Gross v. Ohio Savings & Trust Co.

156 N.E. 205, 116 Ohio St. 230, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 230, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 196, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 336
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1927
Docket19495
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 205 (Gross v. Ohio Savings & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Ohio Savings & Trust Co., 156 N.E. 205, 116 Ohio St. 230, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 230, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 196, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 336 (Ohio 1927).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

The principal contention between the parties in this case arises from the defense that the note sued upon was procured by fraud and trickery upon the part of the agents of the Union Drug Company, the payee of the note. Before going into a discussion of the question of law presented it seems essential that there be a recitation of the facts disclosed by the record. There is little dispute as to the facts upon which the controversy is based.

*232 The only testimony with reference to the occurrence at the time of the execution of the note was that of the defendant, Gross, the maker of the note. Gross was a resident of Athens. Upon the invitation of Clyde Hill, a former resident of Athens and an acquaintance of Gross, the latter met Hill and Pittinger at a hotel in Athens. Hill and Pittinger informed Gross that they were representing a drug store corporation, which then had seven stores in operation, managed by competent men, and that the stores were profitable; that they had for sale about $75,000 or $80,000 of preferred stock for the purpose of starting three more drug stores. Other statements of Hill and Pittinger giving assurance of the success of their proposition were testified to by Gross, which need not be given in detail. The further testimony of Gross is as follows:

“I said to them, ‘Your proposition looks good. If you had some of this stock about March 1st I would take some of it.’ Pittinger turned to Hili, and said, ‘We can fix that, can’t we?’ and Hill said ‘Yes; I guess we can.’ I said ‘I will take 20 shares of the preferred and that will give me 8 shares of common.’ Pittinger started to write out the contract to take this stock. He had a sheet of paper, I would say somewhere near the size of that yellow sheet there, and he filled that in. It had some print in it, and I kept talking to Hill about the drug stores while he was filling this in. When he got through he shoved it over to me. I was on one side of the table, and they were on the other side. I just sketched down over the paper to see whether it had the proper amount of stock in it. I didn’t read the paper thoroughly through. *233 I just sketched it to see if it was the proper amount of stock in it. It was only supposed to be a contract for stock, and I signed it. My understanding was it was to come through the bank of Athens on the 1st of March with a sight draft, and on March 1st I was notified there was a note there. I found a note and I said ‘Is there any stock with this note?’ and they said, ‘No; this is all we got.’ ”

Gross further testified that he had known Hill many years and had confidence in him; that nothing was said about signing a note; that the paper he signed was about the size of the old foolscap sheet, the whole surface of which was covered either with printing or with writing filling in the blank spaces; that the note which came to the bank was about one-fourth the size of the paper he signed, and that before he signed it Hill had said of it, “Here is the paper filled out with the amount of stock we agreed on, 20 shares of preferred and 8 shares of common.” Gross then testified that he “sketched down the paper and seen it was there and signed it.” The paper was signed in two places, the separate subscription for stock and the promissory note.

The testimony of Gross, as shown by the record, discloses that at the time of the occurrence detailed Gross was 64 years of age; had lived in Athens about 30 years, where he had been engaged in the mercantile business; was interested as a stockholder and a member of the board of directors of an oil company in that vicinity, and also to some extent as an independent operator, taking leases and drilling for oil. His eyesight with glasses was “pretty fair,” and his hearing such that he *234 could hear ordinary conversation. The record further discloses that the paper signed by Gross was taken to the office of the Union Drug Company, at Canton, and there turned over to the secretary of the company, where it was cut in two, thereby severing the subscription for stock from the promissory note. The record discloses only a copy of the note, and not the entire paper described by the president of the drug company as a subscription blank with a note attached. The subscription contract was filed in the office of the secretary, and the note came into the possession of the president of the drug company, who testifies to his negotiation and sale of it to the plaintiff, the Ohio Savings & Trust Company.

The judgment in favor ,of the defendant was reversed by the Court of Appeals for error in giving to the jury before argument an instruction requested by counsel for the defendant, the substance of which was also given to the jury in the general charge. That instruction is as follows:

“If you find from the evidence that defendant actually signed and delivered the instrument set out in the petition, and that at the time of signing and delivering the same he was induced, by fraudulent representations as to the character of the paper, to believe that he was signing and delivering an instrument other than a promissory note and that his ignorance of the true character of the paper was not attributable, in whole or in part, to his own negligence in the premises, then your verdict should be for the defendant.”

It is urged that this instruction was erroneous because it ignored the rights of a bolder in due *235 course, and for the further reason that the court thereby submitted to the jury the question of defendant’s negligence, when the facts disclosed by the record show his negligence as a matter of law.

The distinction must be kept in mind between cases in which a party, through fraudulent representations, signs an instrument which he intends to be a negotiable promissory note, usually referred to as fraud in the inducement, and those where through fraud and misrepresentation or deceit and trickery his signature is procured to a negotiable promissory note, when he had no intention or purpose to sign any such instrument, termed fraud in the inception of the instrument. It is quite well settled that fraud in the transaction out of which the instrument arose, or in respect to the consideration for which it was given, is no defense against a holder in due course. A different rule prevails where the signature of the maker of a negotiable instrument was obtained by fraudulent trick or device and the maker did not know that the paper he was signing was a negotiable instrument and had no intention of making or delivering such instrument. 3 Ruling Case Law, 1008.

The question of the right of a holder in due course under circumstances such as here presented was considered in three cases, all in the 29th Ohio State Report, in each of which the opinion was written by Mcllvaine, J. In the first of these, De Camp v. Hamma, Exr., page 467, which was an action by a tona fide holder in due course, it was held in the syllabus that:

“The defendant is not liable where it is shown:

1. That at the time of signing and delivering the *236

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 205, 116 Ohio St. 230, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 230, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 196, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-ohio-savings-trust-co-ohio-1927.