In re Great Western Tel. Co.

10 F. Cas. 1054, 5 Biss. 363
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 1054 (In re Great Western Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Great Western Tel. Co., 10 F. Cas. 1054, 5 Biss. 363 (N.D. Ill. 1873).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge.

I see nothing in the evidence pertaining to the transfer of the notes from Gage to Hilton tending to show it was not a bona fide transaction. Gage in dealing with Reid & Sherwin had claimed to own Hilton's interest in. the business, and had included that interest in this long mortgage taken to himself. As between himself and Hilton, he was bound to pay Hilton what that interest was worth, and proposed to give him these notes of the telegraph company for Hilton’s interest in the Reid & Sherwin matter, and the railroad bonds.

It is true that both Gage and Hilton state that no writings were executed between them, at the time Hilton assigned his un-liquidated interest in the firm to Gage for adjustment; but I cannot deem that a circumstance of sufficient import to say that Hilton really had no interest in the firm. He and Gage were partners, and intimate friends; and I do not think the fact that vouchers were not exchanged, or. writings executed, shows that Hilton had no bona fide claim against the firm to be adjusted. If he had, in fact, no such interest, it would have been easy to have proven it by the books of the firm of Reid & Sherwin, or by -calling parties intimate with its affairs, neither of which was done.

It may be and probably is true that neither of the securities exchanged were deemed first-class. The Reid & Sherwin claim had a long time to run, because the mortgage, debt, which formed at least one-half of the final balance of $60,000 struck in the settle-' ment against Reid & Sherwin, would be first satisfied by the $5,000 installments as they were paid.

This $GO,000 was also a second mortgage on the Reid & Sherwin property, and Hilton. testifies that while he supposed the telegraph company notes were in all respects valid, yet he anticipated that some part of them might have to be renewed and extended. But the fact that an indorsee considers the, maker of a note in doubtful credit, or, as the saying is “slow” does not show that the indorsee is not a bona fide holder, especially when it appears that he paid for the paper in other paper perhaps equally “slow.” It is sufficient to say that the whole testimony, when taken together, seems to my mind to show that the transaction between Gage and Hilton, by which Hilton became the owner of this paper, was a genuine business-operation in which each party at least supposed he was parting with a valid and valuable asset for another equally valid and valuable to himself.

It is, however, urged by the respondent that, notwithstanding Hilton paid value for these notes, yet he took them with knowledge of the equities of the company against the original payee to such an extent that they are chargeable with those equities in his hands.

The evidence to sustain this part of the case consists in the fact that the Terwilliger Case [59 HI. 249] was pending in the supremo court of Illinois at the time these notes were made; that the substance of the bill in that case had been published in the papers of this city, which Hilton was in the habit of reading, and that the allegations of that bill and subject matter of the suit amounted to a caveat to all persons not to deal with Reeve in any matter growing out of his relations to the respondent. But I cannot believe any application of the doctrine of lis pendens has gone to the extent claimed in this case.

The Terwilliger bill charged that a certain contract made between Reeve and this company was fraudulent as against the bona fide stockholders of the company, and asked for an accounting in regard to the money paid and work done under that contract. The case had been heard before the learned and able circuit judge of Cook county, upon [1056]*1056proofs and arguments, and he had delivered an exhaustive opinion reviewing the evidence, and had dismissed that part of the hill for want of equity, from which Terwil-liger had appealed. The opinion of his hon- or, Judge Williams, holding that there was no fraud in the contract, had been published in the papers of this city months after the publication of the synopsis of the bill, so that if any weight is to be given to publications in the papers of the substance of the bill, the opinion of the circuit judge at least neutralized the allegations of the bill, and as the record stood at the time Hilton became the purchaser of these notes, there was a judicial finding that the contract between Reeve and the respondent was not fraudulent for the causes alleged in Terwil-Iiger's bill.

There was no injunction against this company at that time. It was in possession of long lines of telegraph and engaged in the construction of more. It had full control of its affairs through its officers. The bank where Hilton kept his account had recently discounted the paper of the company, and was then the holder of it, to the extent of several thousand dollars, and I cannot conceive that the doctrine of lis pendens should be held to have created a conclusive judicial presumption that this company could not on the 6th day of June, 1872, make a valid note to Selah Reeve or owe him a bona fide debt.

The general principle by which a third person is charged with notice under the doctrine of lis pendens is that the notice attaches only to the thing — the res — which is the subject matter of the suit. Here the subject matter of the suit was partly a contract between two of the parties to the suit, and probably Reeve could not have assigned that contract pending the suit without the assignees taking it subject to the result of that suit. But in regard to promissory notes, fair upon their face, an indorsee is not bound to inquire into the consideration of the note or the circumstances out of which it grew. The presumption is that the note was given for value, as well as that the indorsee paid value for it And it seems to me it would be an abusive stretch of the principle of notice by lis pendens to hold that this respondent could not give commercial paper in its business transactions pending that suit

Incidental to this point, it is also insisted that Otis, the treasurer, had no authority to give these notes, and that they are therefore void. It is insisted that, by the by-laws of the company, all deeds and contracts are to be signed by the president, and that it is nowhere made the duty of the treasurer, nor is he permitted, either expressly or by implication, to sign notes. By the fourth by-law it is provided that an executive committee shall be elected, consisting of three members of the board of directors, “who shall have, and they are hereby authorized to exercise, all the-power of the board of directors.”

On the 5th of June, 1872, a meeting was-held by this executive committee, at which the following resolution was adopted, and spread upon the records of this company:

“Resolved, that the notes already issued by the treasurer in the name of the company in. part payment of a bill for $37,019.25, from the contractor, are approved, and that the-treasurer is hereby authorized and directed to-settle by note for any balance remaining due on said bill.”

It was conclusively shown on the former-trial that these notes were given for part of the bill referred to in this resolution, and also-that Otis, the treasurer, had been in the habit, of giving notes of this character for upwards-of two years last prior thereto.

The power of this executive committee was plenary to the extent of the powers of the board of directors.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 1054, 5 Biss. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-great-western-tel-co-ilnd-1873.