38 Colo. 336 | Colo. | 1906
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:
Action by an indorsee against an indorser of a promissory note.
Tbe Milwaukee Mining Company executed its promissory note for $5,000, payable to tbe order of J. A. Hinsey, which was afterwards indorsed and delivered by the payee to Tbe First National Bank of Ouray. Thereafter tbe bank indorsed and delivered it to L. L. Bailey, its president, presumably for tbe purpose of collection. . Bailey'brought suit on tbe note against tbe maker, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued and levied upon its property.
There was no< defense to tbe action, but before judgment was taken, negotiations were begun between Bailey, representing tbe bank, and tbe officers of tbe city of Ouray, for a trade or exchange of tbe note by tbe bank for certain of its certificates of deposit wbieb tbe city held aggregating about $5,000, these certificates representing funds which tbe city bad on deposit with tbe bank. The exchange was consummated, tbe city giving up its certificates to tbe bank in exchange for tbe note with tbe bank’s indorsement remaining thereon; the complaint alleg
Bailey took judgment upon the note against the maker, and assigned this judgment to the city. Execution was issued and returned unsatisfied owing to the fact that a prior attachment in another suit in another court was issued and levied upon the property of the maker, and all of its property was thereafter levied upon thereunder and sold to satisfy the prior lien. The judgment secured by Bailey was worthless, and the mining company, the maker, insolvent.
The indorsements upon the note at the time it came into possession of the city and when this action was begun, thus appear in the order as made:
“Pay to the order of The First National Bank of Ouray, Colorado; demand, notice and protest waived. J. A. Hinsey.
“Pay to the order of L. L. Bailey. First National Bank of Ouray, by A. Gr. Siddons, Cashier.
“Pay to the order of The First National Bank of Ouray without recourse on me. L. L. Bailey. ’ ’
After the transfer of the note to the city, the bank became insolvent and ceased to be a going concern, whereupon the defendants McClure, Hurlburt . and Stevens submitted to it a proposition in writing, which was accepted, whereby they agreed to assume and pay all its liabilities as a consideration for the transfer to them of all its assets.
The defendants then filed their answer to-the amended complaint, putting in issue some of its averments, to which a replication was filed. The answer and replication become immaterial upon this review, as do the rulings on the demurrer, because, after the issues were made up and Judge Shumate, judge of another district, had been called in to try the cause upon the merits, he sustained the objections of defendants to the introduction of any evidence by plaintiff] in support of the amended complaint upon the ground that therein no cause of action was stated as against any of the defendants in the action. After-wards the plaintiff made specific and detailed offers of proof in its support, which were' likewise refused.
The question upon this appeal is as to the sufficiency of the amended .complaint. It would seem, from the foregoing statement of its averments, confessed by the demurrer, that the plaintiff ought to recover. The maker of the note was insolvent, and, after maturity, and while it was in possession of the
There are two branches to the case: First, the question as to the liability of the bank; Second, as to the liability of the defendants McClure, Stevens and Hurlburt. All of the transactions occurred while the statute enacted in 1865, entitled “Bonds, Bills and Promissory Notes,” was in force. ' (Mills’ Ann. Stats., §§ 244 et seq.). The defendants’ contentions in support of the ruling of the court refusing- the offer of proof and entering- judgment for defendants are thus stated by them: (1) That the legal effect of the indorsement as made by Bailey, for the purpose of re-transferring the note to the bank, was to cancel both the bank’s and. Bailey’s indorsements thereon; and, if this be not true, it limited the payment of the note to an order made by the bank; (2) that, under our statute, the note could be assigned so as to transfer the legal title from the bank to the city only by a written indorsement thereon, and, conceding- that delivery of the note would constitute an equitable assignment Of the bank’s interest therein, it gave to the city, or the plaintiff’s predecessor in office, the city treasurer, only those rights which the First National Bank had, viz., the right to collect the note as against the maker and Hinsey, the payee, who was the first indorser; that, under the common-law rule, suit-upon this note could be brought only in the name of the First National Bank, and the bank could not sue itself; that, while the code authorizes the real
To the first proposition defendants cite Adrian v. McCaskill, 3 L. R. A. 759. That case lays down no such doctrine as they assert. It was there ruled that, when a note has been assigned and goes out on a certain line which subsequently proves to be a collateral line, and thereafter comes back to the party who thus sent it out with the names of some of the collateral indorsers remaining thereon and is then reissued after maturity, neither the party to whom it is reissued, nor that party’s assignees, can proceed against any of the indorsers in the collateral line, because such indorsers are not in the line through which such party or his assignees trace title; in short, that a prior indorser cannot recover from a subsequent one. If the reasoning of that case be applied to this, instead of supporting the contentions of defendants, it is authority for the claim of the plaintiff that, when Bailey indorsed the note and retransferred it to the bank, the Bailey transaction was wiped out, and title was left in the bank; and when it subsequently delivered the note to the city treasurer with its indorsement thereon, even though this indorsement was put upon the note at the time of the transfer by the bank to its president for a special purpose, the bank is liable to its transferee precisely as it would be if the indorsement was in blank, general and unrestricted, and made at the time of the transfer.
