54 N.Y.S. 685 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The three grounds of the motion to dismiss raise the legal questions to be considered.
1. The indorsement of the note in blank by the payee, Dalzell, and the production of it by the plaintiff, constituted prima facie evidence of the latter’s ownership. Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) p. 318, and cases cited. The mere fact of subsequent indorsements does not affect this result. Presumably, the prior holder, the plaintiff, took up the note. That view is strengthened here by the cancellation of the later indorsements. To rebut this presumption of ownership, the defendants rely mainly upon the plaintiff’s cross-examination. From this it appears that, three days before the note was made, Dalzell gave the plaintiff a power of attorney to collect and receive all moneys payable to him, and that the plaintiff received the note for Dalzell, and acknowledged payment of a part of it. But this does not necessarily rebut the legal presumption of ownership. It is entirely compatible with such ownership. The case is quite different from those cited (Iselin v. Rowlands, 30 Hun, 488; Bell v. Tilden, 16 Hun, 346), where there was explicit and uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiff was a mere collection agent. It also appeared by the plaintiff’s testimony that the note was delivered by Haaren, the last indorser, to the Irving National Bank for collection, and remained there for some months after the commencement of the action; and that it was delivered to Haaren as security for a debt due him by the plaintiff, or by the plaintiff and the latter’s father. Haaren gave it to the plaintiff’s counsel some months before the trial. This surrender of the note by Haaren, the pledgee and credit- or, to the plaintiff, the pledgor and debtor, is susceptible of two inferences,—one that the debt had been paid; and the other that, though the debt had not been paid, Haaren intended to relinquish his lien thereon. It was for the defendants to rebut these inferences, since the legal presumption is in favor of the plaintiff’s title. Haaren’s act, unexplained, points to the conclusion that the legal title to the note was in the plaintiff throughout. Certainly, in any view of Haaren’s acts, the parties liable upon the note would have been justified and perfectly safe in paying the plaintiff. His legal title, prima facie, has not been successfully shaken; and, clearly, the case on that head should, at the very least, have been submitted to the jury.
2. The ruling of the learned trial judge that there was no evidence that the defendants indorsed the note with the intention of giving the makers credit with the payee is somewhat extraordinary, in view of the explicit testimony of the treasurer of the Foreign Hardwood Log Company that the note was indorsed by the company “to assist in the purchase” of certain lands in North Carolina, and that this note was given to the payee, Dalzell, one of the owners, as part of
3. As to the executors of the estate of George Hagemeyer, we think the judgment should be affirmed. By leaving a portion of the estate in the business, under the testator’s will, the executors, if partners at all, merely became such individually to the extent of the fund invested. Watch Co. v. Hodenpyl, 135 N. Y. 430, 32 N. E. 239. The general estate of the deceased partner did not thereby succeed to his place in the firm, or to the liabilities attached thereto. The testator nowhere attempted to put the general assets of his estate at the risk of the business which was to be conducted after his decease. The business was to be so conducted, not by his executors, but by his two sons individually; and the only power conferred upon the executors was to permit the use of the testator’s capital (already invested in the business) by his two sons individually, as surviving partners. It follows that no cause of action was made out against the executors in their representative capacity, and the judgment must therefore be affirmed as to them.
As to the legal representatives of George Hagemeyer, the judgment should be affirmed, with costs. As to the other defendants,respondents, the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event All concur.