Hart v. West

42 S.W. 544, 91 Tex. 184, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 398
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1897
DocketNo. 589.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 544 (Hart v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. West, 42 S.W. 544, 91 Tex. 184, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 398 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

this suit was brought by the plaintiff in error against defendants in error Graham and West, as makers, and against C. K. Breneman as endorser of a promissory note for $3500 dated December 30, 1895, and payable to Breneman ninety days after date.

The defendants Graham and West pleaded severally, that the former being desirous of raising a sum of money agreed with Breneman to execute to him a promissory note, with the latter as surety, which Breneman was to discount for the benefit of the principal in consideration of $100 to be paid from the proceeds; that in accordance with such agreement the note was executed by the makers and placed in the hands of Breneman to be discounted, but that the payee conspired with the plaintiff and H. A. Jackson to transfer the note without consideration, so as to enable the plaintiff to recover upon the same as a bona fide holder for value, and that it was transferred accordingly. They also averred that in substance neither of them ever received any consideration for the note, and that the plaintiff knew the fact when the same was transferred to him. They prayed that Jackson be made a party;, and he appeared and answered disclaiming any interest in the note.

The undisputed evidence showed that the note was executed and delivered to Breneman for the purpose alleged in the answers of Graham and West; that Breneman failed to discount it; that Graham demanded its return; but that subsequently Breneman .transferred it to the plaintiff. In this transaction Jackson acted as the purported agent of the plaintiff. Breneman testified that Jackson paid him 83400 for the note, and Jackson testified to the same fact and also that at the time he purchased the paper he had no knowledge of any defense against it. But the defendants, Graham and West, filed interrogatories under the statutes, both to the plaintiff and to Jackson, and took their respective depositions ex parte. The deposition of the plaintiff was subsequently taken *186 in his own behalf, and Jackson testified on the stand. We need not recite their testimony; it is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion to say that the discrepancies between the statements of the plaintiff and of Jackson, the circumstances developed by the testimony, and the remarkable account given by Jackson of the manner in which he became intrusted for the plaintiff’s benefit with the money with which he claimed to have paid for the note, were sufficient in our opinion to warrant the jury in wholly discrediting them. The jury were also the judges of Breneman’s credibility; and if they believed, as the evidence warranted them in believing, that he transferred the note with the deliberate purpose of defrauding the makers, they were not bound to accept his testimony that he received value for the note.

Upon the case so made by the pleadings and evidence there was a verdict and judgment for the makers of the note, but against Breneman as endorser. Both the plaintiff and Breneman appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, where the judgment was reversed as to Breneman but was affirmed as to Graham and West. Hart having testified that the money which he paid for the note had belonged to his wife, but that having been sick and apprehensive of death she had “willed” it, as the witness expressed it, to the plaintiff, who was her brother, and had directed him, the witness, to take charge of the money and to invest for the benefit of Hart, and it appearing that Mrs. Jackson was still alive, the Court of Civil Appeals held that the undisputed evidence showed that the plaintiff was not the owner of the note, and that therefore the judgment below in favor of the defendants Graham and West should be affirmed. In passing upon the application for the writ of error, we were inclined to think that if value had been paid for the note without notice of the breach of trust on part of Breneman, the plaintiff as the legal holder was entitled to recover upon it, whether he was the beneficial owner or not, and it was upon this ground that we granted the writ. But having reviewed the whole case, we do not find it necessary to pass upon that question. That issue was not submitted to the jury. They were in effect pointedly instructed to find a verdict for the plaintiff, unless they believed that Graham had placed the note in the hands of Breneman to be negotiated for his, Graham’s benefit, and that before the transfer he had revoked Breneman’s authority, and either that the plaintiff did not pay value for the note or that at the time of the transfer he knew of Breneman’s want of authority to assign it.

The only error distinctly assigned in this court to the rulings of the trial court, is upon the refusal of the following instruction asked by the plaintiff: “You are instructed that the law presumes that the plaintiff in this case, as the holder of the note sued upon, paid or caused to be paid a valuable consideration therefor, and that the burden of proof is upon the defendant herein to show that the plaintiff in this case did not pay a valuable consideration for the assignment and transfer to him of the note sued upon herein.” If this charge had been correct as a legal proposition, it was not error to refuse it, for the reason that, as before *187 stated, the jury were already instructed by the general charge, in effect, to find for the plaintiff, unless they believed that Breneman had fraudulently transferred the note, and that the plaintiff either had not paid value or had notice of the fraud. The court also gave this instruction: “If you believe from the evidence that plaintiff did not pay a valuable consideration for said note then you will find for the defendants Graham and West.” The jury were also told to find their verdict from a preponderance of the evidence. Therefore the effect of the charge given by the court was to direct the jury, that they should find a verdict for the plaintiff, although they should believe the note was fraudulently transferred, unless they believed from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff did not pay value for the note or that he had notice of the fraud in the transfer.

The charge placed the burden of showing that the plaintiff did not pay value upon the defendants Graham and West and was an instruction more favorable to the plaintiff than he had a right to demand. The point was decided in Rische v. The Bank, 84 Texas, 413, in which Chief Justice Stayton says: “If the averments of the answer are true, there can be no doubt that the paper was put in circulation fraudulently; and when this is shown to be the case, the presumption that an indorsee is an innocent holder cannot be indulged, and the burden of proving that he had acquired the paper before maturity, in ordinary course of business, for valuable consideration, rests upon him.” The same rule was announced by Chief Justice Moore in Blum v. Loggins, 53 Texas, 136. These are authoritative decisions and settle the rule in this State. In Herman v. Gunter, 83 Texas, 66, the defence was that there was a failure of consideration in the note sued upon and it Avas held that the burden was upon the defendants to show that the plaintiff had not paid value. But in that case the court say: “We do not determine where the burden of proof would be if the note originated in fraud perpetrated upon the maker.”

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 544, 91 Tex. 184, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-west-tex-1897.