Defendants say that, under our statute, as previously construed by the supreme court of Illinois, from which state it was taken, the legal title to a
Whatever may be said of this-contention, if the assumed fact of transfer by delivery only was true, it is entirely foreign to this case if the assumption of fact upon which it is based is not borne out by the record. First, it is observed that plaintiff does not rely on a transfer by delivery. She asserts what, in a legal sense, is an indorsement in blank. In the amended complaint there is an allegation that, at the time the city surrendered to the bank its certificates of deposit and received therefor this note, the bank agreed with the city treasurer that its former indorsement still remaining upon the note should stand in lieu of a present indorsement. But it is apparent that plaintiff claims nothing by virtue of the contemporaneous agreement which defendants say was oral, though the complaint does not say it was of that character, and, while there is not an averment in the complaint, in those' words, that at the time this transaction took place the bank indorsed the note, yet there are allegations of the various indorsements upon the
These allegations show that the bank indorsed this note to Bailey, its president, for a special purpose, which purpose was accomplished. .Afterwards the bank, indorser, received back the paper from Bailey, and thereafter reissued it for value without striking out its former indorsement. This indorsement was not left by mistake, accident or oversight. Plaintiff’s contention, which we think is correct, is that, under the facts, the bank is estopped to deny its liability thereon as indorser, and it makes no difference whether the reissue was before or after maturity. Brook, Oliphant & Co. v. Vannest, 58 N. J. Law 162, supports this proposition, and St. John v. Roberts, 31 N. Y. 441, seems to us conclusive upon the subject. The indorser is held liable- upon the doctrine of estoppel. The city was certainly a purchaser for a large consideration and in good faith, and the bank, in reissuing and delivering to it the nóte without erasing its former special indorsement, in legal effect then indorsed the note in blank. That such indorsement passes the legal title, fixes the indorser’s liability and authorizes this action by the city as indorsee directly against the bank as indorser, is too plain for argument.
In thus disposing of the case, we do not invoke the doctrine announced in Doom v. Sherwin, 20 Colo. 234,- that, though indorsement by the payee of a note is necessary to transfer title, indorsement by his transferee is not necessary, as he can pass title by delivery, since plaintiff does not rely upon this rule, and counsel have not cited the case to this effect.
Defendants’ objections to the cause of action alleged against the individual defendants McClure and others are: (1) that no liability against the bank has been stated, consequently none against these de
It- further charges that, in consideration for a transfer to them by the bank of all its assets, McClure and others assumed and agreed.to pay all its liabilities, aggregating about the sum of $41,000. Facts are alleged in the pleading from which it necessarily follows that the note sued on is one of the liabilities of the bank, and that the individual defendants agreed to pay all its liabilities. The complaint clearly brings the plaintiff within the class for whose use and benefit the contract was directly made. — State v. St. L. & S. F. Ry. Co., 125 Mo. 596; Rohman v. Gaiser, 53 Neb. 474; Lehow v. Simonton, 3 Colo. 346; Green v. Richardson, 4 Colo. 584; Green v. Morrison, 5 Colo. 18.
The estimate of the sum of the liabilities at $41,-000 does not limit to that sum the liabilities which the individual defendants assumed. At all events, if the pleading is vulnerable at all, it is on the ground of uncertainty, and no such objection was taken below. As against a general demurrer, the amended complaint is good. '
In thus disposing of the case, we assume, as we must, the truthfulness of the allegations of the- complaint. What facts the trial may disclose, we do- not know.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial. Reversed.
' Chief Justice G-abbert and Mr. Justice Steele concur.