Baltimore Trust Co. v. Oidick

4 Balt. C. Rep. 418
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 418 (Baltimore Trust Co. v. Oidick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Trust Co. v. Oidick, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 418 (Md. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

FRANK, J.

The verdict of the jury was for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,600.25. The substantial ground for the defendant’s motion for a new trial is the suggested error in the rulings of the Court in excluding testimony tendered by the defendant as hereinafter stated. The action was upon a promissory note of the defendant to the order of Bernstein, Cohen & Co., which was the trade-name of Max Cohen, a private banker, and by that banker endorsed in blank and delivered to the plaintiff with other similarly endorsed notes as collateral security for a loan from the plaintiff to Bernstein, Cohen & Co. By special pleas the defendant controverted the authenticity of the endorsement of Bernstein, Cohen & Co.

The plaintiff as part of its case offered the testimony of several witnesses each of whom positively identified the endorsement as the genuine signature of Bernstein, Cohen & Co. The defendant offered no testimony controverting this, contenting himself with pointing out to the jury certain alleged discrepancies between the endorsement in question and other admitted signatures in evidence. Defendant’s prayer imposing the burden of proving the genuineness of the endorsement upon the plaintiff was granted by the Court and the verdict of the jury established that it was in fact authentic.

Inter alia, defendant contends that the fact that the signature of the endorser was denied required the Court to admit the proffered testimony which was rejected.

The tender of the defendant was to prove as follows:

(a) That the defendant was a depositor with Bernstein, Cohen & Co. (R. 47-48) ;

(b) The circumstances under which the defendant borrowed from Bernstein, Cohen & Co. $2,500 on the note in suit (R. 48) ;

(c) Agreement by the defendant to maintain a balance in his account with Bernstein, Cohen & Co. (R. 48, 49) ;

(d) Amount of the defendant’s balance with Bernstein, Cohen & Co.;

(1) At the time the latter ceased doing business;

(2) At the time of the trial;

(3) At the time the note sued on was executed; and

(-1) At the time of its negotiation to the plaintiff (R. 49, 56, 57) ;

(e) Similar transactions between the defendant and Bernstein, Cohen & Co. prior to the note in suit (R. 49, 50) ;

(f) That Bernstein, Cohen & Co.’s assets were less than their liabilities;

(1) On the date of the making of the note in suit;

(2) On the date of its negotiation to the plaintiff; and

(3) On the date of Cohen’s death (R. 51, 55, 62) ;

(g) That it is the usual practice for bankers in Baltimore City to require all borrowers to maintain a minimum balance (R. 58, 59) ; and

(h) That Witness Urban, formerly cashier and manager of Bernstein, Cohen & Co., told defendant not to pay the note in suit (R. 68, 69).

[419]*419The tender (b) was couched in such general terms that it was impossible for the Court to determine that it was intended to include circumstances of “fraud, duress or force and fear, or other unlawful means” or that the note had been given “for an illegal consideration.” Any such circumstances, if shown, would under Section 74, of Article 13, have rendered defective the title of Cohen when he came to negotiate the note to the plaintiff, and under Section 78, of Article 13, would have imposed on plaintiff the burden of proving that it acquired the note as a holder in due course. The defendant himself testified (R. 48) that he received $2,500 from Cohen on the note in suit, so that no question of the legality or sufficiency of the consideration is involved. The whole suggestion of the defendant at the trial was that the loan to him was made by Cohen on the condition that he, the defendant, maintain with Cohen a balance of at least 20 per cent, of the amount of the loan; that defendant from this assumed that in case of need he would have a set-off of this balance against Cohen and that the negotiation of the note by Cohen, while having liabilities in excess of his assets would deprive defendant of this set-off. The uncontradicted evidence shows that Cohen carried on business in the usual way from the date of the making of the note in suit (December 22, 1922) until the date of his death (February 7, 1925) the note having been negotiated to the plaintiff on January 14, 1925. It is impossible, therefore, from the question (b) to assume that it was intended to elicit facts such as would render the answer admissible under Section 74.

Let us assume, however, that in response to this question an answer had been made which under Section 78 would have shifted to the plaintiff the burden of proving that it acquired the note as a holder in due course. The plaintiff did not rest its case on any presumption that it was such a holder in due course. As a part of its case in chief, it offered evidence, which was uncontradicted, that it had acquired the note for value and prior to its maturity and under circumstances which gave it no notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in Cohen’s title as defined by Section 75, of Article 13. No tender of testimony made or question asked by the defendant was capable of showing or eliciting any facts or circumstances tending to contradict this evidence of the plaintiff. As stated by Judge Urner in Edelen vs. First National Bank, 139 Md. 413 at page 419, “The effect of the transfer to the plaintiff of the burden of proof upon a question of this nature is to make it incumbent upon him to prove the circumstances under which he acquired the instrument upon which he seeks to recover. If the evidence thus offered is uncontradicted, and the proven circumstances do not admit of a rational inference of knowledge or bad faith on the part of the plaintiff, the Court may rightfully so instruct the jury. To adopt the contrary view would mean that in every suit by an indorser of a negotiable instrument, affected by some original infirmity, the question as to whether the plaintiff acted in bad faith would have to be submitted to a jury, no matter how conclusively his good faith may be proven by uncontradicted evidence.” In the ease cited, the evidence showed that the payee had obtained the note sued on from the defendant by an outrageous fraud, the endorsee bank showed the circumstances under which it obtained the note for value before maturity and the Court of Appeals held, this evidence being nhcontradicted, that the jury had been properly instructed to bring in a verdict for the plaintiff.

I am of the opinion, therefore, that no error was committed by me in sustaining the objection to question (b).

Tender (f) was to show that Bernstein, Cohen & Co.’s assets were less than their liabilities from the time of the making of the note in suit until the discontinuance of the business upon Cohen’s death. The uncontradicted evidence shows that during all this time the banking business was being regularly conducted, all indebtedness being paid as it matured and all demands being promptly met. Indeed, until Mr. Cohen’s death nobody suspected anything but that he was a successful and prosperous banker. It is alleged that the transfer of defendant’s note to plaintiff for value and before maturity upon these circumstances was to negotiate “it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amounts to a fraud.” The breach of faith or fraud, if any, could only exist in the negotia[420]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-trust-co-v-oidick-mdsuperctbalt-1925.