Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Co. v. Barry

154 So. 736, 179 La. 684, 1934 La. LEXIS 1426
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 23, 1934
DocketNo. 32420.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 So. 736 (Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Co. v. Barry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Co. v. Barry, 154 So. 736, 179 La. 684, 1934 La. LEXIS 1426 (La. 1934).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Plaintiff sued on a promissory note for $8,711, subject to certain enumerated credits, interest, and attorney fees. The defendant is John C. Barry, and the note sued on is signed “J. C. Barry, Trustee,” and is payable on demand to the order of the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company. Plaintiff alleges that, although the word “Trustee” appears after the signature of J. C. Barry, the said Barry is personally liable on the note. The defense is that plaintiff is not a holder of the note in due course and for a valuable consideration, and that the note itself, issued without consideration and no consideration whatever, was received by defendant for the instrument. An alternative defense is that the note was given for an illegal consideration, which, so far as it is violative of the law, is unenforceable by plaintiff. The court below rejected plaintiff’s demand, and plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

At the time the note sued on was executed, J. C. Barry was president and in active charge of the affairs of the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company. For a number of years prior to the execution of the note, it was customary for the bank, from time to time, *687 to purchase and carry for resale a small amount of its capital stock. The custom arose, following the financial crises of 1920, from the necessity of establishing in the city of Lafayette a central point where dissatisfied or distressed stockholders could dispose of their stock, thereby preventing the peddling of -the stock or its advertisement for sale in the local newspapers to the irreparable injury of the bank. The plan devised and followed as á precautionary and protective measure consisted in the bank purchasing the stock, when unavoidable, paying for it with its own fund's, and issuing certificates in lieu thereof in the name of J. C. Barry, trustee, which certificates were retained by the bank. Barry’s notes, executed as trustee, were taken for the amounts expended, with the distinct understanding that no personal liability would attach to him thereon, and that the notes would be discharged out of the proceeds derived from the resale of the stock and the dividends accruing thereon. The notes were kept in the bank’s portfolio and credited, from time to time, with the amounts realized from the sale of the stock and the accrued dividends; the purchased stock remaining at all times in the possession of the bank as its property.

The note sued on is a renewal of prior notes of the same terms and tenor, and represents the aggregate amount invested hy the bank at the date of the note in purchasing its own stock, the credits entered on the instrument representing returns on the stock which stood on the books of the bank in the name of I. O. Barry, trustee.

In March and May, 1931, the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company sold all its assets to the Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company. Among those assets was the note which is herein sued on.

Plaintiff contends that it acquired the note for valuable consideration before maturity, and' hence is a holder against whom prior equities will not avail. On this ground, plaintiff objected to the offer of any evidence by defendant in support of his defense. The objection was overruled, and the evidence was admitted. We find no error in the ruling. The unindorsed note was acquired by plaintiff from the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company, the payee named in the instrument, by contracts of merger or sale. Hence no title resting on endorsement is vested in plaintiff.

As stated in the able written opinion of the trial judge filed in the record: “At common law, under the law merchant, and independently of the Negotiable Instruments Law, a transferee of a note payable to order could not and did not obtain the legal title thereto, except by the endorsement of the payee, and a holder without, such endorsement took it ‘subject to all the equities vested in prior parties.’

“This principle is recognized in all the textbooks and in numerous cases, including the well-known and oft-quoted Louisiana case, Pavey v. Stauffer, 45 La. Ann. 353, 12 So. 512, 19 L. R. A. 716. Therein it was said: ‘A transferee before maturity of a piece of commercial paper, not endorsed at date of transfer, acquires an equitable, but not a legal, title thereto; and the subsequent actual endorsement thereof before maturity does not operate the exclusion of equities between the maker and payee, of which the transferee had notice in the meantime.’

*689 “Independently of the common law rule, the Negotiable Instruments Law (Act No. 64 of 1904) section 49, has consecrated the prior doctrine in language clear and unmistakable.

“ ‘Where the holder of an instrument payable to his order transfers it for value without indorsing it, the transfer vests in' the transferee such title as the transferor had therein, and the transferee acquires, in addition, the right to have the indorsement of the transferor. But for the purpose of determining whether the transferee is a holder in due course, the negotiation takes effect as of the ■time when the endorsement is actually made.’

“Mr. Brannon, in his Negotiable Instruments Law, 4th. Ed., under § 49, at page 340, collects numerous authorities holding that endorsement alone can constitute one a holder in due course of a note payable to order, notwithstanding section 59, for under section 191 he is neither ‘holder’ because not a payee or indorsee, nor ‘bearer,’ because the instrument is not payable to bearer.

“To the same effect is 8 C. J., § 575, p. 389; 3 R. C. L., § 241, p. 1034 and numerous authorities,” cited in support of the test.

Under section 30 of No. 64 of 1904 (the Negotiable Instruments Law), “An instrument is negotiated when it is transferred from one person to another in such manner as to constitute the transferee the holder thereof. If payable to bearer it is negotiated by delivery; if payable to order it is negotiated by the indorsement of the holder completed by delivery.”

There having been no negotiation of the note sued on in the sense of the statutory provision, because it was never indorsed by the payee, it is immaterial whether plaintiff acquired the note prior to its maturity.

Section 57 of Act No. 64 of 1904 provides that: “A holder in due course holds the instrument free from any defect of title of prior parties, and free from defences available to prior parties among themselves, and may enforce payment of the instrument for the full amount thereof against all parties liable thereon.” But 'section 58 of the statute declares that: “In the hands of any holder other than a holder in due course, a negotiable instrument is subject to the same defences as if it were non-negotiable.”

From'all of which it follows that plaintiff cannot be regarded as a holder in due course, and the instrument sued on is sub ject to the same defenses as if it were nonnegotiable.

Plaintiff also objected to the introduction of any evidence to sustain the allegations of defendant’s answer on the grounds (1) that by the provisions of section 9 of Act No. 179 of 1902, as amended by Act No. 8 of 1922, banking associations are prohibited from purchasing directly or indirectly any of their own stock; and (2) the answer, taken as a whole, discloses that the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company and the defendant, John C.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 736, 179 La. 684, 1934 La. LEXIS 1426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-lafayette-trust-co-v-barry-la-1934.