121 Ark. 250 | Ark. | 1915
The defendants, Fondren & Moore, merchants at Kensett, Arkansas, purchased a bill of jewelry from the National Novelty Import Company, a corporation doing business at St. Louis. The bill of goods aggregated $296, and defendants accepted time drafts drawn on them by the seller. The purchase was covered by a written contract which specified the terms of the sale. The drafts were assigned before ¡maturity to the plaintiff, Metropolitan Discount 'Company, a corporation doing business at St. Louis, for the purpose, as its name implies, of dealing in commercial paper. This is a suit on one of the said drafts in the sum of $59.21. The defense tendered is that the jewelry was worthless and unsalable, having no merchantable value whatever, and that plaintiff was not an innocent purchaser of the negotiable paper representing the purchase price.
Now, the testimony of the defendants is that this jewelry was absolutely worthless, and the jury were warranted in drawing the inference that the National Novelty Import 'Company was engaged in the business of selling worthless jewelry which the purchaser could not be forced to pay for and in selling the paper representing the purchase price to other concerns'. The familiarity of plaintiff’s manager with the methods pursued by the National Novelty Import Company, in conducting its business, made it a question for the jury to determine whether or not the plaintiff company had any intimation that there were defenses against the collection of the commercial paper taken by the National Novelty Import Company for the price of the ■worthless jewelry which was sold from time to time. In other words, since it appears that the business of the National Novelty Import Company w.as that of selling worthless jewelry, those concerns which were familiar with its methods of business must have known that there were defenses against the paper which it was taking in due course of that business. We can not, therefore, say that there was no testimony at all in support of the finding that the plaintiff was not an innocent purchaser. That is the only question argued here.
Judgment affirmed.