Fogg v. School District

75 Mo. App. 159, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 403
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 Mo. App. 159 (Fogg v. School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fogg v. School District, 75 Mo. App. 159, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 403 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Gill, J. —

Statement. This is a suit on certain interest coupons of a bond issued by defendant in January, 1883. No question is made as to the original validity of the bond; but the defense is, that the same , ' was paid off by and through J. O. Thompson, a former banker at Sedalia, who, it is claimed, fraudulently and feloniously reissued the bond after it was paid off and taken up by him, and that plaintiff acquired said bond with notice of the facts. The [164]*164evidence set out in the record is quite voluminous, and much of it immaterial to the real issues involved. That our opinion may be understood, we deem it necessary to give only a brief statement of the more prominent features of the controversy.

The bond in question was one of aseries of $30,000 issued by the defendant school district in January, 1883. They were what is known as 5-20 bonds, that is were due in twenty years after date of issue, with an an option in the district to pay any time after five years. In July, 1889, the board of education concluded to issue a new set of bonds, bearing five per cent interest, and with the proceeds of the sale thereof pay off the old issue which bore six per cent. To this end the district advertised for bids on the new issue, and said J. C. Thompson in his own name (though in fact acting for a New Jersey insurance company) was the highest bidder and became the purchaser. At that time Thompson seems to have been a business man of high standing and was the president and managing officer of thé First National Bank of Sedalia. In July, 1889, the new issue of bonds was given over 'to Thompson, who at once sent them to the insurance company at Newark, New Jersey, which by Thompson’s direction deposited the $30,000 with the American Exchange National Bank of New York for the credit and to th$ account of Thompson’s bank at Sedalia. This disposition of the money seems to have been with the assent of the defendant school board; and it was intended to use the money in taking up the old issue, which was payable at said American Exchange National Bank. The evidence tends to prove (and for the purposes of this case we shall assume it to be a fact) that Thompson was relied on as the agent of the school district to use the proceeds arising from the sale of the last bond issue in taking up the old bonds; the $30,000 [165]*165was left with him for that purpose. Thompson was expected to pay off and take up the old issue of bonds and return them to the school board for cancellation.

It seems that the holders of a large portion of these bonds of the 1883 issue, and who lived at St. Louis, demanded the right to take the new issue of bonds, in place of the old, and a law suit followed, resulting however adversely to the claim — the court holding that the school district had the right to pay the old issue in money. At that time the bond in question was held by the St. Louis parties, and there is evidence tending to show that the holder thereof turned it and others over to Thompson who paid the amount due thereon. There is also some evidence tending to prove (and we shall assume it to be a fact) that Thompson thereafter (in the year 1893) sold this and other bonds of the same issue to Marshall & Company, bankers in Pennsylvania, and who paid therefor ninety-eight cents on the dollar. Marshall & Company immediately thereafter sold these bonds to plaintiff for a small advance on the price paid Thompson. We may as well state here that there was no evidence worthy of mention, to impeach the good faith of plaintiff nor her agent, nor indeed of Marshall & Company in the purchase of said bonds. Nor was there anything within their knowledge tending to excite suspicion even as to the validity of the bonds, or that they had ever been called in or paid off. It is true that when the interest on the bonds for the year 1893-1894 matured the coupons were, by Thompson’s request, sent to him at Sedalia for payment, but the reasons for this were fully explained, and besides it seems to have been not an unusual practice. Subsequent events however show Thompson’s reason therefor. Por as he was perpetrating a fraud on those who had trusted him, and was selling bonds which he was only authorized [166]*166to pay off, his purpose was clearly to avoid an exposure sure to follow if the coupons had been presented where, according to their face, they were payable.

The villainy of Thompson was not disclosed until in May, 1894, when his bank at Sedalia failed and he left the country. During the entire time that he had this funding business in his hands — from July, 1889, to May, 1894 — the defendant’s officers had reposed such confidence in him that he was not called to account for and turn over the old issue of bonds which he was supposed to have paid off. In answer to occasional inquiries Thompson said to certain of the directors that the old bonds were not then all in and that as soon as they were he would turn them all over to the school board. It appears, however, that this was a mere fraudulent pretense, and that he (Thompson) was at the time continuing the bonds in circulation by selling them to innocent third parties.

On a trial before the circuit court, without the aid of a jury, there was judgment for plaintiff and defendant appealed.

BlpLaymeñfbefore qj e n (re i s su ei This is clearly a case where one of two innocent parties must suffer from the fraudulent and felonious act of a third party. The defendant school district, through its officers, attempted to fund or rather pay off and redeem the bon'd issue of 1883. To accomplish this, said officers, in 1889, executed and sold to Thompson a like amount of funding bonds bearing a lower rate of interest than the first issue. These last bonds were sold at a premium which -Thompson paid to the board, but by mutual agreement of the board and Thompson the latter was permitted to retain the $30,000 with which he was to take up and turn over to the board for cancellation the old issue, which were then redeemable at the option of the school district. [167]*167Though the evidence in this respect is weak, we now assume that Thompson did take up the bond in question. He did not, however, turn it over to the school district for cancellation, but instead sold it to an innocent third party in the state of Pennsylvania, who in turn for full value sold to plaintiff who was likewise innocent of Thompson’s fraudulent conduct or that the school district had attempted to exercise its option to pay off said bonds. On these facts the trial judge held the defendant liable, and in our opinion he was clearly right. As already stated, the original validity of the bonds is unquestioned. They were, too, negotiable securities of the highest grade. Payable to bearer, they invited confidence and imported negotiability and to be transferable from hand to hand as the best of commercial obligations; they were not yet due, and therefore gave no warning of any dispute as to their obligatory force.

Conceding that these bonds had been once paid, yet there was nothing to indicate it — no marks of cancellation or other circumstances to excite inquiry or suspicion even. Speaking of payment, Daniels, in his able treatise on Negotiable Instruments (vol. 2, sec. 1233), says, that it (payment) “can only be made with perfect safety at or after maturity of the instrument, unless the payor receives it in his hands and cancels it; for a payment before maturity is not in the usual course of business; and should the bill or note afterward, and before maturity, reach the hands of a bona fide

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ickenroth v. St. Louis Transit Co.
77 S.W. 162 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
City National Bank v. Goodloe-McClelland Commission Co.
93 Mo. App. 123 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1902)
Allen v. Harris
79 Mo. App. 490 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Mo. App. 159, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fogg-v-school-district-moctapp-1898.