Cheever v. Pittsburgh, Shenago & Lake Erie Railroad

28 A.D. 81
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 A.D. 81 (Cheever v. Pittsburgh, Shenago & Lake Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheever v. Pittsburgh, Shenago & Lake Erie Railroad, 28 A.D. 81 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Barrett, J.:

The facts. as they appear in the present record differ materially from those which were presented upon the previous trial. We have examined the record of that trial, and we find that the defendant, after proving the diversion of the notes, rested upon the constructive notice implied from what appeared upon their face¿ It is true that Mr. Brooks’ deposition, taken in the year 1891, was rdad in evidence. But the circumstancfes attendant upon his receipt of the two notes in suit, as collateral security for the loan which he made to Erost in March, 1888, were not fully or clearly developed. In that deposition Mr. Brooks testified that he lent $30,000 to Mr. Frost upon the security of these notes, together with certificates or. receipts representing unissued bonds of the Pittsburgh,, Shenango and Lake Erie Railroad Company of the par value of $21,000. These bonds were worth about eighty-five cents upon the' dollar. He also testified that he had previously made loans to Frost upon the security of stock of the St. Paul Gas Light Company. He gave no particulars of these other loans, nor did he furnish any information as to their extent, character or condition. He. did not intimate that they were large, nor that they were due and unpaid when Frost asked for this fresh loan of $80^000. In fact,' there was nothing in his narration on that head suggestive of anything unusual in his financial relations with Frost. For aught that appeared in that deposition, Frost approached Mr. Brooks upon the occasion in question as an ordinary borrower in good credit, who had promptly met his previous obligations at maturity, and whose request for a further loan was unaccompanied by any circumstances, calculated to arouse suspicion or to call for special inquiry.

Upon the trial now under review, however, it was proved that at the very time when Frost asked for this additional loan of $30,000, he owed Brooks $75,000; that Frost, as he himself says, was borrowing money from Brooks all the time ; ” that he commenced this constantborrowing as far back as the year 1885 ; that the $75,000 was made up in part1 of two notes amounting to $17,500, which had matured in the previous month and had not been paid ; and that the balance consisted of demand notes which were also unpaid. How this indebtedness of $75,000 was secured does not appear by direct evidence. The inferences deducible from the course of busi[85]*85ness between the parties, however, indicate that it certainly was not well secured. For it appears that the principal debt was never paid, nor was the interest paid as it became due from time to time. This debt, with accrued interest, was “ settled or canceled ” some two years later by the turning over to Brooks (cts owner) of the securities which up to that time he had held as collateral thereto.

It seems that Brooks, notwithstanding this unsatisfactory condition of things, unhesitatingly advanced to Frost the further sum of $30,000 without asking a single question or saying a single word as to these unpaid notes. Clearly he did not make the fresh advance to reduce the existing indebtedness. Ho part of it was applied to the payment of the $17,500 of matured and unpaid notes, much less to the payment of the demand notes. Frost says that when the $30,000 was borrowed, no mention was made of these unpaid notes to his recollection ; and Brooks is entirely silent upon the subject. In fact, there is not a suggestion in the testimony that this indebtedness of $75,000 was then referred to in any manner. There is no proof in this record that the relations of the parties were such as to entitle Frost to special and' extraordinary credit ■—regardless of his large unpaid indebtedness. On the contrary, it appears that Frost’s business, apart from his railroad presidency, was largely speculative, and that the capital which he was using in this business was. “ chiefly borrowed.” Bruen testified that Frost’s business was the “ putting in gas plants,” the furnishing of railroad supplies, and “ a variety of speculations.” It may reasonably .be assumed that Brooks knew the nature of Frost’s business and was well aware of its unstable and speculative character. Why- then did not Brooks scrutinize the securities which such a debtor under such circumstances offered him ? The debtor was seeking to extend his unpaid indebtedness and to extend it largely. What was there- in Frost’s situation and attitude, when he thus approached Brooks, to warrant the latter in taking anything in the way of security which was offered him; and in taking it without the slightest inquiry ? He knew that Frost' was president of the railroad company, and lie also knew that that president proposed to raise money for his own purposes upon the credit of the railroad company’s notes and securities. The indorsement of Bruen upon these notes played literally no part in the transaction. Upon the present trial, Brooks [86]*86.himself says' so. “ I have no idea,” he now testifies, that I placed 'any value upon the indorsement of John T. Bruen. * * *• I did not, as far as I can recollect, inquire who John T. Bruen was¿ * * * I did not make any inquiry as to whether he was a man of property. * * * I did not know what interest, if any, the payee named in the, notes, John T. Bruen, had had in them ” (the notes). This is, under the circumstances, an extraordinary confession. Why, it may well he asked, did he make no such inquiry ? Was security for a fresh loan of $30,000, beyond the unpaid $75,000, of so little moment to him that he did not care who the indorser was ?' Or, for that matter, who the maker was ? For there is not an intimation that Brooks made any inquiry even with regard to the railroad or as to its responsibility and solvency. Brooks was himself a railroad president. He had been such for nearly ten years; and' he either knew from his general information, as a railroad official, that this particular company had just emerged from a receivership and that its predecessors had undergone great vicissitudes, or else. he knew nothing at all about it and did not care to know. Here was a gentleman in Boston, a lawyer of forty years’ experience, president of a railroad company and apparently a capitalist, advancing money to a weak and speculative debtor without the slightest scrutiny of the collaterals offered. The parties were neither .relatives nor apparently close friends nor near neighbors. There was plainly nothing philanthropic in the transaction. In or were the securities on their face speakingly convincing. Ho innocent inference can well be drawn from the possibilities of local knowledge or environment. The debtor was from Hew York; the railroad was a Pennsylvania corporation ; and the indorser Bruen was wholly unknown. He was, in fact, but a name. He might have as well been called John Doe. - And Brooks did not even ask where notice of protest should be sent in case the notes should ' happen to be dishonored. All he knew, or seemingly cared to know, was that his crippled debtor was president of a railroad; that that president had the railroad’s notes and securities of uncertain value in his .possession; and that he was anxious to pledge these notes and securities to raise money for use in his own speculative adventures.

What happened subsequently tends to indicate Francis Brooks' consciousness of what the transaction really meant. The notes [87]*87were dated at Greenville, Pennsylvania, and they were payable to the American Exchange National Bank in this city. When they matured they were not protested, nor were they even presented for payment. No notice of non-payment was ever given to Bruen.

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Related

Cheever v. Pittsburgh, Shenango & Lake Erie Railroad
50 A.D. 422 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
28 A.D. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheever-v-pittsburgh-shenago-lake-erie-railroad-nyappdiv-1898.