Despres, Bridge & Noel v. Hough Drug Co.

86 So. 359, 123 Miss. 598
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
DocketNo. 21266
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 86 So. 359 (Despres, Bridge & Noel v. Hough Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Despres, Bridge & Noel v. Hough Drug Co., 86 So. 359, 123 Miss. 598 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant sued the appellee on five promissory notes bearing date September 14, 1917, due and payable as folio ays : One for two hundred dollars, due four months from date; one for two hundred and tAventy-five dollars, due five months from date; one for tAvo hundred dollars, due six months from date; one for two hundred dollars, due seven months from date; and one for two hundred dollars, due eight months from date. The first note reads as folIoays :

“$200. P. O., Indianola; State, Mississippi.
“Date, Sept. 14 — 17.
“Four months after date for value received we promise to pay to the order of Partin Manufacturing Company, Incorporated, two hundred dollars ($200) at Indianola Bank.
“Hough Drug Co., by John Hough.”

The other notes Avere identical in form and language, except that they Avere for 5, 6, 7, and 8 months, respectively, and in the case of the note due five months from date, the amount of the note was for two hundred and twenty-five dollars; the other notes all being for two hundred dollars each. Each of the said notes were indorsed as follows: ■

“Partin Manufacturing Co. Inc. C. H. Partin, Manager. Pay to the order1 of Foreman Bros. Banking Co.'Chicago, 111. Despres, Bridges & Noel. Pay to the order' of Any Bank or Banker, Foreman Bros. Banking Co." 2-27 Chicago, 111. 2-27. John Terborcli, Cashier.”

The defendant pleaded the general issue and two special pleas. By the first special plea it is alleged that plaintiff ought not to maintain its action because the debt sued [608]*608for in this case is not a legal, subsisting, and valid demand against the defendant, because the Par-tin Manufacturing Company, to which the notes here sued on were executed, was, at the time of the execution, thereof and of the contraction of said debt, a foreign corporation, incorporated under the laws of the átate of —--, and had not, at the time of the execution of said notes and of the contraction of the alleg'ed debt, qualified to do business in the state of Mississippi, as required by chapter 24, Code 1906, and the amendments thereto; that the notes sued on were given to the Partin Manufacturing Company to represent and evidence the installment due under a certain contract executed concurrently therewith by and between the defendant and the Partin Manufacturing Company; that the Partin Manufacturing Company had its domicile in the city of-., state of-, and one of its principal offices in the city of Memphis, Tennessee, and that it was engaged in the states of Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, and other states in increasing the business of mercantile concerns in the manner set forth in the contract; that said notes were given to the said corporation doing business in this state in violation of the laws and of the public policy thereof, and were void and uncollectible. A certificate was attached to this plea from the secretary of state of Mississippi, showing that the Partin Manufacturing Company had no charter in the state of Mississippi, and had not filed its foreign charter under the requirements of the law.

The second plea alleges that the notes sued on were exer cuted to represent installments under a certain contract, and that under the terms of the said contract the Partin Manufacturing Company was to do and perform certain things therein stipulated, and that at the time of the execution of the contract it .was the intent and purpose of the said Partin Manufacturing Company not to comply with any part of such contract, and that it had not performed the things, or any of them, specified in the contract; that the defendant was induced to sign said con[609]*609tract by tbe Partin Manufacturing Company for tbe purpose of fraudulently obtaining said notes; that the Partin Manufacturing Company urns engaged in the business of obtaining such contracts and having executed to it notes such as here sued on, and that after the execution of said notes it Avould transfer- and assign said notes to the plaintiff-, so that the plaintiff could hold itself out as an innocent purchaser for value Avithout notice; that the plaintiff is not an innocent purchaser, and. that the Partin Manufacturing Company falsely and fraudulently induced the defendant to enter into the said contract, and that the Partin Manufacturing Company then and there knew it would not perform the things it was called upon to do and perform; that it intended to deceive the defendant, and that the defendant, relying on the false representations made to it, executed the notes sued on.

At the time of. the execution of the notes here in suit, the contract, made Exhibit A to the second special plea, AAras entered into, under which the defendant placed an order with the Partin Manufacturing Company for: First, .an automobile; second, a Grand Phonola talking machine; third, a ladies’ bracelet watch; fourth, a ladies’ lavaliere and chain; fifth, a ladies’ locket and chain; sixth, one forty-two-piece hand-decorated dinner set; also certain advertising matter; the things so ordered to be used as. prizes to purchasers from the defendant, under an understanding that the Partin Manufacturing Company would increase the defendant’s sales and collections not less, than tAvelve thousand, five hundred dollars in .twelve months, under Avliich agreement the Partin Manufacturing Company was to refund ten cents on every dollar the defendant fell short of the twelve thousand, five hundred dollars increase, and agreed to send' its bond, indorsed by a bonding company to the purchaser in the sum of one thousand, two hundred and fifty dollars to guarantee this agreement. The special pleas were replied to, and the case proceeded to trial.

[610]*610It appears from the record that the Partin Manufacturing Company bought from the plaintiff at various times, jewelry, and that the notes in suit were transferred to the plaintiff before the same became due, and that credit ivas given the Partin Manufacturing Company in the same way that it would be given for cash, that is to say, the notes, according to the plaintiff, were bought unconditionally. The plaintiff testified that it bought the notes on the commercial rating of the ITough Drug Company, and that it had no knowledge of the agreements and contracts between the Partin Manufacturing Company and the Hough Drug Company, and that plaintiff did not know that the Partin Manufacturing Company did with the goods ordered from it. In the deposition of the sales manager for the plaintiff he offered to permit the defendant, or any reliable representative of the defendant, to examine the books and business of the plaintiff. On cross-interrogatories to the depositions the defendant was requested to attach correspondence between the plaintiff and the makers of the notes transferred by the Partin Manufacturing Company to the plaintiff, and also the correspondence between the Partin Manufacturing Company and the plaintiff, and many letters are contained in the record; but these do not pertain to the notes in suit, and do not, in our opinion, warrant the inference that the plaintiff was engaged fraudulently in buying notes acquired from the Partin Manufacturing Company, nor does it show, in our opinion,, that they had any knowledge of any fraudulent dealings on the part of the Partin Manufacturing Company.

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Bluebook (online)
86 So. 359, 123 Miss. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/despres-bridge-noel-v-hough-drug-co-miss-1920.