52 F. 641 | 7th Cir. | 1892
This suit was brought at law by Willet B. Jenks, since deceased, to recover the amount of a certificate of deposit, of which a copy follows:
“ No. 26,161. The First National Bank of Monmouth, Ill.
“$10,000. Nov. 5th, 1881.
“Wm. M. Gregg has deposited in this bank ten thousand dollars, payable to the order of himself six months after date, on return of this certificate.
“B. T. D. Hubbard, Cashier.”
Endorsed: “Pay to bearer. W. M. Gregg.”
The case, as disclosed by the record, was this : The First National Bank of Monmouth was organized under the national banking law in the year 1863. The period of legal existence granted by law was about to expire, and could not be extended. Thereupon, in June, 1882, the bank went into voluntary liquidation, and adopted the necessary legal
The certificate of deposit upon which suit is brought was issued by the cashier of the old bank, without consideration, without deposit of the amount therein stated by Gregg or by any other person, and solely by way of margins to speculative transactions between Hubbard, the cashier, and the payee, William M. Gregg, or his firm of Gregg, Son & Co., of Chicago. The certificate was not entered upon the books of the old bank. The bank number borne by the certificate was in fact the number of a certificate issued on the 23d day of February, 1881, to one Langdon, for the sum of $100, and which was duly entered upon the books, and paid by the bank shortly after its issue, and before the date of the Gregg certificate. The certificate here in question was first pledged by Gregg, Son & Co., on September 6,1883, to the Continental National Bank of Chicago, as collateral to a loan of $10,000. That loan was paid in October, 1883. It was then used on December 27, 1883, as collateral with the same bank for a loan which was paid January 26, 1884. It was again pledged by Gregg, Son & Co. to the Continental National Bank as collateral to two notes of that firm, each for $5,000, payable on demand; one dated March 7, 1884, and the other dated March 24, 1.884. After the loan of December 27, 1883, and before its payment, the cashier of the Continental National Bank, becoming suspicious of the certificate by reason of its age, had an interview concerning it with Hubbard, the cashier. He asked Hubbard “if the certificate was good; if it was genuine; and he said it was a genuine certificate;” that it was a private matter with Gregg, and was connected with his (Gregg’s) family affairs. Payment of the certificate was demanded of the new bank on the 8th day of April, 1884,—the date of its failure,—and the certificate protested for nonpayment on the following day. On the 11th day of April, 1884, a transaction was had by which Willet B. Jenks, the intestate of the plaintiff in error, paid to the Continental National Bank the amount of the indebtedness of Gregg, Son & Co., and received from the bank the certificate of deposit in question.
The contention on the part of the defendant is that the certificate was issued by the former First National Bank of Monmouth, and not by the defendant bank; that the latter never assumed its payment, the certificate not appearing upon the books of the old bank; that the certificate was fraudulent in its inception, and of no effect in the hands of Gregg, the payee; that the Continental National Bank took it after its maturity, and charged with the equities attaching to it in the hands of Gregg; that the old bank could not be estopped by the declarations of Hubbard, made after the bank had ceased to exist; that the defendant bank is not estopped, because, among other reasons, the declarations only went to the genuineness of the certificate as the paper of the former bank, and not to the liability of the defendant bank thereon; and that the transaction between the Continental National Bank and Willet B. Jenks was a payment by Jenks of the debt of Gregg, Son & Co. at their request, and not a purchase of that debt and its collateral. The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and the issues found in favor of the defendant.
The record declares that at the close of the evidence the plaintiff submitted to the court certain propositions of law, and requested the court to hold them as the law of the case, but the court disregarded and overruled “certain of the same,” and found the law and the facts in the case as follows. Then follows the opinion of the presiding judge, reciting certain facts stated to be conceded, and holding that the certificate was fraudulently issued; that the defendant bank was liable for the valid debts of the old bank; that the certificate was a valid security in the hands of the Continental National Bank by reason of the estoppel stated above; and that the transaction between Willet B. Jenks and the Continental National Bank was a payment by the former of the debt of Gregg, Son & Co. at their request, a payment, cancellation, and surrender by that bank of that firm’s notes held by it, and that Jenks took a new note from the firm for the money paid by him, and that he did not succeed to the right of the Continental National Bank, but held the certificate as collateral to the new note of Gregg, Son & Co., taken by him after payment by him of their debt, after maturity of the certificate, and after its dishonor; and so, in his hands, the certificate stood charged with all the equities attaching to it in the hands of Gregg.
The findings of a trial court, whether general or special, have the effect of a verdict of a jury. Rev. St. § 649. When the finding is spe
It cannot be seriously urged that, the facts being as found, the judgment is unwarranted. The question of the liability of the defendant hank hinged upon the further question whether Jenks stood in the light
In this view it seems unnecessary to consider the other errors assigned. If the exceptions were sustained, the substantial facts would remain unquestioned and unquestionable that "this certificate was fraudulently issued, and without any consideration, to Gregg’s knowledge, and that Jenks took it as collateral to Gregg’s debt after its dishonor. These facts are sufficient to bar a recovery. The admission of immaterial evidence not affecting that finding could not, therefore, injure the plaintiff, and constitutes no ground for reversal, (Mining Co. v. Taylor, 100 U. S. 37; Hornbuckle v. Stafford, 111 U. S. 389, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 515;) nor would the reception of incompetent evidence going to that finding, when there is competent evidence uncontradicted on the same point, (Cooper v. Coats, 21 Wall. 105.) The judgment is affirmed.
Mr. Justice Harlan was not present when this decision was announced, but he participated in the hearing and decision of the case, and concurs in the opinion.