed no duty to the defendant whose notes were offered to it, as he had authorized Giddings to do. For the protection of the stockholders and depositors of the bank, its officers, doubtless, should have seen to it that the trust deed purporting to secure these notes was placed upon record, but it did not owe such a duty to the defendant.

The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Murray v. Lardner, 2 Wall. (U. S.) 110, say of the case of Goodman v. Simonds:

“That case affirms the following proposition: The party who takes it (commercial paper) before due for a valuable consideration, without knowledge of any defect of title, and in good faith, holds it by a title valid against all the world.”
“ Suspicion of defect of title or the knowledge of circumstances which would excite such suspicion in the mind of a prudent man, or gross negligence on the part of the taker, at the time of the transfer, will not defeat his title. That result can only be produced by bad faith on his part.”
“The burden of proof lies on the person who assails the right claimed by the part}' in possession. Such is the settled law of this court, and we feel no disposition to depart from it.”

The Supreme Court of this State in Comstock v. Hannah, 76 Ill. 530, quoting the above, say:

“Such is the settled law of this court and we feel no disposition to depart from it.”

To .the same effect is Bemis v. Horner, 165 Ill. 347, as well as many other cases.

That the defendant’s note went into circulation was not only his own fault, but in accordance with his intention, and for which he received all the consideration he asked or expected. That the deeds by which it purported to be secured were not placed upon record was entirely his fault. They were in his power and he could have recorded them himself, or, as he ought to have done, retained his note until he knew they were recorded and the security sufficient. The only promise to him which Giddings left unfulfilled was his statement that he would record the deeds.

For one year after the execution of the-note upon which suit was brought, the interest upon it appears to have been paid. If a man, carelessly, and without consideration, let his note go into circulation and an innocent party purchases it in the usual course of business, upon him must fall the loss, for he it was whose conduct made it possible for the purchaser to be deceived. Leach v. Nichols, 55 Ill. 273.

The jury should not have been instructed as to what they might do upon the hypothesis that the note was obtained by Giddings without his having given the agreed value therefor, because there was no evidence warranting such hypothesis; on the contrary, the only evidence upon the subject was that Giddings did give all that he agreed to for the note and all that he was asked to give. Mor should the jury have been instructed as to what they might do upon the hypothesis that the notes were obtained from Draper by fraud and circumvention, because there was no evidence tending to show that the notes were obtained from the defendant by fraud and circumvention. On the contrary, the defendant testified that they were executed by him freely, voluntarily, and that he well understood what he was doing. Mor should the jury have been instructed as to what follows when a maker of a note shows that it was obtained from him by fraud, because there was no evidence that the note was obtained from Draper by fraud. On the contrary, he testified that he gave the note to Giddings just as Giddings asked, and as he, the defendant, agreed to do, for five dollars paid to him.

As we have before stated, the only complaint he makes as to the conduct of Giddings is as to Gidding’s failure to record the deeds purporting to secure the note, after he, the defendant, had given the notes to Giddings and authorized him to negotiate the same. Mor should the jury have been instructed, as they were by the fourth instruction, that when the maker of a note shows that it was obtained from him by fraud, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show by a preponderance of the evidence that he acquired the notes in question in good faith, for value, and in the usual course of business, and in such a way as not to create a presumption of knowledge of their infirmities.

Mor is it the case, as the jury were told in the fifth instruction, that the want of a consideration destroys the validity of a note in the hands of any one chargeable with notice of such want of consideration, and this without regard to the good faith of the transaction in which the note was given.

The giving of mere accommodation notes is a common occurrence. Such notes, if negotiated in good faith, for value, in the usual course of business, are binding "upon the'' maker, and he can not, against such a bolder, setup the lack of consideration. Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sections 189, 190.

In the present case, the note was given for a good and valid consideration, small and inadequate as it was.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded.

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