Baldwin v. Adkerson

158 S.E. 864, 156 Va. 447, 103 A.L.R. 644, 1931 Va. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 864 (Baldwin v. Adkerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Adkerson, 158 S.E. 864, 156 Va. 447, 103 A.L.R. 644, 1931 Va. LEXIS 204 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Court of Law and Chancery of the city of Norfolk, entered March 25, 1930, dismissing a bill in chancery filed therein at first September rules, 1929, by W. Ludwell Baldwin and A. M. Winingder against H. C. Adkerson, A. P. Grice, trustee, John D. Gordan and Theo. S. Garnett, receivers of Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation, and Seaboard Citizens National Bank.

The facts as they appear from the record are as set forth below.

Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation had been in business in Norfolk since about 1917, and was engaged principally in [451]*451lending money on notes secured by deed of trust on real estate, guaranteeing the payment of principal and interest of such notes, and selling them to whomsoever it could get to buy them.

The notes taken by it for loans, and the interest coupons thereto attached, were generally made payable at its office, the notes being made payable “to bearer, or if registered, to the registered owner hereof,” and the interest coupons “to bearer.”

The form of guarantee used by it in making sale of such notes reads as follows: “For value received we hereby guarantee the payment of this note, and also the payment of the attached interest coupons as the same fall due, upon conditions that, at our option, we are to- be allowed twelve months from date of maturity within which to pay the principal amount, but with interest in the meantime at the rate named in this note should we require this twelve months’ extension.”

It was its custom when a note or interest coupon, which was payable at its office and so guaranteed by it, was presented there for payment to pay the same upon presentation, whether the maker had funds there to pay it or not. Usually such note or interest coupon would be presented for payment at the office of the corporation and paid without there being any intercourse or dealing between the borrower and the transferee of the note or coupon, and usually without the borrower being advised to whom the corporation had transferred the note, or that it had transferred it to anyone.

It kept a card index of the notes sold by it, and it was its regular custom to write a letter to the holder of each such note a month before the maturity thereof, stating when the note would be due; that it should be presented for payment at the Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation, and that it would be glad to have him reinvest the proceeds either in the same notes or some other notes. The names of the makers of the note, but not their addresses, were given in these letters.

It was its custom to accept payment of a loan made by it whether it had possession of the note or notes evidencing it or [452]*452not, and also to make renewals of such loans, at or after maturity, when it desired to do so, and accept renewal notes therefor, without considering the transferees of the notes evidencing the loan, even though it did not have possession of them.

When a loan was renewed, without waiting for the presentation for payment of the notes for which renewals had been taken, it would hypothecate or sell the renewal notes taken by it and place the proceeds from such sale or hypothecation in the general funds of the corporation. Then, when the notes for which renewals had been accepted were presented for payment, it would pay to the holders thereof the amount due thereon out of the general funds of the corporation, and mark the note “renewed.”

There is some evidence tending to- show that when renewal notes were thus accepted by the corporation it would notify the holders of the renewed notes that it had renewed the notes and request them to present the notes held by them for payment, but there is no evidence that this was done in the instant case.

However, there is no evidence that the customs of the Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation with reference to- accepting payment of loans or of making and handling renewals of loans were in accordance with any general custom of corporations and persons doing a similar business in Norfolk, or were known to- the public generally, or to- the bankers of Norfolk, or to any of the defendants in this cause.

On April 11, 1924, Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation loaned to W. Ludwell Baldwin and A. M. Winingder $3,500.00. This loan was evidenced by four notes, one for $500.00 and three for $1,000.00 each, dated April 11, 1924, drawn by Baldwin and Winingder, payable three years after date “to bearer, or if registered, to registered owner hereof.” These notes and the semi-annual interest coupons thereto- attached were made payable at the office of the Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation; and by deed of trust, dated April 11, 1924, Baldwin and [453]*453Winingder and their wives- conveyed to A. P.. -Grice, who was the president of Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation,, certain real estate in the city of Norfolk, in trust to- secure the payment of said notes and “the payment of note or notes, bond or bonds given in renewal, in whole or in part,” of said debt.

It then endorsed' on said notes its guarantee of the payment thereof, using the form heretofore quoted, and sold them; but to whom they were sold does not appear from the pleadings or the evidence.

. When these notes fell due the makers applied to Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation for a renewal of the loan, which it made, and accepted from them their four renewal notes for like amounts and of like tenor, payable one year after date. When the original notes were presented for payment it paid to the holders thereof the amount due thereon, took up the original notes, marked them renewed, and held and -still holds them in its possession. The renewal notes taken by it were passed to its.bond department for sale or hypothecation. Presumably they were sold or hypothecated, though the evidence js not positive on this point and gives no indication of to whom they were sold or hypothecated.

When these first renewal notes fell due Baldwin and Winingder again applied to- Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation for a renewal of the loan, which it made. It accepted from them as a second renewal of said1 loan four notes, one for $500.00 and three for $1,000.00 each, dated April 11, 1928, drawn by Baldwin and Winingder, payable one year after date, “to bearer, or if registered, to registered owner hereof,” which notes and the interest coupons thereto attached were made payable at the office of Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation. Each of these notes states on its face that it was one of a series of notes secured by said deed of trust dated April 11, 1924.

Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation then sold these four second renewal notes to different parties and paid to the holder or holders of the first renewal notes the amounts due thereon.

[454]*454Note No. 2 for $1,000.00 of said second series of renewal notes was sold to H. C. Adkerson on April 16, 1928, and is still held by him. It was not registered and has always remained payable tO' bearer.

The record discloses no knowledge by Adkerson of the transactions had by Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation relating to the handling of the original notes or the first series of renewal notes, nor any transaction of any kind which ever took place between Adkerson and Guaranty Title and Trust Corporation other than the purchase of this note.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 864, 156 Va. 447, 103 A.L.R. 644, 1931 Va. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-adkerson-va-1931.