Gansevoort Bank v. Carragan

55 A. 741, 69 N.J.L. 404, 40 Vroom 404, 1903 N.J. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 55 A. 741 (Gansevoort Bank v. Carragan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gansevoort Bank v. Carragan, 55 A. 741, 69 N.J.L. 404, 40 Vroom 404, 1903 N.J. LEXIS 159 (N.J. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PitnRy, J.

This action was brought against the surviving partner of a firm that was second endorser upon three promissory notes amounting in the aggregate to. $5,500, all made in .the summer of 1901, and discounted in the ordinary course of business by the plaintiff bank. The notes were identical in form with respect to parties, each being made by one J. A. Machemer, payable to the order of R. B. Poucher, and endorsed by Poucher and by the firm of R. B. Poucher & Company. The proceeds were credited on the books of the bank to an account that stood in the individual name of R. B. Poucher, and were used in whole or in part for the payment, of maturing notes, similar in form with respect to parties, that had -been previously discounted and credited to the Poucher account in like manner. These payments of the maturing notes were made by checks, signed by R. B.'Poucher 'and drawn to the order of the bank. The firm of R. B. Poucher & Company was formed in the year 1894, and continued until the death oí Poucher, which occurred in the fall of the year 1901. The partners were R. B. Poucher and the present defendant, George Carragan. Poucher was the active man. of the concern, and was in sole charge of the conduct and management of its business. The partnership articles were iri evidence, and show no limitation upon the powers ordinarily conferred upon the several partners by such an agreement.

Hpon the trial of the action it appeared that Machemer, the maker of the notes, was a bookkeeper in the employ of the firm, and that the several notes were drawn up and signed by him; that the .endorsements were in the handwriting of Poucher, and that, the notes had been duly protested at maturity. The defence was that the partnership endorsement was made by Poucher. for his own accommodation, without [406]*406the knowledge or authority of the defendant, his .co-partner, and that the plaintiff had notice of the accommodation character of the transaction so far as the second endorsement was concerned, because the notes were presented for discount by the first endorser and the proceeds were credited to an account that stood in his own name and used in payment of maturing notes, upon which he was primarily liable as between him and the firm. The trial judge acceded to this view, and held that under the circumstances the second endorsement must be presumed to have been made for the accommodation of the payee or of the first endorser, and that in a partnership the presumption is against a binding accommodation endorsement unless by consent of all the partners, so that the bank was put upon inquiry to ascertain whether authority had been given by Carragan to Poucher to use the firm name for the personal benefit of the latter; and since, according to the uncontradicted testimony, such inquiry would have developed the fact that Carragan knew nothing of the transaction, and had authorized no endorsement by his firm for Poueher’s accommodation, it was held that a complete defence had been presented. A verdict was thereupon directed in favor of the defendant, and to this ruling a bill of exceptions was sealed.

The-plaintiff’s answer to the defendant’s contention was that it was unfounded in fact, it being insisted that the notes in suit, and also the prior notes, of which they were in whole or in part renewals, were given in and about the business of ■ tne firm and for the firm’s benefit. If this was true, the signatures of the maker and of the first endorser were loaned for the accommodation of the firm, and the firm was as between the parties primarily liable; that being so, the making of the firm endorsements was within the ordinary partnership authority of Poucher as plainly as if the firm name had appeared upon the notes as maker instead of endorser. A second contention made on the part of the plaintiff was that even if it were not true that the three notes in suit were given in and about the firm’s business, and the proceeds thereof -used in that business, yet a course of dealing had existed between the bank and the firm of R. B. Poucher & Company for some [407]*407time prior to the making of the notes in question, in which numerous notes of like form had been discounted by the bank at the instance of Poucher, but for the firm’s benefit, and the proceeds thereof passed to the credit of the 'R. B. Poucher account and used in and about the firm’s business, so that, upon the presentation of the three notes in suit, the officers of the bank had a right to believe, and that they did believe, that the R. B. Poucher account was really a firm account, and that the maturing notes were really firm obligations; so that those officers were not charged with notice that the firm endorsements upon the notes in suit were accommodation endorsements, and were not put upon inquiry to ascertain the authority of Poucher to endorse the notes with the firm name.

Some evidence was offered by the plaintiff, and admitted by the trial judge, which, it is contended (and, we think, correctly), supports these insistments. Much other evidence was offered' by the plaintiff as tending in the same direction,, and was overruled bjr the trial judge, bills of exceptions being sealed. The main purpose of the evidence thus excluded was to show that the R. B. Poucher account was in part, or exclusively, a firm account; and to prove the course of dealing that antedated the making and discounting of the notes in suit, in order to show that at least the bank officers had a right to believe (as they did) that moneys placed to the credit of that account went to the benefit of the firm. As the excluded evidence was offered in a manner to clearly indicate its purport and effect, and since that part of it which was documentary has been returned with the bill of exceptions, it is easy and convenient to discuss the case as if the excluded evidence had been admitted.

So treating it, the facts bear this aspect: R. B. Poucher & Company were produce commission merchants, doing business in West Washington market, in the citjr of New York. At the formation of the firm in 1894 Poucher had an account in his own name in the Gansevoort Bank, and this account was continued without interruption and without change of name down to his death. During many years, and perhaps from the inception of the firm, a bank account was kept in the firm [408]*408name at the Irving National Bank. The .place of business of the firm was distant about three city blocks from the Gansevoort Bank, and about three miles from the Irving National Bank. During some years prior to the summer of 1901— commencing at least as early as December ,17th, 1898—-the firm, from time to time,, applied for and received from the Gansevoort bank discounts of its mercantile paper. Applications were sometimes made by Machemer or Poucher personally, and sometimes made by letter, the letters being written upon the letter-heads of the firm, bearing the names of Poucher and Carragan as partners. These letters were sometimes signed “R. B. Poucher & Co.,” and sometimes “R. B. Poucher.” In each instance they were written either by Poucher or by Machemer,- the bookkeeper; Carragan, as already mentioned, being an inactive partner. The applications for discount in each 'instance gave the officials of the' bank to understand that tire loans were asked for the benefit of the firm. The notes were in most instances, if not invariably, made by Machemer to the order of Poucher, and endorsed by him in his own name and in the name of R. -B. Poucher & Company, precisely in the same form as the notes in suit; the proceeds were passed to the credit of the account of R. B.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A. 741, 69 N.J.L. 404, 40 Vroom 404, 1903 N.J. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gansevoort-bank-v-carragan-nj-1903.