Atlas National Bank v. Savery

127 Mass. 75
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 12, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 127 Mass. 75 (Atlas National Bank v. Savery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas National Bank v. Savery, 127 Mass. 75 (Mass. 1879).

Opinion

Lord, J.

The question as to the plaintiff’s title to the notes is fully settled in the case of Pemberton National Bank v. Porter, 125 Mass. 333, and with that decision we are satisfied. If we assume that a national hank cannot purchase a note, as contended by the defendants, that contract of purchase is entirely independent of the executory contract which the plaintiff is seeking to enforce; and whether the plaintiff is holding the note for itself or for another is wholly immaterial to the defendants, unless it shall appear that it is holding the note for some one who could not enforce it against the defendants, of which there was- no evidence nor presumption, nor was the question made at the trial.

The notes were obtained by the plaintiff in the market, with no evidence that the party from whom they were obtained was not a bona fide holder of them for value. The fact that the party from whom they were obtained was a broker, if from that fact it is to be inferred that he was not the owner, raises no presumption that he was an agent of Law for the negotiation of the notes. If any presumption could arise from that fact that he was the agent of any party to the notes, it would be that he was age.ui of the last indorser of the notes. But we think that the mere fact that he was a broker authorizes no presumption as to the ownership, other than that which the possession and power of disposition implies.

The argument of the defendants’ counsel was based upon the fallacy that the broker of whom the notes were obtained was the [78]*78mere representative of Law, of which there was no evidence, and the presumption, so far as there was any, was otherwise.

W. G. Russell & H. M. Rogers, for the plaintiff. E. Avery, for the defendants.

Exceptions overruled.

The second case was on a similar promissory note, dated December 20, 1876.

At the trial in the Superior Court, before Colburn, J., the same facts appeared as in the first case, except that the note in this case was brought to the plaintiff bank by Charles H. Demerritt, a member of the firm of Charles F. Parker & Co., and known to the plaintiff to be such member, by whom the indorsement of that firm’s name was made.

The judge ruled that the plaintiff was, as matter of law, affected with notice of the defence existing to the note on the part of the defendants other than Law, and ordered a verdict for them. The plaintiff alleged exceptions.

Colt, J. The defendants, partners doing business under the name of John Savery’s Sons, are sued as second indorsers of a note made by Alexander Law, payable to the order of C. F. Parker & Co., and by them indorsed in blank. Law, at the time the note was made and negotiated, was a member of the firm of C. F. Parker & Co., and also of the firm of John Savery’s Sons. It is agreed that the name of the defendants’ firm was indorsed on the note by Law, without the knowledge or consent of the other partners, and in fraud of the rights of the firm. The name of the firm of C. F. Parker & Co. was indorsed by Charles H. Demerritt, a member of the firm, who, before its maturity, offered it to the plaintiff bank for discount. The note was at once discounted by the bank on the credit of the parties to it, and the avails paid to Demerritt. The bank had no knowledge or notice that the partnership name of the defendant’s firm was indorsed on the note by Law without the authority and in fraud of the other members of the firm, other than what is to be inferred from the form of the note, or the facts above stated.

It is contended that the fact that the note was signed by Law, indorsed in the name of the defendant’s firm by him, and then discounted for Demerritt, who was a member of the firm of C. F. Parker & Co., payees and prior indorsers, was conclusive [79]*79notice to the hank that the defendants were accommodation indorsers and sureties; and that, in the absence of proof that the signature of the firm name by Law was authorized, or ratified by the other members of the firm, all the defendants except Law, are entitled to a verdict in their favor. This is the only question for our consideration.

It is settled that one who takes a negotiable promissory note for value, before maturity, in good faith, and without knowledge of any defect of title, may recover upon it, although facts are offered in evidence which impeach its validity between antecedent parties. A suspicion that there is a defect of title, or a knowledge of circumstances which might excite suspicion in the mind of a cautious person, or even gross negligence, not amounting to evidence of fraud, or bad faith, will not defeat the title of the purchaser. Goodman v. Simonds, 20 How. 343. Murray v. Lardner, 2 Wall. 110. Hotchkiss v. National Banks, 21 Wall. 354, 359. The rule has been often approved by this court. Spooner v. Holmes, 102 Mass. 503. Smith v. Livingston, 111 Mass. 342.

When the defect or infirmity of title to the bill or note, however, appears on its face at the time of the transfer, it was said in Goodman v. Simonds that the question whether a party who took it had notice or not, was a question of construction, and must be determined by the court as a matter of law; as, where a person, who took a bill which upon its face appeared to be dishonored, was held not to have the rights of a bona fide holder; Andrews v. Pond, 13 Pet. 65; or where one taking a note so marked as to show for whose benefit it was- to be discounted was presumed to have knowledge of what the note imported. Fowler v. Brantly, 14 Pet. 318. Brown v. Taber, 5. Wend. 566. A party must be presumed to know the contents and true meaning of a written instrument which he takes as evidence of title, or of contract, and, when it is in the form of negotiable commercial paper, to know the construction which must be given to it, with reference to the time when it is transferred to him, and the order of the several names then upon it. National Bank of Commonwealth v. Law, ante, 72. If the attempt is to impeach the title by facts accruing between other parties, independent and outside of the instrument itself, the question whether the purchaser had knowledge of them is a question of fact for the jury. [80]*80to be proved by showing that they were directly communicated to him, or by proof of circumstances from which notice must be presumed.

Upon the face of the note in this case, there is nothing which indicates any irregularity or invalidity in the origin or negotiation of it. It represents a regular business transaction, between Law, the maker, and C. F. Parker & Co., and between C. F, Parker & Co. and John Savery’s Sons. The presumption is that it passed from one party to another for a good consideration, and that the firm names of the two partnerships were indorsed in the course of the regular business of the firms. The fact that Law was a member of both partnerships, and wrote the name of John Savery’s Sons as last indorsers, does not require us to infer that the paper was prepared by him in order to defraud his copartners. Because he was a member of each firm, he was not thereby deprived of the authority to sign the name of either or both, in the regular business of each; nor were the firms thereby prevented from dealing with each other.

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Bluebook (online)
127 Mass. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-national-bank-v-savery-mass-1879.