Davis Sewing Machine Co. v. . Best

11 N.E. 146, 105 N.Y. 59, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 779, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 693
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 N.E. 146 (Davis Sewing Machine Co. v. . Best) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis Sewing Machine Co. v. . Best, 11 N.E. 146, 105 N.Y. 59, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 779, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 693 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

The facts in this case were practically undisputed, and upon the trial a verdict was ordered by the court for the plaintiff for seven, of the ten notes claimed by it.

The General Term affirmed the judgment and the defendant appeals from such affirmance to this court.

The questions presented by the appeal are substantially embraced in two propositions, viz:

First. Whether the notes in suit were negotiable paper entitling a hona fide purchaser thereof, to hold them as against the true owner, and second, whether in case of a recovery by the plaintiff, the jury was authorized to assess their value at the amount appearing to be due upon their face, or at a nominal sum only.

The plaintiff sought to recover what purported to be nine promissory notes of the Davis Sewing Machine Company of Watertown, for $1,000 each, with collateral guaranty and interest coupons attached, payable Movember 1, 1876, and one similar note payable February 1, 1880, each of which was made upon a printed blank of similar form.

Three of these instruments appeared to be complete in form, *63 with all the blanks properly filled except the payee’s name, and were duly signed by the president and treasurer of the plaintiff company. The remaining seven notes, were in the same form, except that they were not signed by the president, although a blank space with a diagonally ruled line, with the title of his office printed thereunder, was apparently left at the foot of each instrument, for such signature.

The National Trust Company was a banking institution located in the city of New York, and had been previous to this transaction, largely engaged in the business of buying, selling and negotiating similar obligations, for the plaintiff and its agents, and which had theretofore been uniformly signed by both the plaintiff’s treasurer and president.

In September, 1875, a contract was made between the plaintiff and one Winslow, whereby the latter agreed, if the plaintiff would make ten bonds of $1,000 each, payable in short time, with coupons for interest attached, properly guaranteed, he would negotiate them in the market at pay, for the plaintiff at a compensation of one per cent upon the amount received.

Accordingly, the following resolution was adopted on September 14, 1875, by the plaintiff’s directors, and the notes in suit were issued thereunder.

“ Resolved, that the treasurer be instructed to have signed, and negotiate $10,000 of bonds, due November j, 1876, at ninety-nine cents with Mr. N. Winslow * * * hme such bonds signed as may be necessary to make up the amount required.”

According to the directions contained in the resolution, the treasurer filled up the notes above described, and procured them to be signed by all of the parties whose signatures were required to be affixed thereto except that of Winslow, as president and guarantor, and delivered them to Winslow to be signed and disposed of as agreed. Instead of selling the notes Winslow placed them with other notes of the plaintiff amounting to $10,000 then belonging to the Security Bank of Water-town, and hypothecated them with the National Trust Com- *64 pony of Hew York for a loan of $10,000 for the benefit of the Security Bank. Subsequently, the Security Bank repaid the Trust Company $5,000 of such loan, and required the notes belonging to it, to be returned, leaving the notes in suit in the possession of the Trust Company, as security for the unpaid balance of the loan. Upon the discovery of the conversion by Winslow of its notes, the plaintiff demanded them from the defendant, who had then been appointed receiver of the Trust Company and had possession of all its assets, and upon his refusal to surrender them brought replevin for their recovery, demanding the usnal relief.

It is not seriously questioned, but that the notes were unlawfully converted by Winslow, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover their possession, unless the Trust Company became the bona fide holder thereof, by virtue of their purchase from the Security Bank. Winslow could not, as against the plaintiff, have retained possession of the notes except for the purpose of executing the authority conferred upon him in accordance with its terms, neither could his transferee acquire any better title than he, except by a purchase for value without notice of the facts invalidating the title or right to their possession. (Decker v. Mathews, 12 N. Y. 313; Comstock v. Hier, 73 id. 269, 273; Fairbanks v. Sargent, 104 id. 108.)

It therefore becomes necessary to inquire whether the trust company received them charged with knowledge of their invalidity, or Winslow’s want of authority to" pledge them for a loan of money.

The burden of proving a purchase in good faith and for value devolved upon the defendant, after it was established that the notes had been surreptitiously put in circulation and diverted from the purpose for which they had been delivered to Winslow.

It then became incumbent upon the defendant to show that the notes had been executed in a form authorized by the plaintiff, and that the Trust Company had paid value for them upon their transfer to it.

It is claimed by the plaintiff, that the seven notes for which it has obtained judgment, were never properly executed *65 owing to the absence of Winslow’s signature, not only as president of the company, but also as a guarantor, and that this defect was apparent upon the face of the paper and deprived the notes of the character of commercial paper.

The casé shows that the plaintiff had never adopted any general by-law prescribing a method for the execution of its pecuniary obligations, and there is no claim that it ever authorized the treasurer alone to issue them, by any special resolution of its board of directors. Resolutions had frequently been adopted by the board authorizing the treasurer and president together to execute notes for specified amounts, duly guaranteed by the twelve resident directors of the plaintiff’s company, and one or two resolutions were also adopted, providing for small amounts of paper, which did not prescribe any particular form of execution. But it had theretofore been the uniform practice of the plaintiff to cause all of its notes and bonds to be signed by both its president and treasurer, and guarantied by its twelve resident directors, of whom Winslow was one. Three of the notes in suit were so signed and guarantied and they belonged apparently to the same series, as the seven not so signed.

The trust company had theretofore dealt largely in the plaintiff’s paper, and at the time of receiving the securities mentioned, was perfectly familiar with its mode of executing such obligations.

It was also obvious from the form of the notes that it was intended to have them signed by the president, since a blank was left for that purpose at the usual place for a maker’s signature.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E. 146, 105 N.Y. 59, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 779, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-sewing-machine-co-v-best-ny-1887.