First National Bank of Bridgeport v. Groves

269 Mass. 161
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 Mass. 161 (First National Bank of Bridgeport v. Groves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Bridgeport v. Groves, 269 Mass. 161 (Mass. 1929).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract by an indorsee against the maker upon two promissory notes, dated June 25, 1925, and July 10, 1925, respectively, payable on demand to the Eastern States Warehouse and Cold Storage Company or order, and indorsed by the payee to the plaintiff. Each note contains a recital, in substance, that the maker has deposited with the payee as collateral security for the “payment of this or any other liability . . . due or to become due, direct or contingent now existing, or hereafter arising, the following property, viz: Eastern States Warehouse & Cold Storage Co’s warehouse receipt No. — for . . . tubs butter — and each note contains an agreement of the maker “to deliver to the said Company additional securities, to its satisfaction, should the market value of the said securities, as a whole, suffer any decline, and also hereby gives to the said Company a lien for the amount of the said liabilities upon the property or securities given unto or left in the possession of the said Company by the undersigned [maker of the notes], and also upon any balance of the account of the undersigned [maker] with the said Company.” The annexed agreements contain the provision that “On the non-performance of this promise, or upon the non-payment of any of the liabilities above mentioned, or upon the failure of the undersigned, forthwith, with or without notice to furnish satisfactory additional securities in case of decline, as aforesaid, or in the case of insolvency, bankruptcy, or failure in business of the undersigned, then and in any such case, this note and all other liabilities of the undersigned, shall forthwith become due and payable without demand or notice, and full power and authority are hereby given to said Company to sell, assign, and deliver the whole of the said securities, or any part thereof, or any substitutes therefor, or any additions thereto, or any other securities or property given unto or left in the possession of the said Company by the undersigned, for safe keeping or otherwise, at any brokers board, [164]*164or at public or private sale, at the option of the said Company or of its President or Treasurer, without either demand, advertisement or notice of any kind, which are hereby expressly waived. At any such sale the said Company may itself purchase the whole or any part of the property sold, free from any right of redemption on the part of the undersigned which is hereby waived and released. In case of sale for any cause, after deducting all costs or expenses of every kind for collection, sale or delivery, the said Company may apply the residue of the proceeds of the sale or sales so made, to pay one or more or all the said liabilities to the said Company, as it or its President or Treasurer shall deem proper, whether then due or not due, making proper rebate for interest on liabilities not then due, and returning the overplus, if any, to the undersigned, who agree to be and remain liable to the said Company for any deficiency arising upon such sale or sales.” A copy of each note is annexed to the declaration and marked exhibit “A” or “B.”

The answer of the defendant, in substance, is a general denial of the allegations of the writ and declaration, a denial of his signature without a demand of proof at the trial, G. L. c. 231, § 29, a denial that he was ever the owner or possessor of the tubs of butter referred to in the declaration, or ever owned, possessed or had issued to him warehouse receipts for butter by the Eastern States Warehouse and Cold Storage Company, and a special denial that he ever executed the instruments set forth in the plaintiff’s declaration marked exhibit “A” and exhibit “B.” The defendant further answered, in substance, that he did not on June 25, 1925, execute and deliver to the Eastern States Warehouse and Cold Storage Company the notes set forth in the declaration marked exhibit “A” and “B”; that said notes “were without consideration and were secured by false and fraudulent representation and were pledged by the payee to the-plaintiffs herein as collateral security for the payment of the Eastern States Warehouse and Cold Storage Company notes”; that the notes declared on were “delivered to the payee under an agreement, restricting their issuance, and, [165]*165that the payee wholly disregarded said agreement, and, with intent to defraud, dated and wrote in the specific amounts, for which said notes are payable, and inserted in said note, Exhibit ‘A’, 413 tubs of butter, and in said note, Exhibit ‘B’, 308 tubs of butter, and negotiated said notes, and wrongfully, with intent to defraud this defendant, placed said notes in circulation, all of which this plaintiff well knew.” The defendant’s answer then recites alleged statements of fact, which are not here set out because they appear later in the testimony of the defendant.

The notes with the collateral agreements attached, saving a difference in parties, amounts of money promised to be paid, and property described in the warehouse receipts, are substantially identical with the notes sued upon in City National Bank v. Adams, 266 Mass. 239, and Springfield National Bank v. Jeffers, 266 Mass. 248. They are, therefore, under these decisions negotiable instruments, and the question for determination now presented is, Was the plaintiff a holder in due course for value without notice? During the trial the defendant saved exceptions to the refusal of the judge to receive certain evidence; so far as they are argued in the defendant’s brief they will be considered herein later.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant made an opening statement to the jury "as to what the defence expects to prove in this case.” Immediately thereafter the plaintiff filed and the judge allowed, subject to the defendant’s exception, the following motion: "Now comes the plaintiff in the above entitled cause and moves that this Honorable Court direct that the jury return a verdict for the plaintiff in accordance with the declaration.” On the record there is nothing to indicate that the defendant in making the opening did. not make a complete statement of all facts and inference of facts within his knowledge. In these circumstances it was within the province of the court to act on the plaintiff’s motion. Hey v. Prime, 197 Mass. 474. Farnham v. Lenox Motor Car Co. 229 Mass. 478, 482, and cases there collected. Energy Electric Co. petitioner, 262 Mass. 534, 538. Indeed the defendant makes [166]*166no contention in his brief as to the power of the court to act as here, in an appropriate case.

Regardful of the answer of the defendant, the plaintiff at the trial did not rest with the production of the notes and proof of the defendant’s signature thereto, but called as witnesses the defendant and Edmund S. Wolfe, president of the plaintiff bank.

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Bluebook (online)
269 Mass. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-bridgeport-v-groves-mass-1929.