Hirsch v. People's Bank of Plaquemine

240 F. 661, 153 C.C.A. 459, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2409
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 1917
DocketNo. 3009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 240 F. 661 (Hirsch v. People's Bank of Plaquemine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hirsch v. People's Bank of Plaquemine, 240 F. 661, 153 C.C.A. 459, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2409 (5th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.,

In January, 1906, Louis Danos made a series of notes, each payable to his order, amoaajiting in the aggregate to $60,000, which were secured by a mortgage and vendor’s lien or privilege on the Milly plantation. Thereafter the mortgaged property was conveyed to the L. Danos Planting & Manufacturing Company, a corporation, which will be referred to as the Danos Company. By the act of sale to that company it assumed the outstanding mortgage and vendor’s privilege notes, but the holders of those notes were not parties to that transaction. The Danos Company was adjudged bankrupt, and the Mill'y plantation was sold under orders made in the bankruptcy proceeding. Emile Hirsch presented four of the above-mentioned notes, aggregating $6,500. The People’s Bank of Plaquemine, the holder of some of the secured notes, opposed the allowance of the notes presented by Hirsch as claims against the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property on the ground that those notes were paid by the Danos Company, it being averred that three of them, aggregating $4,000, were paid on February 8, 1912, and that the remaining note, for $2,500, was paid on February 21, 1912. This opposition was sustained as to the three notes alleged to have been paid on February 8, 1912, and was overruled as to the $2,500 note alleged to have been paid on February 21, 1912. The appeal is from a decree to this effect.

In January, 1912, the notes in question, and others of the series, were held by Dr. W. A. Holloway, and became payable by the expiration of the time for which the original dates of payment had been extended. Dr. Holloway then made it known that “he would like to have some money.” Dr. J. L. Danos, who was a son of the maker of the notes and also air officer of the Danos Compan}'-, between the date of the maturity of the notes on January 2 and February 8, 1912, had several conversations with Dr. Holloway in regard to the notes held by the latter. Dr. Holloway made it known that he “could do with about $6,500,” and that he was willing for some one else to take up> [663]*663and carry that amount of the notes he held. Dr.' Danos applied to several persons, including Emile Hirsch, to take and carry some of the notes held by Dr. Holloway. Hirsch agreed to take $6,500 of those notes. What seems to us to be the convincing preponderance of the evidence is to the effect that this agreement by Hirsch with Dr. Danos was made-prior to the delivery of $4,000 of the notes by Dr. Holloway to Dr. Danos on February 8th, and that at that time the understanding between Dr. Danos and Hirsch was that the latter would on February 21st have in hand the amount in cash required to pay for $6,500 of the rfotes held by Dr. Holloway. The testimony of Dr. Danos to the effect that Hirsch’s agreement to take the $6,500 of notes was made after February 8th is in conflict with that of several Other witnesses, some of whom were disinterested, and is not in harmony with his own previously given version of his transaction with Hirsch.

Furthermore, there was evidence tending to prove that Dr. Danos was improperly influenced to change his version of the Hirsch transaction, in that he was a party to an agreement or understanding with the purchaser of the mortgaged property, which had the effect of making it to the interest of the Danos family to defeat the asserted right of Hirsch to participate in the distribution of the amount for which that property was sold. On February 8th, after Hifsch had agreed to take $6,500 of the notes on February 21st, Dr. Holloway delivered three of the notes, aggregating $4,000 principal, to Dr. Danos, and received from the latter the Danos Company’s check on the People’s Bank of Plaquemine for $4,032, being the amount of the notes, with interest, from January 2d to February 8th. On the date this check was drawn the drawer did not have to its credit in the drawee bank the amount required to meet the check. On February 9th the drawee bank lent $4,000 on a demand note made to it by the Danos Company, credited that company’s account with that amount, and paid the check given to Dr. Holloway when it was presented on the 9th. On February 21st Dr. Danos received from Dr. Holloway another of the notes held by him, one for $2,500, gave him the Danos Company’s check on the same bank for $2,527.78, being the principal and interest to that date, delivered to Hirsch that note, and also the three notes obtained from Dr. Holloway on the 8th, and received from Hirsch his check on the Iberville Bank & Trust Company for $6,572.22, payable to the order of the Danos Company. The amount of this check was the principal of the four notes, with interest thereon to February 21st. This check was deposited in the People’s Bank of Plaquemine to the credit of the Danos Company, and the proceeds of it were used in paying the Danos Company’s demand note of the 8th and the check given to Dr. Holloway on the 21st.

When the three notes delivered by Dr. Plolloway to Dr. Danos on the 8th were delivered to Mr. Hirsch on the 21st, they were in the same condition in which they were when Dr. Holloway parted with them on the 8th. On the back of each of them was the indorsement in blank of Fouis Danos and entries showing payments of interest and extensions of the time of maturity. Nothing on either of the notes indicated that the principal amount it called for had been [664]*664paid in whole or in part. No party to the transactions of the 8th, 9th, and 21st intended or understood that those transactions, or any of them, had the effect of paying or extinguishing the four notes in question, or either of them. Dr. Holloway, who was unwilling to grant further extension or indulgence as to all the notes he held, consented to transfer part of them to another, who was willing to take and hold them if such a person could be found, and, at the time of the deliveries made by him to Dr. Danos, understood that the latter was getting the notes for a third person who had agreed to buy them. Dr. Danos did not understand or intend that anything he did, individually or in the name of the Danos Company, effected a payment or extinguishment of the notes, and delivered them to Mr. Hirsch as existing secured obligations. Mr. Hirsch bought the notes ,as an investment, understanding that as to them he succeeded to all the rights of Dr. Holloway, the former holder. Douis Danos, the maker of the notes, never reacquired possession of them after he indorsed and delivered them to another holder, did not provide or furnish the money to meet the check given to Dr. Holloway on the 8th, and, when the notes were delivered to Mr-Hirsch on the 21st, distinctly manifested his understanding that they were still in force by signing a memorandum on each of them showing that it was extended to January 2, 1915. It was not made to appear that either Dr. Holloway or Mr. Hirsch was' even awáre that the Danos Company had assumed the payment of the notes. The former in accepting the Danos Company’s checks, and the latter in giving his check to that company, cannot be regarded as dealing with a party whose relation to the notes was that of the maker of them.

What.all the parties to the transactions intended was a transfer of the notes from one holder to another. The claim that the notes were paid contrary to the intention of all the parties to the dealings is sought to be supported by invoking the rule that the legal result of a debtor paying 'his debt is to extinguish it, and that his reissue of the instrument evidencing the obligation does not revive it or a mortgage which secured it. Hibernia National Bank v. Succession of Gragard, 109 La. 678, 33 South. 728. The evidence in the case negatives the existence of such a state of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
240 F. 661, 153 C.C.A. 459, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hirsch-v-peoples-bank-of-plaquemine-ca5-1917.