Harford National Bank v. Rutledge

91 A. 790, 124 Md. 46, 1914 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 A. 790 (Harford National Bank v. Rutledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harford National Bank v. Rutledge, 91 A. 790, 124 Md. 46, 1914 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1896 the appellee, Charles A. Rutledge and Elizabeth W. Rutledge, his wife, of Harford County, executed two promissory notes in favor of Allen Hoffman, of that county, ■one dated Rocks, Maryland, February 19, 1896, for $544.5(1, payable three months after date, with interest, and the other dated Rocks, Maryland, March 14th, 1896, for $1,082.26, payable two months after date, with interest from date, and ¡shortly thereafter the notes were discounted by the Harford Rational Bank of Bel Air for the payee.

Mr. Williams, the president of the bank, states that about the sixth of May, 1896, a short time before the notes matured, the payee, Allen Hoffman, came to him with the note of H. C. Campen or H. C. Campen and Company, who were *51 canned goods brokers in Bel Air, and wanted the note discounted by the bank; that he made some investigation about the note, and being satisfied with it he had it discounted for him and the proceeds placed to his credit; that Mr. Hoffman afterwards drew his check and paid the Rutledge notes, and that after they were paid he>, Mr. Williams, required him to leave them with the bank as collateral for Mr. Hoffman’s other obligations at the hank, and delivered them to the cashier who filed them away, and that they have “remained in possession of the hank ever since”; that on the 17th of October of the same year “a petition in insolvency was filed” against Air. Hoffman, whose liabilities to the bank at that time amounted to over $18,000.00, and that suit was brought in the Circuit Court for Harford County on the Rutledge notes on the 29th of January, 1897.

The record shows that Charles A. Rutledge was summoned to the February Term, 1897, and that the writ having been returned “non estf’ as to Airs. Rutledge, it was renewed from term to term until she was summoned to ‘the Alay Term, 1899. In the meantime the ease against Mr. Rutledge had under the rules of Court been carried to the stet docket, but after the appearance of Airs. Rutledge it was reinstated on the trial docket; the cases were consolidated, and on the 11th of September, 1900, upon the suggestion and affidavit of the defendants, the Court directed the record to be sent to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for trial. The record was not transmitted to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County until the 7th of September, 1910, and on the 19th of the same month that Court entered a judgment by default in favor of the plaintiff, and the judgment was extended for $3,025.66. with interest from date. The judgment was subsequently stricken out, and the case was tried in December, 1913, upon issues joined on tbe pleas of “never promised,” etc., and “not indebted,” etc.

Mr. Williams further states that after1 the suggestion and affidavit for a removal was filed in the Circuit Court for *52 Harford County he took for granted that the defendants would have the record sent to Baltimore County, and that he lost sight of the case until the spring of 1910; that there remains of Mr. Hoffman’s indebtedness to the bank, as of the last of December, 1902, $3,000.00; that Mr. Hoffman resigned as a director of the bank on thé 14th of October, 1896, and that he died on the 26th of January, 1897, and that the date, 20th of May, 1896, on the back of the notes is the date of notice sent to the defendants that the bank held the notes and desired payment.

Mr. Finney, who was cashier of the bank at the time the Butledge notes were paid by Mr. TIoffman, says that Mr. Yrilliams handed him the notes and told him to1 hold them as collateral; that he placed them in an envelope upon which he endorsed the amount of the notes, and that the date stamped on the back of the notes is the date of the notice he sent to the makers that the notes were due or overdue; that ho was cashier of the bank for four or five years and left it in 1899; that Mr. Hoffman was an active director of the bank, who sometimes missed meetings of the directors, like other directors, but that he did not think he missed many, and that Mr. Hoffman’s office “at one time was across the way from the bank, and at another time was in the next building.”

Dr. Rutledge, one of the defendants, who1 was seventy-three years of age at the time of the trial, testified that in 1896 and 1897 his principal business was canning corn and tomatoes', and that he owned a large farm on which he raised most of his “canned goods;” that Mr. Hoffman, who was a canned goods broker and a director of the Harford Rational Bank, rendered him financial assistance in his business, and had been doing so for ten years; that he had given Mr. Hoffman a bill of sale of the tomatoes and corn canned by him in 1895, which were stored in a warehouse at Rocks, to secure such amounts as he owed him; that before he and his wife execute the notes in this case, which he under- *53 Flood were to be discounted at tbe Harford National Bank, he went to the hank and told Mr. Williams, the president, that the understanding between him and Mr. Hoffman was that the notes were to be secured by the bill of sale be had given Mr. Hoffman, and were to be paid out of tbe proceeds of sales of the canned goods mentioned in the bill of sale; that when the goods were sold a sight draft would he attached to the bill of lading, and that he wanted the hank to see that the proceeds of the sales of the goods, and of the drafts were applied to the payment of the notes, and that Mr. Williams promised that he would do so; that he and ihs wife signed the notes, and that when he sold and shipped the goods in May, 1896, he took the bills of lading to Mr. Hoffman, and that sight drafts on the consignees for the amount of the sales, with the bills of lading attached, were collected through the bank; that sometime after the goods were shipped he had a settlement with Mr. Hoffman; that Mr, Hoffman told him the notes had been paid and paid him the difference between the amount for which the goods sold and the amount xhe witness owed him, and told him that the notes were in hip hank box; that in order to feel certain that the notes had been paid according to the understanding with tbe bank and Mr. Hoffman, be went to the bank to see about it, and tliat Mr. Williams told him that the notes had been paid, but that he did not at that time get the notes from the bank because Mr. Hoffman bad told bim that they were in his bank box; that the goods sold for more than enough to pay 1he notes, and that after he went to the bank and Mr. Williams told him that the notes had been paid, he never heard anything further of them until he was summoned in this case, after Mr. Hoffman’s death.

During the trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed, the plaintiff reserved twenty-three exceptions, the first twenty-two of which relate to rulings of the Court *54 on the evidence, and the twenty-third is to the action of the Court’ on the prayers.

The first exception was to the competency of Dr. Rutledge as a witness for the defendants, and it is insisted by the appellant that as the suit was instituted in 1897 that question must be determined by the provisions of the Act of 1888, Chapter 315, which was then in force. It is not claimed that Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A. 790, 124 Md. 46, 1914 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harford-national-bank-v-rutledge-md-1914.