Dodo v. Stocker

219 P. 222, 74 Colo. 95, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 1, 1923
DocketNo. 10,536
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 219 P. 222 (Dodo v. Stocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodo v. Stocker, 219 P. 222, 74 Colo. 95, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 430 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Denison

delivered the opinion of the court.

Dodo made his promissory note to the Mountain States Mixed Feed and Feedyards Company, payable in six months. The note was indorsed to Stocker for value before maturity; he brought suit and recovered judgment. The defendant brings error.

The note was given for preferred stock in the said company, with which was thrown in some common stock. Certain defenses were set up to which there was a general [97]*97denial. Trial was to the court and there was a general finding for the plaintiff.

The propositions relied on in defense are: 1. That the evidence shows that the plaintiff acquired the note after maturity; 2. that when the note was made there was an oral agreement that the stock which was the consideration for the note might be returned at any time, and that the note would then be surrendered; 3. that no transfer of the note from the company to the plaintiff is shown; 4. that the company was so organized that certain stockholders had the control of it, which plaintiff knew; 5. that of the $250,000 of common stock $50,000 was given as bonus with the preferred stock to the purchasers thereof, including defendant, and $200,000 was issued full paid to certain directors for “options, plans and formulae” which were of no value; 6. that the note was procured by false representations, which plaintiff knew.

As to the first point we find no evidence, and the general finding of the court for the plaintiff determines, for the purposes of this court, that the transfer was before maturity.

As to the second proposition, it is evident that the oral agreement contradicts the terms of the note.

As to the third, the evidence shows that one Collins, as president, and one Hoffman, as secretary and treasurer, indorsed the note in the name of the company by them, and it is claimed no authority is shown in them to do so, and that at a meeting of the directors which ratified their action, no quorum was present. It appears, however, in evidence that Collins and Hoffman had the actual management and charge of the company and that the note was transferred in part payment for the erection of a building in pursuance of the legitimate purposes of the corporation. This is enough to justify a finding of sufficient authority.

The fourth proposition requires no answer.

Upon the fifth it is claimed that the $200,000 was issued to certain directors for “options, plans and formulae of no value”; that this was fraudulent as to all other purchasers [98]*98of stock, including the defendant; that it was Stocker’s duty as vice president and director to know of this issue and of the consideration, and therefore he is charged with notice of it, and is not a holder in due course. The general finding for plaintiff destroys this argument, because the effect of it is to say that the options, plans, and formulae were of value. We may say in addition that there is no proof or evidence of what such options, plans, and formulae were, nor of their value nor what has become of them, therefore nothing fraudulent has been shown on this point with notice of which the plaintiff can be charged.

In support of proposition No. 6 is testimony by the defendant himself that the agents for the company, who sold him the stock and obtained the note therefor, made certain representations to him concerning the stock, which were false; there is no direct evidence that Stocker knew anything about this or had any notice of it, but it is claimed that, since,he was a vice president and director, he is individually charged with knowledge of it because the directors as a board, or, to put it in another way, the company itself, is charged with knowledge of such representations. This is the real question in the case: Is the purchaser of a current note, from an industrial corporation payee, individually charged with knowledge of false representations made by agents of the corporation in procuring the note merely because he is a director in the corporation?

The negotiable instruments act (C. L. § 3873) says: “To constitute notice of an infirmity * * * the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity * * * or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.”

There is no evidence here nor any claim that Stocker had actual knowledge of the false representations of the agents, and no evidence of bad faith or knowledge of any fact such that taking the note would amount to bad faith.

The authorities are few. Washburn v. Inter-mountain Mining Co., 56 Ore. 578, 586-7, 190 Pac. 382, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 357, is with the plaintiff on this point. Hardin v. [99]*99Dale, 45 Okl. 694, 146 Pac. 717, L. R. A. 1915D, 1099, is with the defendant. McCarty v. Kepreta, 24 N. D. 395, 139 N. W. 992, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 65, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 834, is also with defendant, but is the case of a banking corporation and decided on the principle that the plaintiff who was president and a director of the bank payee, was presumed in law to know the facts under which the note was made, which possibly distinguishes it from the others and from the present case. Defendant cites McClellan v. Morris, 71 Colo. 304, 206 Pac. 575, but that case seems not to determine the point.

Morse on Banks and Banking, § 137, is quoted in McCarty v. Kepreta, accurately enough for that case, where the infirmity of the note taken from the bank by its president was want of consideration; but the author says that the director as an individual will be charged with knowledge which as a director he has or ought, if he had done his duty as a director, to have. This is far from saying that he is individually charged with knowledge of everything with knowledge of which the company is charged. If it is the duty of the director of a bank to know the consideration of the notes it has taken, he is not merely presumed to know it, but it is his duty to actually know it; therefore he cannot be heard to say he does not know it. But it is not his duty to know every lie thé bank’s agent may tell. True, as a member of the board he is deemed to know it, but not to know it is not a neglect of duty. Stocker, then, was not neglecting his duty in his failure to know the representations which Dodo testified were made to him. See Washburn v. Inter-mountain Mining Co., supra.

If a director, as director, actually knows it is absurd to say he does not personally know; moreover he cannot plead that, by reason of the neglect of his duty to know, he does not know, but how can he be said to actually know what he does not know, merely because a board of directors of whom he is one, are, by a fiction of law presumed to know? These considerations seem to distinguish McCarty v. [100]*100Kepreta and similar cases, e. g., Bank of U. S. v. Lyman, 20 Vt. 666, Fed. Cas. No. 924, from the present one.

It seems to us that Hardin v. Dale, and McCarty v. Kepreta violate the statute, — that they cannot logically be brought to agree with it. They in substance erase the word “actual” from the statute, and charge the holder, the purchaser of the note, with knowledge that they admit he does not have.

Counsel for the plaintiff in error inveighs against the fictions of the law, but without fictions he has no case.

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Bluebook (online)
219 P. 222, 74 Colo. 95, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodo-v-stocker-colo-1923.