Consolidated Motors Co. v. Urschel

222 P. 745, 115 Kan. 147, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1924
DocketNo. 24,902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 222 P. 745 (Consolidated Motors Co. v. Urschel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Motors Co. v. Urschel, 222 P. 745, 115 Kan. 147, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 214 (kan 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

Consolidated Motors Company sued D. F. Urschel, claiming to be the holder in due course of a negotiable note upon which he was liable. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals.

1. The instrument sued upon was a “myself” note, executed by Urschel, made payable to his own order, and by him indorsed in blank. The answer alleged that Urschel signed, indorsed and delivered the note to the Associated Mill and Elevator Company, being induced to do so by its false and fraudulent misrepresentations of material matters. In the course of the preliminary statements to the jury the plaintiff’s attorney admitted the fraud as alleged in the answer, and the defendant’s attorney admitted that the plaintiff was the owner and holder of the note for value and before maturity. The plaintiff then moved for judgment as prayed in the petition, and the motion was sustained.

The title of the Associated Mill and Elevator Company to the note was defective because of its fraud in obtaining it (Neg. Inst. [148]*148Law, § 62; R. S. 52-505), and if the ordinary rule concerning negotiable instruments applies the burden was on the plaintiff to prove that it was a holder in due course (§ 66). This burden was not met by the admission made, because notwithstanding the plaintiff acquired the note before due and for value it might have known all about the fraud and this would prevent its becoming a purchaser in good faith, which was necessary to constitute it a holder in due course (§ 59). (Ireland v. Shore, 91 Kan. 326, 137 Pac. 926; Beachy v. Jones, 108 Kan. 236, 195 Pac. 184; see, also, Bank v. Birch, 111 Kan. 283, 286, 207 Pac. 191.)

2. • The plaintiff contends, however, that because of the defendant being an indorser he is precluded from questioning the validity of the title of the first taker of the note — the perpetrator of the fraud — and asserts that this contention was upheld in a recent decision. (Leach v. Urschel, 112 Kan. 629, 212 Pac. 111.) The case cited did not decide that one who had been fraudulently induced to sign, indorse and deliver such a note would be prevented by the fact of his. indorsement from defending an action brought upon it by the swindler or by one who merely stood in his shoes. It held that the note there involved was negotiable and that its negotiability was not impaired by these words appearing above the name of the payee (who was also the maker) where it was written on the back of the instrument: “There are no conditions offsetting this nóte and any bank, banker, corporation or individual has my permission to purchase the same.” (p. 631.) After quoting the provision of the statute that "A person placing his signature upon an instrument otherwise than as maker, drawer or acceptor is deemed to be an indorser, unless he clearly indicates by appropriate words his intention to be bound in some other capacity” (p. 633) the opinion proceeded “Now it cannot be said that the recital on the back of this note indicated any intention on the part of the signer to be bound in any other capacity than as indorser, and it is not discernible that the recital had any significance which would add to or detract from the liability of an indorser under ordinary rules of law. Certainly the indorser’s assurance that there were 'no conditions offsetting this note’ was not a warning that there was some infirmity in it. It did not destroy the note’s negotiability.” (p. 633.) Obviously the language quoted was used solely with reference to the effect of the words appearing above the indorsement, and did not undertake to define the obligations assumed by an indorser of a note who is also the maker.

[149]*149The warranties assumed by the negotiator of a note are fixed by the statute, one section of which reads:

“Every person negotiating an instrument by delivery, or by a qualified indorsement, warrants: (1) That the instrument is genuine and in all respects what it purports to-be; (2) that he has a good title to it; (3) that all prior parties had capacity to contract; (4) that he has no knowledge of any fact which would impair the validity of the instrument or render it valueless; but when the negotiation is by delivery only, the warranty extends in favor of no holder other than the immediate transferee.” (Neg. Inst. Law, § 72.) .

It is argued that the defendant, although the maker of the note, is also the indorser, and as indorser must be held to have made the guaranties referred to, regardless of any question of innocent purchase. That the defendant is not in all respects on the footing of an ordinary indorser is clear from the provision of the statute that such a note is not complete until it is indorsed (§ 191), which is merely declaratory of the law as it had previously been determined. (8 C. J. 176; 3 R. C. L. 1151-2.) The note was not negotiated by a qualified indorsement, for that involves the use of "without recourse” or an equivalent phrase (§ 45); but when the defendant gave it to the first taker — the perpetrator of the fraud — he did in a sense negotiate it by delivery, for a note payable to bearer is by the statute negotiated by delivery (§37) and a note indorsed in blank is payable to bearer (§41). But this note could not have been negotiated at all without the indorsement — the indorsement was a necessary part of the negotiation. The transaction referred to as a negotiation was really the delivery of the note to the first taker. The portion of the statute above quoted plainly has reference to a holder who either indorses a note “without recourse” or passes it on in the same condition in which he received it, making no indorsement at all. Such a person, although he does not become subject to the ordinary liability of an indorser, is declared by the statute to make certain warranties regarding the instrument. It may well be doubted whether a warranty of genuineness, or any of the other matters enumerated, should be construed as a guaranty that the person making it had not been defrauded — a fact of which he would necessarily be in ignorance at the time of its delivery. The fraud that was practiced on the defendant did not make his own title defective, it made defective the title of the person who obtained the note from him, and he can hardly be .conceived as breaking any warranty to the person who had defrauded him. Moreover, the statutory warranty is expressly limited (in the case [150]*150of negotiation by delivery) to the immediate transferee — in this case to the Associated Mill and Elevator Company, which is admitted to have procured it by fraud. But in any event the present instance is not within the reason or spirit of the statute making the indorser a warrantor, nor within its letter when the portion quoted is read in connection with the section following it, which provides that one who indorses a note “without qualification” undertakes certain warranties, but only “to all subsequent holders in due course.” Inasmuch as the defendant’s indorsement was “without qualification,” by the very terms of the statute such warranty as he is deemed to have made inured only to the benefit of holders in due course, and the plaintiff did not meet the burden laid upon it of showing that it belonged in that category.

Moreover, reason and authority alike justify the conclusion that the defendant is not liable, on the ground that although by writing his name on the back of the note he in a literal sense indorsed it, he did not thereby become an indorser in such sense as to assume a liability in that capacity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 P. 745, 115 Kan. 147, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-motors-co-v-urschel-kan-1924.