Herman v. Greene

34 A.2d 17, 140 Me. 54, 1943 Me. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 20, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 A.2d 17 (Herman v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herman v. Greene, 34 A.2d 17, 140 Me. 54, 1943 Me. LEXIS 12 (Me. 1943).

Opinion

Tiiaxter, J.

We are concerned here with two actions brought by different plaintiffs against the same defendant to recover on two promissory notes. In each case an exception was taken to the refusal of the presiding justice to direct a verdict for the plaintiff, and after a verdict for the defendant a general motion for a new trial was filed in each. By filing these motions the plaintiffs waived their exceptions as both the exceptions and the motions raise the same issue. We shall therefore consider only the motions.

Each note was made payable to Maurice L. Diamond and Mabel S. Early and for the same principal sum, $2,925.00, although this circumstance happens to be a mere coincidence. In the action brought by Herman the note was dated February 7, 1942 and was payable May 10, 1942 at the Federal Trust Company of Waterville, Me. In the other case the note was dated March 10,1942 and was due May 15,1942. In all other respects it was similar to the first. The notes were endorsed by the payees and by one Sam Diamond, a brother of Maurice, and were held by the respective plaintiffs as endorsees of Sam Diamond. The defendant does not deny having signed the notes but claims that her signature in each instance was obtained by fraud of which the endorsee, Sam Diamond, and likewise the plaintiffs had notice. It is set forth in the defendant’s amended brief statement in the Herman case that Maurice L. Diamond and Mabel S. Early in May, 1941, persuaded the defendant to make a loan of $5,000.00 to a corporation known as Stewart’s Inc. of which they were respectively the president [56]*56and the secretary; that for the loan of $5,000.00 they gave to the defendant a note of the corporation endorsed by them dated May 3,1941, for the sum of $6,000.00 payable May 1, 1942; that on February 7,1942 the defendant secured of Stewart’s Inc. certain jewelry of the alleged value of $2,925.00 which sum it was agreed should be credited as part payment on the note of $6,000.00; that the said note being then in the defendant’s safe deposit box in Waterville, Maine, it was agreed that the defendant should give a receipt for the value of the jewelry; that she signed the note which is the subject-matter of the suit because of the false and fraudulent representations of Maurice L. Diamond and Mabel S. Early that she was signing merely a receipt in the sum of $2,925.00, being the agreed value of the diamonds, which was to be treated as part payment on the note of $6,000.00, and that she reasonably believed that she was signing such receipt and not a promissory note.

The allegations in the brief statement with respect to the second note dated March 10, 1942 are identical.

The defendant was a widow who appears to have been possessed of a considerable amount of spare money and spare time both of which seem to have been used very unwisely. She had spent several winters in St. Petersburg, Florida. There she met Maurice Diamond and Mabel Early who conducted a diamond auction business under the name of Stewart’s Inc. She had a friend by the name of William Ferguson, who was a guest at the hotel. The defendant, Ferguson, Diamond, and Mabel Early were much in each other’s company. Diamond and Mabel Early invited them to dinners, took them out for automobile rides, and all four went to the dog races together. There were dances, birthday parties and New Year parties. Ferguson testified that he regarded Diamond as a fine man and still thought so at the time of the trial. Out of all these hours spent in inconsequential fun making their relationship became so close that Ferguson finally came to regard Diamond “just like a brother.” During the daytime when the [57]*57dances were not in full swing and the dogs quite probably were resting for their next race, Ferguson and Mrs. Greene would attend the diamond auctions at Stewart’s. It was just for fun and the auctioneer “was very comical.” Such was the tawdry background of what finally blossomed into a business relationship. Diamond had a use for money in his business and Mrs. Greene had the money. She loaned to the corporation $5,000.00 taking therefor the note of $6,000.00 referred to in the brief statement. Six months later she loaned Diamond $2,000.00. Then from being for the most part of the season a spectator at the auctions she became an active bidder. On February 7,1942 she purchased for $5,600.00 a bracelet and on March 10,1942 a diamond ring for $4,400.00. In each instance she turned in in part payment other jewelry which she had previously bought and in each case the balance which she owed amounted to $2,925.00. The plaintiffs claim that she signed the two promissory notes for these amounts with the full knowledge of what she was signing and that her assertion that the payees or either of them led her to believe that these were receipts for amounts to be credited on the $6,000.00 note was false.

The defendant had the burden of establishing by clear and convincing proof that her signature on each of the notes in question was obtained by fraud. Portland Morris Plan Bank v. Winckler, 127 Me., 306, 143 A., 173. The jury has decided that she has sustained that burden. The question before this court on the'general motions is whether that finding is clearly and manifestly wrong. If it is, all discussion as to whether the plaintiffs were holders in due course becomes superfluous.

The claim of the defendant, apparently with respect to the Herman note, is not that any trick was practiced on her by which one piece of paper was substituted for another when she signed. Although this particular allegation was set up in the brief statement, it was abandoned when she was called on to testify. She testified that after her successful bid for the jewelry, Maurice Diamond asked her to go into the back room [58]*58or office with him to sign a receipt, that she sat down there on one side of the desk or table, that he sat down on the other side, that he passed her a paper which she took and signed. She was not hurried and apparently had ample opportunity to have read it had she wished. The paper which she admits she signed is of the following tenor:

“N. P. 62658
1-30
$2925.00 February 7th., 194®
On May the 10th. 194® after date I promise to pay to the order of Maurice L. Diamond and Mabel S. Early
Twenty nine hundred & twenty-five & . . . . No/100 Dollars
at The Federal Trust Co., of Waterville, Maine.
Value received
Nettie A. Greene
No. Due 5/10/4®”

She appears as the maker of a promissory note which she now says she had no intention of signing and was not supposed to sign. Realizing that some explanation was necessary under the circumstances, she put forth several versions of what happened, each, unfortunately for her, inconsistent with the other. In the first place she said that she signed merely a blank piece of paper, apparently intending to imply that she left it with Maurice Diamond to fill in and that he wrote in a promise on her part to pay money instead of an acknowledgment of a payment of money received by her. But this theory of what occurred had to be discarded by her when she was faced with the note which we now have before us. Obviously she did not sign a blank piece of paper.

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Related

Olsen v. French
456 A.2d 869 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 A.2d 17, 140 Me. 54, 1943 Me. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herman-v-greene-me-1943.