Finance Co. v. . Cotton Mills Co.

121 S.E. 439, 187 N.C. 233, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 20, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 439 (Finance Co. v. . Cotton Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finance Co. v. . Cotton Mills Co., 121 S.E. 439, 187 N.C. 233, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 263 (N.C. 1924).

Opinion

Civil action. The Manufacturers Finance Company, hereinafter called Finance Company; Superior Motor Truck Company, called Truck Company; Amazon Cotton Mills Company, called Mills Company.

The plaintiff Finance Company is a corporation of Baltimore, Md., engaged in the business of commercial banking, and deals largely in commercial paper. The Truck Company were manufacturers of motor trucks in Atlanta, Ga. The defendant R. E. Zimmerman, in the year 1920, was engaged in the business of selling motor trucks and motor vehicles at Thomasville, N.C.

The Truck Company on 2 August, 1919, made what was termed a "Dealers' Agreement," also another claimed as "Agents Agreement" under Exhibit "D" duplicate, with R. E. Zimmerman, in which he had the exclusive right to sell their trucks in Davidson County and other counties in the vicinity. This agreement expired by limitation on 1 September, 1920. Also agreement between same parties dated 11 March, 1918. R. E. Zimmerman, under his contracts, purchased a certain motor truck, No. 2529, from the Truck Company, on or about 17 April, 1920, and gave a note for same, the motor company retaining title to secure the note; the title contract was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Davidson County, N.C. where Zimmerman lived, and before the sale of the truck to the defendant Mills Company. (The registration was held sufficient in Finance Co. v.Cotton Mills Co., 182 N.C. 408.) Zimmerman made a promissory note dated 17 April, 1920, in the sum of $1,320, with interest from date, being the deferred payment on the truck, the title to the truck being retained by the motor company to secure the note. The truck was delivered to R. E. Zimmerman. The defendant Mills Company, on or about 12 May, 1920, before the Zimmerman note was *Page 235 due, purchased the motor truck from R. E. Zimmerman for the sum of $3,390, paying cash $1,700, and giving in exchange a one-ton Superior Motor Truck purchased from R. E. Zimmerman, valued at $1,690. The Mills Company claimed it had no notice (except what the law established by record) of the recorded lien on the truck, and it paid full value for the truck. It further claimed that R. E. Zimmerman, in the sale of the motor truck and in collection of the purchase price therefor, acted as agent for the Superior Motor Truck Company, and its answer as a defense to plaintiff's action says: "That, as this defendant is informed and believes, R. E. Zimmerman has been acting and dealing in motor trucks as agent for the plaintiff Truck Company for more than a year past, and has been during said time the exclusive agency and dealer in said Superior Motor trucks in the county of Davidson and many other counties in the State of North Carolina, and has largely advertised as such agent, and sold many trucks, as was well known to and approved by the said Truck Company, which company furnished blanks for orders, and also other blanks and advertising matter. That the said motor company has at all times past well known and approved the way and manner in which its said agent, R. E. Zimmerman, conducted the said business, and that he sold trucks, some for cash and some on time, and collected the purchase price, and took notes for the balance due, and that he took notes in his own name and discounted them at the banks and received the money therefor; and defendant is further informed and believes that R. E. Zimmerman would turn over the money received from the sale of the said trucks to said Truck Company, which took the same, and that in this way said Truck Company has received the money paid by the defendant, and the same should be applied to any charge or account the said Truck Company may have against said R. E. Zimmerman by reason of said motor truck purchased by the defendant."

The defendant Mills Company denied that the Truck Company in due course endorsed the note in blank and sold same to plaintiff Finance Company, and the note is the property of the Finance Company.

The plaintiff Finance Company sued on the note and contract, retaining title made by R. E. Zimmerman to the Truck Company for $1,320, dated 17 April, 1920, and transferred to it by the Truck Company, and brought claim and delivery proceedings for the truck against the defendant Mills Company, and the Mills Company replevied the same.

During the trial the Truck Company took a nonsuit.

There were several issues submitted to the jury but the only one material for the consideration of this case is the third, which is as follows: "Did the Manufacturers Finance Company purchase said note *Page 236 and contract, retaining title to the motor truck herein sued for, from the Superior Motor Truck Company for value and before maturity, in good faith and in due course of business, without notice of the claim or equity of the Amazon Cotton Mills Company, as alleged in the complaint?"

The court below gave the following instruction relating to this issue: "The court further charges that whenever a note is endorsed to another before due, the law presumes he got it in due course, and took it freed from any equities in behalf of the defendant. The law presumes that the holder of a note endorsed in blank is its holder in due course; that he took it for value before maturity, and without notice of any equity, and that he is the owner and has the right to bring suit to enforce collection. Every holder is deemed a holder in due course, and upon the execution of the instrument being proven, every holder is deemed prima facie a holder in due course. Such prima facie evidence is not rebutted in the answer of the defendant denying the ownership of the plaintiff. (Now the plaintiff, having introduced evidence showing that it is a holder in due course and without notice, then the burden would be upon the defendant in this case to satisfy you by the greater weight of the evidence that the plaintiff did take it with notice or that it was not a holder in due course under the law, and the court charges you there is no evidence on the part of the defendant upon which you can answer that issue `No.' Gentlemen of the jury, now, if you believe by the greater weight of the evidence, or if you believe the evidence in the case, the entire evidence in the case, you will answer the third issue `Yes.')" The jury answered the issue "Yes."

The defendant excepted to the latter part of this charge, beginning with "Now the plaintiff" and ending with "Yes," and assigned as error that part of the charge.

There were other exceptions and assignments of error — 23 in all — to the exclusion of evidence, prayers for special instruction and errors in the charge. We will consider them all under the court's charge to the jury on the third issue. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and defendant Mills Company duly excepted, made the usual assignments of error, and appealed to this Court.

The other material facts will be set forth in the opinion. C. S., 3032. "The holder of a negotiable instrument may sue thereon in his own name, and payment to him in due course discharges the instrument." *Page 237

C. S., 3033. "A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions:

(1) That the instrument is complete and regular upon its face.

(2) That he became the holder of it before it was overdue and without notice that it has been previously dishonored, if such was the fact.

(3) That he took it for good faith and value.

(4) That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 439, 187 N.C. 233, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finance-co-v-cotton-mills-co-nc-1924.