100 N.Y.S. 55 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The complaint alleges the liability of defendant Matherson as an indorser on a promissoiy note for $3,500 made by defendant Hobe to the order of deféndant, the Baker Tea and Coffee Company, payable four months after date. The answer denies,-that defendant Mather-son indorsed the note sued on and any liability on account thereof, and sets forth a state o‘f facts which the defendant Matherson here .insists relieves him from obligation. It seems that the Baker Tea and Coffee Company is composed of Stephen Matherson, .Thomas H. Baker and Fred Hobe, these persons owning all of the stock and making .up the board' of directors of the corporation. The defense alleged is that the defendant Matherson being about to leave the State in the month of June, 1904, to be absent some time, was informed by Hobe, the secretary and treasurer of the corporation, that the company would need to borrow from .$2,500.to $5,000 for its use in the extension and development of its business, and Hobe requested Matherson and Baker to indorse a note in blank .'to be drawn by said company and to be used for the purposes of the company as Hobe should determine. It is claimed that Matherson refused to leave a blank note,"but that he did consent to sign a:
We think that the evidence does not show that the corporation ever signed this note as maker; the signature was not complete until it bore the name of the treasurer, and the paper having been taken to the plaintiff and negotiated for the benefit of the corporation, as the evidence shows, and it being apparently regular upon its face, there was nothing in the appearance of the note' which was calculated to give notice of any defect in the authority of Hobe to make the note and to issue the same' for value. The mere fact that there had been a rubber stamp used did not give notice that there was any agreement between Hobe and Matherson that the note should be made by the Baker Tea and Coffee Company. The note was in the possession of the secretary-and treasurer of the corporation, indorsed by the corporation and by each of its officers and directors, and it was not to be presumed, because, of an erasure which might have been made, that the note had any defect. The proceeds of the note were credited to the corporation and the funds were paid out upon the checks of the corporation in the regular course of business, so that the note in suit accomplished all that the parties contemplated at the time of making the indorsement, and if
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Hirschberg, P. J., Gaynor, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with, costs,