Central Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Stotter

174 N.W. 142, 207 Mich. 329, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 414
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1919
DocketDocket No. 44
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 174 N.W. 142 (Central Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Stotter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Stotter, 174 N.W. 142, 207 Mich. 329, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 414 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

STONE, J.

This case was brought here to review a judgment for the plaintiff, upon a directed verdict. It is an action on three promissory notes executed by the defendants to one Luther B. Watson on September 8, 1916, due six months thereafter. The plaintiff claims to be a bona fide holder for value of these notes. The notes were indorsed over by Watson, the payee, to the plaintiff on February 26, 1917. They were due March 8, 1917. The plaintiff sent these notes, on [330]*330February 26th, to the German National Bank of Cincinnati to be forwarded by the latter to the First and Old Detroit National Bank for collection. And the loose leaf discount sheet of the plaintiff shows that these notes were entered on the discount sheet on February 28, 1917.

In 1915 said Watson, the payee, and Robert Wachman, one of the makers, as co-partners, were dealing in certain automobile accessories in the city of Detroit, under the name of the Jiffy Starter Company and the Evapco Company. Subsequently, both of these companies were incorporated, and at first they interested Sid A. Erwin, one of the appellants herein, and later they interested Isadore J. Stotter, the other appellant. At this time, Mr. Schulte, the president of the plaintiff, Mr. Hermes, the secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff, and Mr. Schweikart, a director, held stock in the Jiffy Starter Company- — Mr. Hermes owning 150 shares, Mr. Schulte 100 shares, and Mr. Schweikart 175 shares. At the time the notes in suit were indorsed over to the bank, these three men were still connected with the bank in the capacities above described.

The transactions which led to the giving of the notes sued upon were as follows : During the early part of September, 1916, Watson and Wachman were attempting to raise money to enlarge the business, and Mr. Stotter was talked of as a “prospect” to buy part of the treasury stock, which at that time amounted to approximately $10,000. Mr. Stotter at that time purchased $5,000 worth of this $10,000 stock, paying at that time $2,500 in cash on the purchase price. In the latter part of August, or the early part of September, 1916, Wachman suggested to the appellants •that they (meaning himself and the two appellants) should get rid of Watson, and that it would be a good thing to take up his stock, and also the stock of the [331]*331officials of the plaintiff bank. Prior to that time Watson and Wachman had been representing to Stotter and Erwin the very profitable business they were doing; that they were doing a business of about $400 or $500 a day, with the profits in excess of $100 a day. Watson, in September, 1916, represented that the assets of the Jiffy Starter Company and the Evapco Company were in the neighborhood of $30,000 with only current bills owing, for the purpose of inducing the appellants to purchase the stock of Watson, his wife, and that of the officials of the plaintiff. He produced a list of alleged accounts, aggregating $17,-058.30, and an assignment of a claim for $3,000 which the Jiffy Starter Company was supposed to have against another concern. Arrangements were then made to purchase said stock at the rate of $7.50 a share. Watson claimed that he would have to go down to Covington, Kentucky, and get the stock of the bank officials. He brought the stock back indorsed in blank, and Stotter went to the First and Old Detroit National Bank, and paid Mr. Watson about $8,000 in cash, and he and Erwin, the other appellant, and defendants Wachman and White, executed and delivered to Watson the three notes in suit, — balance of the purchase price. About a week or ten days after this transaction, to wit: about September 21, 1916, the appellants became suspicious of the solvency of the Jiffy Starter Company and the Evapco Company, and, upon investigation, found that both concerns were in a serious financial condition; that there was no money on hand; and a Mr. Isenhart was put in charge, and upon investigation it was found that the list of accounts receivable, upon the strength of which the stock was purchased, were not bona fide, and that the $3,000 account never existed. It was found that the total assets of both companies amounted to $847 only. The representations of Watson, as to the worth of [332]*332the accounts receivable, were also made in the presence of Mr. Hart, vice president of the First and Old 1 Detroit National Bank. Mr. Schulte, the president of the plaintiff, testified that Watson purchased his stock, as well as the stock of the other officials of the plaintiff at $7.50 a share; that they had paid $5 a share and that they made $2.50 a share; and that the company never declared a dividend, but that he never knew that the company never made a profit. The plaintiff bank claims to have discounted these notes on February 26, 1917, and either permitted Watson to draw against the amount of said discount or to have applied it in payment of an antecedent debt. Upon direct examination Mr. Schulte, the president of the plaintiff, testified that Watson was a customer of the bank, and had been doing business with it for 12 years, and that at the time it discounted the note it gave him credit in the usual manner of banking; and that the notes were placed to the credit of Watson. He testified:

“When I took the notes from Mr. Watson I did not know that there were any equities existing in the favor of the makers as against the payee. I took the notes in the usual course, and discounted them and gave Mr. Watson credit for them.”

On cross-examination he testified:

“Q. Did you give him full credit for the face of the notes?
“A. I discounted them.
“Q. How much money did you pay him on that occasion?
“A. The full face of the note.
“Q. How — in cash?,
“A. I gave him credit on his account.
“Q. What was the state of his account at that time —did he owe you money?
“A. He owed us money.
“Q. How much?
“A. I could not give that. I cannot say whether [333]*333he owed us $2,000 at that time or not. He was given credit for that amount, whether it was for payment of his note that he might have paid it later — I don’t know if that is the amount of his note or not. I don’t know whether he owed that amount or not. He may have owed the bank more.” * * *

Upon being recalled he testified:

“When we received these notes we placed them to the credit of Mr. Watson, the payee, the full amount of these notes to his credit. As a matter of fact, the notes themselves were not discounted; they were placed to his credit — the whole thing, the whole amount, including the interest up to that date. We allowed Mr. Watson to check against that account, and he did check against it. He had the full benefit of the entire amount.”

The witness also testified that he could not state what Mr. Watson’s account was on February 27th.

It is stated by defendants’ counsel that neither defendant Wachman nor White defended the suit, and, as we understand it, only the defendants Stotter and Erwin have appealed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 N.W. 142, 207 Mich. 329, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-savings-bank-trust-co-v-stotter-mich-1919.