Clark v. Dada

183 A.D. 253, 171 N.Y.S. 205, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6009
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 A.D. 253 (Clark v. Dada) 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
Clark v. Dada, 183 A.D. 253, 171 N.Y.S. 205, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6009 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

Merrell, J.:

This action is brought by the plaintiff, Horace E. Clark, to recover of the defendant, Samuel N. Dada, upon a promissory note (Exhibit 1) alleged to have been made by said defendant, of which the following is a copy:

“-$670.00 Syracuse, N. Y., February 13th, 1914.
“ Four months after date I promise to pay to the order of Wm. B. Fuller Six hundred seventy and no /100 Dollars at Syracuse Trust Company. Value received, with interest.
“ S. N. DADA.”

The defendant was at the time of the trial on October 22, 1917, an old gentleman of the age of ninety years, and at and since the time of the alleged making of the note in suit was practically blind and wholly unable to see or read writing or printing. He had been a practicing attorney at law at Fulton, N. Y., but for a number of years had resided at Syracuse, N. Y., with the payee named in the note, who was his son-in-law, and who was also a lawyer. Wilham B. Fuller, the payee named in the note in suit, was on January 25, 1917, by order of the county judge of Onondaga county, upon the certificate of two qualified medical examiners, adjudged insane and committed to the St. Lawrence State Hospital for treatment. [255]*255There has never been any adjudication of lunacy and no proceedings have ever been taken for the appointment of a committee of the person or property of said Fuller. It, however, appeared upon the trial that he was still confined in said State hospital.

• The circurnstances under which the note in suit came into plaintiff’s possession are interesting. Plaintiff’s complaint is the usual one upon a promissory note and alleges the making and delivery of the note by defendant to the payee, William B. Fuller, but does not allege that such making and delivery was for value. The complaint further alleges that before maturity the said note was duly indorsed and delivered by the said payee to one M. Stanley Powell, for value, and that thereafter and on or about the 1st day of November, 1915, the said Powell indorsed and delivered the said note to the plaintiff, for value. By his answer the defendant denies generally the allegations of the complaint as to the making and delivery of the note, and specifically alleges that he never signed or delivered to said William B. Fuller or any other person the note mentioned in the complaint, or any note for $670. In his answer defendant further alleges his blindness and inability to read, and that if he ever signed said note, he was induced so to do by fraudulent representations of his son-in-law, Fuller, as to its purpose, and that the same was wrongfully diverted by his said son-in- ' law, and defendant denies that he ever-received any consideration for said note. Defendant in his answer also alleges that the pretended transfers of the note to Powell and to plaintiff were without consideration, and after maturity, and that thereby neither indorsee became a bona fide holder or owner thereof for value.

The evidence upon the trial did not disclose the consideration of the note in suit and defendant was not permitted to deny that he made it, nor to testify as to the circumstances under which it was obtained, if in fact he ever signed or delivered it.

To prove his cause of action plaintiff first swore two employees of the Syracuse Trust Company — the paying teller and a bookkeeper—who testified that defendant for several years had had an account in said institution and that through handling his checks they had become familiar with [256]*256his handwriting, although neither had ever seen him write. A signature card was produced bearing defendant’s alleged signature and which they swore was kept at the bank or the identification of defendant’s signature, It was not shown that the signature upon the card was made by defendant. Said witnesses were then permitted to testify that in their opinion the signature to the note in suit was defendant’s. It was upon such slender evidence that plaintiff rested his case so far as the execution of the note by defendant was concerned. Neither of these witnesses had ever seen him write. Such familiarity with his signature as they professed came from handling checks which had passed through the bank, none of which were produced upon the trial and none of which they saw him sign, and concerning the genuineness of the signatures of which they had no personal knowledge. And they were only able to testify that in their opinion the note bore defendant’s signature after comparing the same under a -powerful magnifying glass with the deposit card bearing defendant’s name, which neither saw him write.

The fact that at these times defendant was blind and probably unable to make uniform signatures greatly weakens any probative value of such testimony. Plaintiff next swore M. Stanley Powell, the person to whom it is claimed Fuller, the payee, indorsed the note. Powell has been somewhat of a wanderer. At the time of the trial he claimed to be a resident of New Jersey, but. that for two years he resided at Syracuse, N. Y., and there became acquainted with the said William B. Fuller. Powell accounts for his connection with the note in suit through business transactions with Fuller. Powell was a promoter- and claims to have sold Fuller certain stock for which he held Fuller’s notes. On May 22, 1914, Powell testifies Fuller’s notes were merged in one renewal note made by Fuller for I960, payable to the order of Powell three months from date. Powell testifies that at the time of making such renewal note he demanded additional security of Fuller and that the latter then turned over to- him as such collateral security the note in suit. Powell testified as to seeing Fuller indorse the same and that Fuller told him that it was defendant’s note. Powell claims to have held the note from May 22, 1914, until he turned it over to plaintiff on November 1, 1915, [257]*257and though long past due admits that he never presented the same at the Syracuse Trust Company for payment and never called upon defendant for pay thereon, nor in any manner communicated with defendant with reference thereto. Fuller’s $960 note held by Powell was at its maturity on August 22, 1914, again renewed for three months, and such renewal note was offered and received in evidence as Exhibit 3. At its maturity, on November 23, 1914, this last note ivas still again renewed for $960, and this final renewal note was received in evidence as Exhibit 4, but for some reason Exhibit 3, of which Exhibit 4 was a renewal, was not surrendered to Fuller. So that, as matters stood on November 23, 1914, and thereafter, as Powell claims, he held Fuller’s note for $960 for the latter’s indebtedness, and as collateral thereto held the note in suit. On November 1, 1915, Powell claims to have transferred both of said notes to the plaintiff by indorsement. Powell was an entire stranger to plaintiff, the deal whereby plaintiff claims to have obtained said notes being engineered by a Mr. Hyle, an attorney of Syracuse, to whom Powell had delivered said notes for collection. Powell, residing out of the State and not desiring to bring suit in his own name, employed Hyle to bring action through a resident, and plaintiff testifies that Hyle wanted him to take the notes in his name so he could bring action thereon. Plaintiff paid nothing for the notes, but if successful under his arrangement with Hyle was to.pay to Powell two-thirds of whatever he recovered, and retain the other third for his trouble.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.D. 253, 171 N.Y.S. 205, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-dada-nyappdiv-1918.