Gwyn v. Lee

1 Md. Ch. 445
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Md. Ch. 445 (Gwyn v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gwyn v. Lee, 1 Md. Ch. 445 (Md. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

This case though not very important with reference to the amount involved in its decision, is yet not destitute of interest to the commercial community.

It appears that some time in the month of April, 1848, the complainants, trading under the firm of Gwyn & Company, placed in the hands of George Baughman, of the firm of Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon, their promissory note for $1227 33, made payable to the last named firm, dated the 9th of that month, and payable eight months after date, and, as the complainants allege, the note so made and delivered by them to Baughman, was made and delivered upon the offer and agreement of Baughman to procure the same to be discounted for their use at some bank in Baltimore.

[446]*446Baughman did not comply with this, his alleged agreement, but, on the contrary, on the 11th of September, 1848, three months before the maturity of the note, the firm of which he was a member borrowed' from the'defendant, Lee, twenty-one thousand dollars, and lodged and hypothecated with him as security for the re-payment of the money, this note, with many others, a list of which is given in his answer. • Of these notes, it appears some have matured and remain unpaid, and that others have not yet matured, so that a considerable portion of the money loaned is still due.

There is nothing to show that Lee, the defendant, had any knowledge or any reason to suspect when he received this note as stated, that it had been procured by fraud or misrepresentation, or was without consideration; and in his answer he expressly denies that he had any such knowledge or suspicion ; and, denying all belief in the allegations of the bill charging such fraud and want of consideration, the defendant avers himself to be a bona fide holder of the note, for a full and valuable consideration and without notice.

The bill charges, that the note was pledged by Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon, to the defendant, Lee, to secure the payment of a large sum of money which they had borrowed of him, and upon which he charged and exacted from said firm, usurious interest. The bill does not allege that the defendant knew of the circumstances under which the note was given to Baughman, nor does it charge that the complainants gave Lee notice thereof, until after he had received the same from the payees as security for the loan made to them ; nor is there any allegation that steps were taken by the complainants, by publication or otherwise, to caution the public against taking the note. It is charged, that to secure the money borrowed by Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon, from the defendant, they pledged with him securities to a larger amount than the loan, and the bill insists that Lee is bound, before he can proceed against the complainants upon their note, to apply and exhaust the other securities.

In answer to this charge, the respondent says, that several of [447]*447the makers of the other notes, pledged to him, have refused to pay them, and that some of them insist that they were lent to Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon, and that after defendant is repaid his loan with interest, they are entitled to share in the surplus, if any there be.

The complainants in their bill, further insists, that even if the defendant can hold said note as a security at all, it can only be for so much as might be due him after deducting all the interest paid him by said firm on all their transactions, over and above the interest allowed by law ; and they call upon the defendant to state the amount of such excessive interest paid within the period of the last three years.

In answer to this ground of equity, the defendant says, that the loan already spoken of, for twenty-one thousand dollars, and a further loan to the same parties of four thousand dollars, on the 16th of August, 1848, and to secure the repayment of which, other notes were hypothecated with the defendant, are the only two transactions of business he has with Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon ; that he claims to hold these last notes as also those pledged for the payment of the $21,000 before mentioned, as security for the repayment of the two sums, principal and legal interest, and such costs and expenses as he may incur by the resistance of the makers of the notes, to pay the amount of their liabilities ; and denying the right of the complainant to interrogate him on his obligation to answer to the charge of usury, the defendant says, “he was always ready and willing, and is now ready and willing, to surrender to the persons entitled to receive the same, all securities which he holds, upon the payment to him of the amount of Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon’s indebtedness to him, with legal interest thereon, and the costs and expenses,” &c. But he claims to hold the said securities until he is so repaid, and to adopt such measures as he may be advised, and as may be necessary to recover the sums due upon said securities, until he shall be reimbursed his principal, legal interest, and costs and expenses.

The injunction which was ordered upon the filing of this bill to restrain the defendant, Lee, from passing away the note of [448]*448the complainants, or from suing thereon, to recover the amount thereof, was not granted upon the alleged fraud charged to :have been practised by Baughman, upon the complainants in obtaining the note; because it was not charged that the defendant had any knowledge of such fraud or imposition, at the time he received it; but upon the ground, as I understood the bill, that it was pledged with the defendant to secure a pre-existing debt, due from Baughman, Nicholson and Cannon to him, the allegation being, that it was placed with the defendant by ¡those parties, to secure the payment of a large sum of money which they had borrowed from him ; which language was understood by me to mean, which they had borrowed prior to the pledge, and, with that understanding, I thought he might not be entitled to all the rights which attach to a party who had taken a negotiable security, bona fide, and without notice, and in the usual course of business. Story on Promissory Notes, sec. 195, note 1.

If Baughman committed a fraud, or practiced an imposition upon the complainants, that was a matter between him and them, with which the defendant, Lee, had nothing to do, and for which he could be in no way responsible, unless he had notice thereof when he received the note. Baughman was trusted by, and made the agent of, the complainants, and if he abused their confidence, surely they, and not third parties, ignorant of the fraud, must bear the consequences, and this claim to the protection of the court, was the weaker, seeing that after they discovered the imposition, they did not take the usual and proper course to warn the public by advertisement, or in some other way.

Unquestionably, as between them and innocent third parties, who might obtain their note before its' maturity, and in the ordinary course of business, there could not be a doubt as to who should bear the loss.

There can be no doubt that a bona fide holder of a negotiable instrument for a valuable consideration, without any notice of facts which affect its validity as between the antecedent parties, if he takes it by indorsement before it comes due, acquires [449]*449a valid title, and may recover upon it, although, as between the antecedent parties, the transaction may be invalid. This is a doctrine, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Md. Ch. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwyn-v-lee-mdch-1849.