Bank of Commerce of Charlotte v. Waters

56 S.E.2d 350, 215 S.C. 543, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 9, 1949
Docket16278
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 350 (Bank of Commerce of Charlotte v. Waters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Commerce of Charlotte v. Waters, 56 S.E.2d 350, 215 S.C. 543, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 115 (S.C. 1949).

Opinion

Stukfs, Justice.

The respondent Broome will also be referred to as the defendant. He is in the restaurant business in Columbia. On and before' December 14, 1945 he purchased in Charlotte, North Carolina, from E. I. Sinkoe, trading as Charlotte Salvage Company, certain fixtures and equipment for which he executed a conditional sales contract bearing that date covering the property and securing the payment of $4,430.40 in deferred installments of $193.90, payable on the fifteenth days of each month beginning January 15, 1946, with interest upon the installments after maturity. After recital of the transaction, description of the articles of property and prices, the instrument contains the form of a promissory note payable to the “seller” or order at Industrial Doan and Investment Bank, Charlotte. There are also other obligations, that the purchaser should keep the property free from taxes, liens and encumbrances, satisfactorily insured against various hazards in an amount always equal to the unpaid balance, the property should not be hired out, removed from purchaser’s county or sold without written consent of the seller who should have the right to possession before and after default. In addition to all of these the following provisions are in the contract: “In the event the Purchaser shall fail or neglect to pay when due any one or more of the installments required by the terms hereof, or in the event the Purchaser shall violate or fail to perform any one or more of the Purchaser’s covenants as herein set forth, or in the event the above described personal property shall be seized under any legal process against the Purchaser, or in the event of the commencement of bankruptcy, receivership or other insolvency proceedings against the Purchaser, then, *547 and in any one or more of such events, the entire unpaid balance under the terms hereof shall immediately become due and payable in full, and the Seller, or his or its assigns, shall have the right to sell the above described personal property or any part thereof at public auction to the highest bidder for cash after first posting ten (10) days’ notice of the time and place of sale on the bulletin board at the Mecklen-burg County Court House, Charlotte, N. C., and after payment of the expenses of such sale shall apply the residue of the proceeds of such sale to the payment of the unpaid balance under the terms hereof and the excess, if any, to the Purchaser; and it is expressly agreed that the Seller, or his or its assigns, shall have the legal right to bid and become the lawful purchaser at any such sale.”

On December 17, 1945, the paper was “discounted”, that is, it was sold and assigned for value to the bank designated in it, which thereafter by change of name became the plaintiff in this action and is appellant. Schedule of the due dates of the deferred payments was also introduced in evidence and it 'contains record of the payments. They were made with fair regularity each month through December 1946, after which they were irregular but continued through February 1948 and until the total amount of $3,630.00 was paid, which left a balance of $881.01 due on the account.

Action in claim and delivery was commenced in March, 1948, upon complaint which alleged default, demand and refusal of delivery of the property, the amount due, and prayed for the usual relief in such cases.

The defendant filed answer and counterclaim in which the original transaction was admitted but alleged an overcharge, referred to as an “accounting error”, discovered after execution of the obligation as were defects in the property, whereupon defendant so informed Sinkoe who acquiesced and gave defendant a credit memorandum in the amount of $1,367.50, which reduced defendant’s obligation so that he has overpaid it to the bank to the extent of *548 $486.49, in which amount defendant asked judgment against plaintiff. There was reply by which the material allegations of the answer and counterclaim were denied and that if there was a credit memorandum, it applied to another transaction, was not authorized by plaintiff and does not affect its cause of action.

Plaintiff also demurred and moved to strike the answer and counterclaim upon the ground that defendant knew of the discount of his paper with the bank and the subsequent credit memorandum was of no effect upon the rights of plaintiff as assignee. The demurrer and motion were overruled by formal order of the court and the case proceeded to trial by jury.

Plaintiff consistently objected to the introduction in evidence of the credit memorandum upon the ground that the obligation sued upon is a negotiable instrument and plaintiff as assignee was a purchaser for value before maturity and, in any event, credit given after assignment was of no effect upon the rights of plaintiff. The objections were overruled and the credit memorandum was received in evidence. It is as follows:

Dec. 11-46
“Doug Broome Cafe
“Columbia, S. C.
“Due credit to above on acct. of contract Ind. Loan & Inv. Bank $1,367.50.
“Charlotte Salvage Co.,
“E. I. Sinkoe.”

Sinkoe was a reply witness for plaintiff and he testified that the memorandum referred to another transaction and did not represent a credit upon defendant’s obligation to plaintiff which arose from the sale and assignment by the witness of the paper to the plaintiff.

The case was submitted to the jury which returned verdict in favor of the defendant for the full amount sought by *549 him in his counterclaim. Subsequent motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, or in the alternative, for a new trial, was refused and this appeal followed. The case was tried under the law of this State without reference to the law of North Carolina.

The appellant has submitted three questions by the first of which it is contended that the instrument sued upon was negotiable, second, that the defendant was estopped by his conduct from claiming the credit against the assignee, and third that, regardless of the negotiability of the instrument, defendant could not after the assignment obtain release of the debt from the assignor. Respondent makes counter-statement of the questions in his brief but the difference is immaterial. .

Of primary importance is whether the instrument in suit was negotiable. The answer is that it was not, under the following quoted portions of Section 6756 of the Code which is part of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Taw, enacted in 1914: “An instrument which contains an order or promise to do any act in addition to the payment of money is not negotiable. * * *” It is plainly violative of this provision and the point needs little or no elaboration.

Before the comparatively recent enactment of the statute our courts had arrived at about the same rule. The development of the law may be seen by reference to the following decisions : Wallace v. Dyson, 1 Speers 127; Barnes v. Gormon, 9 Rich 297; First National Bank of Charleston v. Gary, 18 S. C. 282; Carroll County Savings Bank v. Strother, 28 S. C. 504, 6 S. E. 313; First Nat.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baeza v. Robert E. Lee Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc.
309 S.E.2d 763 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1983)
Northwestern Bank v. Neal
248 S.E.2d 585 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1978)
Allen-Parker Co. v. Lollis
185 S.E.2d 739 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1971)
First National Bank of SC v. Wade
141 S.E.2d 102 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 350, 215 S.C. 543, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-commerce-of-charlotte-v-waters-sc-1949.