Gilman v. F. O. Bailey Carriage Co.

131 A. 138, 125 Me. 108, 1925 Me. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 A. 138 (Gilman v. F. O. Bailey Carriage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilman v. F. O. Bailey Carriage Co., 131 A. 138, 125 Me. 108, 1925 Me. LEXIS 90 (Me. 1925).

Opinion

Deasy, J.

In January, 1925, Henry Gilman, of Portland brought these two actions against the defendant corporation. In one (No. 5353) he sued the defendant as maker of seven promissory notes payable to and endorsed by W. A. Gilman or (in one instance) W. A. Gilman Co., and as indorser of four so-called customer’s notes payable to the defendant.

The other action (No. 5354) sought recovery upon seven cheques drawn by the defendant running to and indorsed by said W. A. Gilman. All of the corporation’s notes and cheques were signed “F. O. Bailey Carriage Co. Inc., by W. A. Gilman, Treas.” The customer’s notes were indorsed in the same manner. W. A. Gilman, treasurer and álso payee, is the plaintiff’s brother.

The plaintiff introduced the notes, cheques and also oral testimony that he paid value for the paper. The defendant offered no evidence. The presiding Justice refused the defendant’s motion for directed verdicts. A similar motion by the plaintiff was allowed. Verdicts were ordered for the full amounts of the notes and cheques. Exceptions were reserved by the defendant.

It is contended that this situation — the situation created by a motion.by both parties for a directed verdict — is tantamount to a submission of the whole case to the court with authority to decide both law and facts. Not so in this jurisdiction. Notwithstanding such motions issues of fact are to be submitted to a jury.

The defendant asks that its exceptions be sustained for several reasons, only two of which need be discussed.

[110]*110(1) For the reason that the corporation’s notes signed by W. A. Gilman as treasurer, and payable to himself individually, were negotiated and used to pay his personal obligations to the plaintiff.

No affidavit was filed as authorized by Superior Court Rule XII. (identical with S. J. C. Rule X.). The effect of such omission is to waive proof of the signing and also of the authorization of the instruments “declared upon.” Bank v. Merriam, 114 Maine, 439.

But for such waiver the plaintiff would have had the burden of proving not general authority merely, which general authority was shown, but (by by-law, vote or usage) specific authorization for the issuance of notes payable to himself. McLellan v. File Works, 56 Mich., 582; Park Hotel v. Bank, 86 Fed., 744; West St. Louis Bank v. Shawnee Bank, 95 U. S., 559. The waiver, however, dispenses with all proof either of general or specific authority. We start thus with the presumption, proof being waived, not only that W. A. Gilman signed the notes and cheques in suit, but that he was authorized by the corporation to do so. Moreover, the case shows that the treasurer was authorized by vote to issue and indorse notes and cheques.

But while the treasurer’s authority to sign the notes and cheques in suit cannot be questioned, he presumptively had the right to negotiate them for corporate purposes only.

Even his authority given by vote to issue and indorse paper gave him no right to use it to pay his individual debts. ‘If such a power is' intended to be given, it must be expressed in language so plain that no other interpretation can rationally be given it.” Bank v. Trust Co., 143 N. Y., 559 — 38 N. E., 713; Ward v. Trust Co., 192 N. Y., 61 — 84 N. E., 588.

If he indorsed the notes to the plaintiff in settlement of a personal obligation the plaintiff presumptively acquired no title to such notes enabling him to maintain actions upon them against the defendant.

There is evidence in this case having some tendency to prove that the notes, or some of them, were used for such private purposes. The plaintiff testified that he made advances to his brother from time to time in cash. These advances he charged upon a memorandum as “Loans to W. A. Gilman.” Then as a “settlement”-of several such advances he received one or more of the notes or cheques in suit. All of these advances the plaintiff now says were for the corporation’s purposes. The notes were, he contends, given to settle corporate obligations.

[111]*111But the defendant claims that the corporation’s notes and cheques were in some cases, if not in all, used to pay personal ‘ ‘Loans to W. A. Gilman.” The evidence supporting the claim “giving to it all its probative force would authorize a jury to find in his (the defendant’s) favor.” Heath v. Jaquith, 68 Maine, 436.

Thus a question of fact is presented which we think should have been submitted to the jury.

If found as a fact that the notes or cheques, or some of them, were used to pay the treasurer’s personal debts a defense in whole or in part is made out, good until it is shown that the instruments were properly used for such purpose. Wheeling Ice Co. v. Connor, 61 W. Va., 111 — 55 S. E., 987; Felton v. Lumber Co., (Wis.), 112 N. W., 33.

We assume that the plaintiff paid value for the notes. “A preexisting debt constitutes value.” (1917, Chap. 257, Sec. 25). But such defense is open against the-plaintiff. The form of the notes is such that he cannot claim immunity as an innocent holder.

“The very form of the paper itself .... is sufficient to put him on his guard.” West St. Louis Bank v. Shawnee Bank, 95 U. S., 557.

“A bona fide holder of a promissory note executed by an officer in the name of the corporation and payable to the officer executing' it as an individual in legal contemplation cannot exist.” Luden v. Lumber Co., (Georgia), 91 S. E., 102.

“Such a note is a danger signal which the discounter or purchaser disregards at his peril.” Hotel Co. v. Bank, 86 Fed., 744. See also Stough v. Ponca Mills, 54 Neb., 500 — 74 N. W. 868; Campbell v. Bank, 67 N. J. L., 301 — 51 Atl., 497; and Randall v. Lumber Co., 20 R. I., 625 — 40 Atl., 763; Thornton v. Navigation Co., 165 N. Y. S., 682.

The above reasoning takes no cognizance of the statute.

But if we apply the rules established by the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act (1917, Chapter 257) the same conclusion is reached. A note like those in suit is not ‘ ‘regular upon its face.” (Section 52). The plaintiff is therefore not a ‘ ‘holder in due course.” (Section 52). He has not the rights of a holder in due course. (Section 57). Such note is “subject to the same defenses as if it were non-negotiable.” (Section 58). If the first of these propositions is correct the others necessarily follow.

[112]*112Regularity, within the meaning of the statute, cannot be predicated of a note whereof the payee is, in a trust or quasi-trust capacity, the maker.

“No person can be a bona fide holder of a promissory note executed by an officer in the name of the corporation and payable to the officer executing it, as an individual.” 3 R. C. L., 1085. “It is out of the ordinary course of business.” Rubber Co. v. Pinkey, (Wash.), 170 Pac., 584.

With exceptions hereinafter noted the facts involved in the authorities presented by the learned counsel for the plaintiff differ from those in the pending case in one of two vital particulars:

In most instances the notes under consideration in the cases cited were regular in form.

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 138, 125 Me. 108, 1925 Me. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilman-v-f-o-bailey-carriage-co-me-1925.