Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Limpright

160 P. 1046, 93 Wash. 361, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1206
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1916
DocketNo. 13332
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 160 P. 1046 (Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Limpright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Limpright, 160 P. 1046, 93 Wash. 361, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1206 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

Plaintiff, claiming to be a bona fide holder for value, brought this action to recover $1,150 as a balance due [362]*362upon a promissory note, together with interest, costs and attorney’s fees. The defense was that plaintiff was not a bona 'fide holder for value. Certain facts are not disputed. On February 21, 1914, defendant husband gave to one Pittman, doing business as Riverside Carriage & Auto Company, a negotiable promissory note for $1,600, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, and» reciting, “$1,150 due April 21, 1914, balance at rate of $100 per month.” The circumstances under which the note was given were these: ■Pittman, as the auto company, sold to defendant an automobile at a price of $1,600, agreeing to take defendant’s old car in part payment at a valuation of $1,150, the balance of $450 to be paid in four monthly payments of $100 each and one of $50. The old car was at once delivered to the auto company and the new car to defendant, who received in return for his note the following memorandum of agreement:

“Everett, Wash., 2-21, 1914.
“We hereby agree to allow C. Limpright $1,150 for his 35 Studebalcer car, same to be paid and applied on a certain note for $1,600, this is to be applied on sixty days from date on said note of $1,600. Riverside Carriage & Auto Co.,
“Ry L. R. Pittman.”

On February 26, 1914, the note was transferred by indorsement to plaintiff as collateral to a loan of $1,280. Defendant thereafter made payments on the note as follows: $200 on April 4, 1914, $100 May 5, 1914, $100 June 3, 1914, $50 July 7, 1914. These payments were made to the auto company and were credited on the note by the bank. Two questions of fact are in dispute. Plaintiff’s cashier, with whom the transaction was had, testified that, when the note was negotiated at the bank, he had no notice or knowledge of the circumstances under which the note was given nor any notice or knowledge of the collateral agreement, and did not learn of these things till about six months afterwards. Pittman testified that, either at the time of the transfer or soon afterwards, “I told them I had 'a car to sell and the [363]*363proceeds applied on the note in sixty days from the time I accepted the note.” He did not testify that he showed to the cashier or any one connected with the bank the collateral agreement, or that he advised any one connected with the bank of the terms of that agreement or even of its existence. The other disputed fact is as to when notice of the negotiation of the note was first given to defendant. Plaintiff’s cashier testified that, on February 26, 1914, he wrote to defendant advising him that the bank held the note; that, while he had no independent recollection of the matter, he knew it because that date was stamped on the back of the note, and that it was his universal custom to so stamp the date on sending such notices. Defendant denied ever having received any notice of that date. On October 1, 1914, the cashier wrote defendant as follows:

“Your note to the Riverside Carriage & Auto Company, assigned to this bank, is past due as to several monthly payments of $100 each, and we must therefore urge this matter upon your prompt attention, and oblige.”

Defendant testified that this letter conveyed to him the first notice he ever received that the bank held the note. He ■afterwards admitted, however, that he paid the first installments to one Gay, an employee of the auto company, who then told him he would take the checks to the bank and that he, defendant, then supposed the bank had the note. Pittman, on May 27, 1914, sold the old car for $749.70, took a note in payment and sold this note to plaintiff bank for eighty per cent of its face. There was no evidence that any one connected with the bank had any knowledge or notice that this note represented the proceeds of the old car received by Pittman from defendant. Pittman testified: “I never said a word to them about that.”

The cause was tried to the court without a jury. The court found that plaintiff took the note prior to its maturity but with full knowledge and notice of the collateral agreement between defendant and Pittman, and took it subject to [364]*364that agreement, and that the note had been paid in full. Judgment was entered dismissing the action with costs to defendants. Plaintiff appealed.

It is contended (1) that the evidence was insufficient to charge appellant with notice or knowledge of the collateral agreement when it took the note; (2) that the collateral agreement being still executory when the note was indorsed, knowledge of its existence could not deprive appellant of its character of bona fide indorsee in due course.

The taker of negotiable paper, fair upon its face, does not owe to the party who gives it currency the duty of active inquiry in order to avoid the imputation of bad faith. His rights are to be measured “by the simple test of honesty and good faith,” not by mere speculation as to his diligence or negligence. It is not enough to impeach his good faith that he may have been negligent or may have failed to take precautions that a prudent man would have taken. McNamara v. Jose, 28 Wash. 461, 68 Pac. 903; Gray v. Boyle, 55 Wash. 578, 104 Pac. 828, 133 Am. St. 1042; Scandinavian-American Bank v. Johnston, 63 Wash. 187, 115 Pac. 102. As we read the evidence, the full purport of which we have set out in our statement, it falls far short of showing knowledge on appellant’s part when it took this note of any agreement on Pittman’s part to credit upon the note $1,150, or any other sum, as the price of the old car. We shall not further discuss the evidence on this point, since, even were it conceded that appellant had full knowledge of the collateral agreement, that fact would not charge it with bad faith.

If, as between the parties, at the time of the delivery of the old car it was to be considered as an immediate payment of the $1,150, the written agreement to treat it as a payment sixty days from that date would be nugatory and meaningless. That agreement was an executory agreement to apply the $1,150 as the valuation of the old car upon the note, not immediately, but sixty days from that date. It was a contemporaneous agreement to do the thing at a future time [365]*365as part of the consideration for the note. The plain purpose of the giving of the note for the full price of the new car without then crediting upon it the $1,150 was to enable Pittmaü to raise money upon the note. On the face of the transaction no other purpose is conceivable. Moreover, the oral evidence conclusively so shows. Respondent, when asked why it was that he gave the note for the full price of the new car when he turned in the old car said: “He (Pittman) wanted sixty days to turn the old car.” Pittman, when asked why he took the note when he already had the old car, answered:

“In the first place we had to pay cash for the cars when we received them, and we either had to pay for the cars or do without them, and we could not sell the cars unless we took paper or did something to negotiate for cash for the cars.”

There is not a word of evidence that Pittman agreed not to negotiate the note or that respondent ever asked him not to negotiate it.

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Bluebook (online)
160 P. 1046, 93 Wash. 361, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-trust-co-v-limpright-wash-1916.