Goodman v. Simonds

61 U.S. 343, 15 L. Ed. 934, 20 How. 343, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 26, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by185 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 343 (Goodman v. Simonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodman v. Simonds, 61 U.S. 343, 15 L. Ed. 934, 20 How. 343, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 462 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Missouri.

Timothy S. Goodman, a citizen of the State of Ohio, complained in the court below of John Simonds, a citizen of the State of Missouri, in a plea of trespass on the case- upon promises. The declaration was filed on the first day of March, 1854. It contained two counts — one upon a bill of exchange, and the other upon an account stated. At the April term following, the defendant appeared and pleaded the general issue, which was joined, and several special pleas in bar of the action. The special pleas -were held bad on demurrer, and at the October term, 1855, the parties went to trial on the general issue. Robert M. Nesbit, a witness called-for the plaintiff, testified that he was a notary public of the county of St. Louis; and that, as such, on the fifteenth day of January, 1848, he. presented the bill in suit for payment to John Simonds, the acceptor, who refused to pay it, and that he afterwards gave due notice of the presentment and refusal to both endorsers. And the witness further testified, that he was well acquainted with the signatures of all the parties to the bill, except that of the drawer, and that they were genuine. "Whereupon the plaintiff read in evidence the bill of exchange described in the first count of the declaration, together with the endorsements thereon, a3 they appear in the record. W. Nesbit & Co. were merely nominal hold *357 ers of the bill, never having had any interest.in it, and only endorsed it to the plaintiff for the greater convenience in bringing the suit. Evidence was then introduced on the part of the defendant, exhibiting substantially the following state of facts: On the twenty-first day of June. 1847, the defendant addressed, a letter to Wallace Sigerson, who resided at Cincinnati, informing him that he wished to avail himself of banking facilities in that place, to carry on certain business, in which he and John Sigerson had determined to engage, and asking his assistance, as a correspondent, to negotiate discounts, enclosing at the same time his letter of-credit for ten thousand dollars, and two hills of exchange, each, for the sum of five thousand dollars, and suggesting in the- same. letter that they should require some twenty to twenty-five thousand dollars during the next four or five months, in sums of about five thousand dollars, as the same could be used from time to time. In the same letter also he instructed his correspondent to negotiate five thousand dollars immediately, authorizing him to use for that purpose either the letter of credit or. the bills of exchange. When those bills were transmitted to Cincinnati, they were in all respects perfect bills of exchange, except that the'name of the drawer was-wanting, and they were without date. .They were both made payable to the order of John Sigerson, and by him endorsed in-blank, and were accepted by the defendant. Soon after their receipt, Wallace Sigerson, as drawer, procured one of the bills to be discounted according to his instructions, and remitted the proceeds, or a part thereof, to the defendant; and it also appeared that, during that season, he procured other bills of-the same kind, to be discounted for the same parties, to the amount of twenty-five thousand dollars. The other bill forwarded at that time is the one now in suit. -Wallace Sigerson had also large transactions of his own, the same season', amounting to four hundred thousand dollars. Many of his own transactions were with his brother, John Sigerson, who was the payee and endorser of this bill, and was jointly engaged in the same business with the defendant. He and his brother interchanged accommodation paper, and some of their acceptances were regularly discounted in bank,-, and it did not-appear that any complaint was made, either by the acceptor or endorser, that this bill had not been accounted for or returned. There were dealings, also, the same season, between T. S. Goodman & Co. and Wallace Sigerson. They made a settlement on the twelfth, day of October, 1847, when it was ascertained that the amount due to T. S. Goodman & Co. was about five thousand six hundred dollars, arising principally from notes discounted, secured by bills of exchange as collaterals, on which nothing *358 had been realized. At the settlement, the debt was divided into two notes, one having sixty and the other seventy-five days to run; and Wallace Sigerson testified that he gave his two notes in payment of the debt, and left'this bill as collateral security to the notes, fixing the dates so that the notes would mature twelve or fifteen days before the bill. Two drafts on Ravisess, Bulock, & Co., previously held as collaterals, were embraced in 'the settlement, and formed a part of the indebtedness tor which the notes were given; and McDonald, who was the book-keeper of the plaintiff’s firm, and a witness for the defendant, testified he knew of no other collateral security than this bill, which the firm held for those notes. It would seem, therefore, that all the prior collaterals were surrendered to the defendant at the settlement. There is some confusion, and perhaps uncertainty, in the evidence reported, respecting the history of the bill from the time it went into the possession of Wallace Sigerson till'it was thus placed in the hands of T. S. Goodman & Co., as collateral security to the above-mentioned notes. It may, however, be gathered from the testimony of Wallace Sigerson, that he first offered it for discount to the Ohio Life and Trust Company, and shortly afterward to the plaintiff, for the same purpose, and that the plaintiff declined to discount it, but soon after took it as collateral security for temporary loans. How long the bill remained in the possession of the plaintiff as collateral security for temporary loans does not appear, nor for whose benefit the money was obtained. When the settlement took place, Wallace Sigerson told the plaintiff' that he had a right to use the bill, and the plaintiff agreed that it should not be sent to St. Louis for collection till after the maturity of the notes to which it was collateral. Nothing of the kind was agreed when it was left as collateral security for temporary loans. Wallace Sigerson became the drawer of this bill, as he. had previously done with respect to the other, which was sent him. at the same time, and filled up the date, but whether at the time of the settlement, or previously, was not entirely certain. He failed in business in November, ,1847, and on the twentieth day of the same month, T. S. Goodman & Co. addressed a letter to C. W. Clark & Brothers, enclosing this bill, and requesting them to pass it at the least rate, not exceeding twelve percent, interest, saying, “We do not endorse it, as we are selling it for another; and when L. C. Clark, one of that firm, a few days afterward offered the bill for sale to the defendant, “he said it was a forgery of his name; that Wallace Sigerson had no authority to use it.” At the trial, the court, on the prayer of the plaintiff, instructed the jury to the effect, that'if the plaintiff acquired the bill of Wallace Sigerson as *359 collateral security without notice of his want of authority to transfer it, that the plaintiff was unaffected by such abuse of trust, and that the defendant was precluded from setting it up as a defence in this suit, to which no exceptions were taken.

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Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 343, 15 L. Ed. 934, 20 How. 343, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-simonds-scotus-1858.