Bank v. . Finance, Co.

133 S.E. 415, 192 N.C. 69, 48 A.L.R. 519, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 225
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 415 (Bank v. . Finance, Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank v. . Finance, Co., 133 S.E. 415, 192 N.C. 69, 48 A.L.R. 519, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 225 (N.C. 1926).

Opinion

CLARKSON, J., dissenting. On 26 February, 1924, J. H. Mackie, of Yadkin County, North Carolina, executed his note, due six months after date, payable to Southern States Finance Company, of Charlotte, N.C. or order, for $16,500, negotiable and payable at the Peoples National Bank of Winston-Salem, N.C. This note, together with a subscription for 1,650 shares of stock of the Southern States Finance Company, was delivered by J. H. Mackie to S. F. Penry, who had, as agent for the Finance Company, solicited the said subscription. The consideration for the note was the purchase price of the stock. It was agreed between Mackie and Penry that if the subscription and note were not accepted by Southern States Finance Company, and if the certificates were not issued, the note should be returned to Mackie. Thereafter, Penry submitted the subscription and the note to Southern States Finance Company at Charlotte.

The Southern States Finance Company communicated by telephone with Col. W. A. Blair, vice-president of the Peoples Bank of Winston-Salem, *Page 70 N.C. in order to secure information upon which to determine whether or not it would accept said note, and issue the certificates for the stock to J. H. Mackie. After several phone conversations with Colonel Blair, relative to Mackie and the note, then in its possession, Southern States Finance Company endorsed the note, and sent it by Penry to plaintiff at Winston-Salem. Plaintiff issued certificates of deposit, aggregating $16,500, payable to Southern States Finance Company, and delivered same to Penry. Penry thereupon delivered the note, with the endorsement of Southern States Finance Company, to plaintiff. Penry then took the certificates of deposit to Charlotte and delivered same to Southern States Finance Company. The Finance Company thereupon issued certificates of stock, in accordance with his subscription, to J. H. Mackie. These certificates of stock were delivered by Penry to Mackie, at his home in Yadkin County. The certificates of deposit have been paid by plaintiff.

This is an action by plaintiff, as holder of the note, to recover of J. H. Mackie, as maker, and of defendant, Southern States Finance Company, as endorser, the sum of $16,500 and accrued interest. No answer was filed by defendant, J. H. Mackie.

Southern States Finance Company, in defense of plaintiff's action upon said note, says:

1. "That on and for some time prior to 26 February, 1924, plaintiff, Peoples National Bank of Winston-Salem, N.C. was the regular depository of this defendant in which defendant kept on deposit a considerable portion of its funds, and the vice-president of plaintiff, who has active charge of its affairs, was a member of the advisory board of this defendant, as representative of the plaintiff bank, and according to the course of business of this defendant, it submitted to the plaintiff bank and to its said vice-president all paper which it took in the regular course of business from the vicinity in which plaintiff bank did business, and this defendant was accustomed to rely and did rely, upon the information given it by the plaintiff bank and its said vice-president with regard to the financial standing and responsibility of persons in the neighborhood of plaintiff bank from which this defendant purchased all papers and securities, and for the service and information rendered by the plaintiff and its said vice-president, the plaintiff was duly compensated by this defendant, and this defendant had a right to rely upon information received by it from the plaintiff."

2. "That the plaintiff, well knowing the confidence reposed in it by this defendant, abused the confidence of this defendant in the matter of the endorsement hereinbefore described, and as this defendant is informed and believes, conspired and agreed with certain persons against *Page 71 whom it held insolvent papers to obtain security for a certain unsecured indebtedness at the expense of this defendant, and with intent to cheat and defraud this defendant, made false and fraudulent representations to this defendant, and obtained from defendant the endorsement to the note of J. H. Mackie, as hereinafter more fully set forth."

3. "That prior to the said 26 February, 1924, the plaintiff held worthless and unsecured paper made or endorsed by Webb S. Alexander, J. H. Mackie, F. W. Hanes and others, aggregating approximately $16,500; that plaintiff being desirous of obtaining some security for the said worthless indebtedness, entered into an agreement with the said Alexander and others, as defendant is advised and believes, by the terms of which the said Alexander and others were to sell to the said Mackie $16,500 of stock in the Southern Finance Company, which was to be placed by Mackie as collateral to a note of the said Hanes, which was to be given in lieu of the aforesaid worthless paper; that the plaintiff was to induce this defendant to issue the said stock for the worthless note of Mackie by representing to this defendant that the said Mackie was solvent and that his said note was good, and was to obtain the endorsement of this defendant on said note by said representation, and by offering to discount same for defendant."

4. "That in pursuance of the aforesaid fraudulent scheme and conspiracy, the said Webb S. Alexander and certain of his associates did obtain the $16,500 note sued on in this action from the said J. H. Mackie, and thereupon presented same, together with a stock subscription for $16,500 stock, to this defendant; that before this defendant would accept said note, it made inquiry of the plaintiff as to the solvency and responsibility of the said J. H. Mackie and was assured by plaintiff that the said J. H. Mackie was solvent and responsible and that this defendant would be safe in taking said note in payment of his stock subscription, and agreed that if this defendant would take said note, plaintiff would purchase same from the defendant upon its endorsement; and that relying upon the said representations made to this defendant by the plaintiff, as aforesaid, this defendant issued its stock to the said J. H. Mackie in the sum of $16,500 and endorsed the note sued on to plaintiff; that this defendant thereupon delivered the said stock and the said note to one S. F. Penry, who was acting in concert with the plaintiff and the said Webb S. Alexander, to the end that the said note might be delivered to the plaintiff and that the stock might be pledged as security to the said note, defendant assuming and believing that the said stock would be placed with plaintiff as security for the note given for the purchase price of said stock, but this defendant has recently learned that the plaintiff did not place the said stock as security to the said note given for its purchase price, as aforesaid, but allowed same to *Page 72 be placed as security for a note of one F. W. Hanes, which note was given to take up the aforesaid worthless paper given by Mackie, Hanes, Webb S. Alexander and others, as aforesaid, and that plaintiff thereupon held the said $16,500 note signed by defendant Mackie without any security whatever for the payment of same, except the endorsement of this defendant obtained in the fraudulent manner aforesaid."

5. "That at the time plaintiff obtained from this defendant its endorsement on the said promissory note, the said J. H. Mackie was not solvent or responsible, and his credit was not good for $16,500, but, on the contrary, he was involved in debt and insolvent, and his note was worthless, as the plaintiff then and there well knew; that the plaintiff made the aforesaid false representations as to the solvency and responsibility of the said J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 415, 192 N.C. 69, 48 A.L.R. 519, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-v-finance-co-nc-1926.