84 S.E. 47 | N.C. | 1915
There are several of the exceptions in this record which are common to both this appeal and that of McMichael, which make it necessary to discuss only the assignment of error relating to the question, *129
whether the court should have given the instruction requested by the interveners, Frank Co., that if the jury believe the evidence, they will find that they are innocent purchasers for value and without notice of any fraud in the transaction connected therewith, or, in (70) other words, that they are holders in due course, notwithstanding any infirmity in the instruments or any defect in the title of the person who negotiated them. There can be no doubt that Frank Co. acquired their title to the instruments by indorsement before they were due, and that each of them was, all that time, complete and regular on its face and had not been previously dishonored, so that the only requisite to an unimpeachable title to the notes, under Revisal, ch. 54, sec. 2201, is that, at the time they were negotiated, Frank Co., had no notice of "any infirmity in the instruments or any defect in the title of the person who negotiated them." Revisal, sec. 2208, provides, in part, that every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course, but when it is shown that the title of any person, who has negotiated the instrument, was defective, the burden is on the holder to prove that he, or some person under whom he claims, acquired the title in due course. The interveners started out with prima facie evidence that they were holders in due course, but when it was found that the notes had been executed in fraud of creditors, the burden shifted to them and they were bound to prove that they acquired the title as holders in due course, or from some person who held the notes as such. It has been held to be insufficient to show merely that the holder purchased the note before its maturity and paid value for it; but to entitle him to recover upon it, under Revisal, sec. 2206, as a holder in due course, he must go further and show that he acquired it bona fide and without notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person who negotiated it to him. In order to constitute such notice, it is further provided by Revisal, sec. 2205, that the holder, claiming the right of recovery upon it, "must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith." Norton on Bills and Notes, 334, speaking of the burden of proof when there is an infirmity in the note or a defect in the title, says: "The burden is cast upon the plaintiff to show that he took the paper for value and in good faith. Some of the cases declare that the holder need not show that he had lack of notice, but need only show value, because the burden of showing notice is upon the party who seeks to impeach the title. But the other courts maintain, and properly, that in addition to proving value the holder should prove that he bought the note in good faith, and should show that he had no knowledge of or notice of the fraud. If value and notice are disputed as facts, they must be passed *130
upon by the jury." So in Tatum v. Haslar, 23 Q. B. Div. (1889), p. 345, the Court says: "When fraud is shown, the burden of proof is on the holder to prove both that value has been given and that it has been given in good faith, without notice of the fraud." And in Vosburgh v.(71) Diefendorf,
It would be useless to prolong the discussion of the law applicable to cases of this kind, as it is fully set forth in Bank v. Fountain, supra, with proper reference to the authorities, which case has been later and frequently approved by this Court. Mfg. Co. v. Summers,
If a statement of the law be found in any former decision of this Court which would seem to militate against the view herein expressed, it was inadvertently made, attention not having been directed at the time to the exact terms of the statute, or it was due, perhaps, to the wrong citation of the doctrine in Bank v. Burgwyn,
It was suggested that there were contradictions in the testimony of E. M. Frank, but we have failed to discover them, or, at most, any material one. His disposition, on the contrary, appears now to be consistent, credible, and believable, and free, so far as we can see, from any reasonable ground of suspicion. The jury, though, must be the final arbiters of its credibility.
The case is remanded, with directions to call another jury for the trial of the issue involving the validity of the notes held by these interveners.
New trial. *134
Cited: Moon v. Simpson,
(75)