Gramatan National Bank and Trust Co. v. Beecher

173 A.2d 163, 122 Vt. 366, 1961 Vt. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJuly 12, 1961
Docket188
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 A.2d 163 (Gramatan National Bank and Trust Co. v. Beecher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gramatan National Bank and Trust Co. v. Beecher, 173 A.2d 163, 122 Vt. 366, 1961 Vt. LEXIS 84 (Vt. 1961).

Opinion

*367 Shangraw, J.

This is an action in general assumpsit, with specifications, seeking to recover on a note signed by the defendants and payable to the Globe Remodeling Company. The defendants filed an affidavit of defense alleging: fraud in the procuring of the note by the payee, and signatures thereto; that the plaintiff is not a holder in due course; and that the representations made by the Globe Remodeling Company were a part of a general scheme to defraud the defendants of which the plaintiff had knowledge.

An opinion was handed down by this court in this case at the November Term, 1958 and is reported in 121 Vt. 39, 146 A.2d 246. Initially the trial court entered judgment for the plaintiff to which an appeal was taken by the defendants. On appeal, and predicated on the facts as found, this Court at page 49 of the opinion in part stated, * * * “there was evidence tending to show fraud in the procurement of defendant’s signatures to the initial contract and ultimately to the note. * * * Furthermore, in the absence of evidence on the part of the plaintiff disclosing facts and circumstances attending the transfer and its procurement of the note, from which good or bad faith might be inferred, it cannot be said that the court was at liberty on the evidence presented to determine as a matter of law that the plaintiff purchased the note in good faith, or that it was a holder thereof in due course.” Judgment was reversed, cause remanded, and a further hearing was had by the Bennington County Court limited to the sole purpose of allowing the plaintiff to disclose “facts and circumstances attending the transfer and its procurement of the note from which good or bad faith might be inferred.” Findings of fact were then made and judgment entered for the defendants to recover their costs.

The plaintiff filed a notice of appeal and here urges that the court erred in certain of its findings, and further that judgment should have been entered for the plaintiff in accordance with specifications.

On rehearing Henry C. Wunder, assistant vice president of the Gramatan National Bank and Trust Company, was improved as a witness and by consent of the parties it was agreed that the testimony by him given at the first trial might be considered by the trial court in this last hearing, and it was so considered.

A detailed statement of the facts and circumstances surrounding this transaction is reported in Gramatan National Bank and Trust Company v. Beecher, supra, and for the purpose of passing upon the questions here presented it is sufficient to briefly summarize them as *368 follows: On September 24, 1953 a representative of the Globe Remodeling Company procured the defendants’ signatures to a contract wherein the Globe company agreed to furnish and install asbestos siding on their home in Bennington, Vermont, for a net cash price of Twelve Hundred Dollars, ($1,200). As an inducement to the procurement of their signatures to this contract it was represented by the Globe company that photographs of their home would be taken by the company to be used in its advertising program: that other sales would be made by the company by reason of this proposed advertising; that the defendants would be allowed commissions on such other sales as might be made through this advertising by the company in that locality; and that by reason of this advertising program the defendants would make a lot of money in the form of commissions which would more than pay for the siding to be placed on their home. No photographs were taken, nor did the defendants receive any commissions. Later, on October 13, 1953, the Globe company procured the defendants’ signatures to a note written for the sum of Fourteen Hundred Fifty One Dollars and Eighty-eight cents ($1,451.88), as set forth in the plaintiff’s specifications. This was obtained by reason of representations made by an agent of the Globe company that the defendants were going to make money by reason of the advertising, and that their signatures to the note “was to show the job had been completed.” Following this general pattern of representation other contracts and notes were obtained by the Globe company from several property owners in the vicinity of Bennington, and likewise no photographs were taken, nor commissions paid to any of them. Gramatan National Bank and Trust Company v. Beecher, supra, at pages 43 and 44.

This Court on the first appeal held that there was evidence tending to show fraud in the procurement of the defendants’ signatures to the initial contract and ultimately to the note. The limited issue here presented by this appeal is whether or not the plaintiff is a holder in due course of the note. 9 V.S.A. §422 in part reads:

“A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: * * *
“(3) that he took it in good faith and for value; and
“ (4) That at the time it was negotiated to him, he did not have notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.”

*369 The following facts were found on the issue presented. The note was endorsed by the Globe Remodeling Company to the Gramatan Co., Inc. on October 13, 1953, the date of the note. On the same date the plaintiff received a telephone call at its New York office from the Boston office of the Gramatan Co. Inc., an affiliate, asking for a commitment to purchase certain negotiable instruments, including this note. The note in question was purchased by the plaintiff from the Gramatan Co., Inc. without investigation. This negotiation and transfer were made under the direction of the witness, Henry C. Wunder, assistant vice-president and supervisor of the purchase and collection of notes for the plaintiff. As of October 13, 1953 Mr. Wunder had purchased for the plaintiff some three hundred notes of the Globe Remodeling Company. The usual procedure was that such a note, accompanied by a financial statement, would be first submitted to the plaintiff before it was purchased from the Gramatan Co., Inc. As of October 13, 1953 about twenty-one complaints of various kinds had come to the attention of the plaintiff concerning the activities of the Globe Remodeling Company. These complaints related to one or another of the following: (a) that the job contracted for had not been completed; (b) that there had been misunderstanding of the date of the first payment; (c) that there had been a misunderstanding of the rebate allowable in the event of prepayment; (d) that the workmanship had been unsatisfactory. These complaints were referred to the Globe company by the plaintiff. On the day in question, October 13, 1953, and in respect to the defendants’ note, the court was unable to find that the plaintiff did anything to determine the circumstances under which the Globe Remodeling Company obtained the note from the defendants. The only endorsement on the note is that of the Globe Remodeling Co. by Marvin S. Berger, “Owner.” There is no endorsement by the Gramatan Co., Inc. or an agent thereof. Under paragraph 12 of the findings of fact, which is the crucial finding, the trial court stated:

“12.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A.2d 163, 122 Vt. 366, 1961 Vt. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gramatan-national-bank-and-trust-co-v-beecher-vt-1961.