Black v. Bank of Westminster

54 A. 88, 96 Md. 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 54 A. 88 (Black v. Bank of Westminster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. Bank of Westminster, 54 A. 88, 96 Md. 399 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the First National Bank of Westminster to recover from Levi Black the amount due upon two negotiable promissory notes for $100 each, made by him and payable to the order of the United Milk Producers’ Association, now an insolvent corporation, in six and twelve months respectively from date. The declaration, which contains the common counts and a special count upon each of said notes, alleges that they were endorsed to the plaintiff by the payee before its insolvency. The defendant pleaded never indebted as alleged, ánd never promised as alleged, and subsequently filed ten additional pleas. The third denied that the plaintiff was a corporation as alleged, and this, on motion, was stricken out by the Court, because the defendant, having failed in his previous pleading to deny plaintiff’s incorporation, had thereby admitted it. There was no exception to this ruling, and none could have been sustained.

The fourth and fifth pleas denied that the notes were endorsed as alleged. The sixth and seven pleas denied that J. B. Councilman, the Secretary and Treasurer of the United Milk Producers’ Association (which will hereafter for brevity be called the association) and by whom the alleged endorsement was made, was the agent of the association to endorse said notes to the plaintiff, or that he had power and authority so to do.

The eighth plea alleged that the notes were procured and negotiated by the fraud of said association.

The ninth plea alleged that the notes were given to the association, and were deposited by it with the Old Town Bank of Baltimore, and by that bank were delivered to the plaintiff in breach of faith.

The tenth plea alleged an agreement between the defendant and said association that these notes were to be deposited by *415 it with the Old Town Bank of Baltimore as collateral security for advances to be made by it to said association, and that the Old Town Bank was to hold, and not to negotiate, the same ; and that the plaintiff well knowing these facts received said notes from said bank.

The eleventh plea alleged that said notes were executed and delivered for the accommodation of said association, under the agreement set forth in the tenth plea, and that the plaintiff took said notes, well knowing all these facts.

The twelfth plea alleged that the defendant had subscribed to 400 shares of the capital stock of said association upon condition that said association would take his milk and pay him for it, and out of the amount thus due him at the end of each month, would deduct five per cent of his said subscription, to be credited thereon; and that subsequently said association requested him to give to it three notes covering the amount then unpaid on said subscription, to be deposited with the Old Town Bank under the agreement stated in the tenth plea, and that he gave said notes, two of which are the same here sued on ; that for four months this agreement was carried out, and then said association, without any fault on defendant’s part, refused to receive his milk and pay him for it, or to credit anything upon his said subscription, and that the plaintiff took said notes well knowing all the terms and conditions of said agreement.

The plaintiff joined issue on the isf and 2nd pleas traversed the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th, and demurred to the 8th, 9th, 10th, nth and 12th pleas. This demurrer was sustained, whereupon issue was joined on all the pleas, and the case went to the jury resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount due on the two notes. During the trial, nine exceptions were taken to rulings on the evidence, and one to the ruling on the prayers. The first question is presented by the ruling on the demurrer.

As to the eighth and ninth pleas, there is no averment in either that the plaintiff took the notes with knowledge of the fraud charged in one, or of the breach of faith charged in the *416 other, and there was therefore no error in the ruling as to these pleas. Banks v. McCosker, 82 Md. 518; Code, Art. 13, sec. 75, (Supp. to Code).

The tenth plea does not aver that the agreement set out therein, was in writing. In McSherry v. Brooks, 46 Md. 113, prayers were rejected which sought to defeat recovery by an endorsee upon promissory notes because of an alleged parol promise by the payee to keep the notes in his possession and not to pass them away, the Court saying : “This would seem to be contrary to all principle and authority,” and, that it was not competent “to destroy their legal import and operation by the introduction of parol evidence that the notes were not to be negotiated, notwithstanding the negotiable terms employed on their face.” . But it is not necessary, as was contended by the appellee, to allege in the declaration that the promise is in writing. If it appear in proof at the trial to be in writing, it is sufficient for its admission. Ecker v. Bohn, 45 Md. 285; Horner v. Frazier, 65 Md. 1.

But if in writing that could not avail in this case, since this plea expressly alleges the execution and delivery of the notes by the defendant to the association, and sec. 43 of Art. 13 of the Code, provides that every negotiable instrument is deemed prima facie to have been issued for a valuable consideration; and every person whose signature appears thereon, to have become a party for value ; and sec. 45 provides that where value has at any time been given for the instrument, the holder is deemed a holder for value in respect to all parties who became such prior to that time. But apart from these considerations, the plea states a case which does not disentitle the plaintiff to recover, since it alleges that the notes were delivered by the association to the Old Town Bank, “as collateral security for advances to be made by it to the association ; ” and in Maitland v. The Citizens' Bank, 40 Md. 562, it is said that “every person is within the rule, and entitled to the protection of a bona fide holder for value, who has received the note in payment of a precedent debt, or has taken it as collateral security for a precedent debt, or for ftdure, as well as past advances.” The Old Town *417 Bank therefore, as well as the .plaintiff, is presumed to be a holder for value; and in Cover v. Myers, 75 Md. 419, the Court said : “Where a negotiable instrument is originally infected with fraud, invalidity, or illegality, the title of the original holder being destroyed, the title of every subsequent holder which reposes on that foundation, and nó other, falls with it. But if any subsequent holder takes the instrument in good faith, and for value, before maturity, he is entitled to recover on it; and so any person taking title under him may recover, notwithstanding such latter holder may have knowledge of the infirmities of the instrument; and all that is required of the holder in such case, is, that it be proved that he, or some preceding holder, or endorsee, under whom he claims, acquired title to the paper before maturity, bona fide,

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 88, 96 Md. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-bank-of-westminster-md-1903.