Kelly v. Freedman

22 N.W. 820, 56 Mich. 321, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 662
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 N.W. 820 (Kelly v. Freedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Freedman, 22 N.W. 820, 56 Mich. 321, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 662 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

Defendant is sued as endorser of a promissory note for $3750 dated April 7, 1883, made by Sampson & Freedman and payable to their own order, endorsed by them without recourse as first endorsers, at four months. The note bears no place of dating, and was made payable at a bank in Detroit. The makers, at its date, were tobacco dealers in Chicago, and defendant is a widow, the aunt of Freedman, one of the makers, and lives in Detroit. Plaintiff, who is doing business in New York Individually but under a firm name, claims to have received the paper a few weeks after its date from the Chicago firm, who were his debtors.

Mrs. Freedman defends on the double ground of fraud in the procuring and use of the paper, and of illegality as a Sunday contract. And she claimed in the court below, and was sustained in her claim by the jury, that plaintiff did not take the paper under circumstances which would make him entitled to enforce it against her”discharged of her defenses. [323]*323The several assignments of error all relate to two sets of inquiries: first, as to the validity of the paper and the mutual relations of Mrs. Freedman and the makers; and second, as to plaintiff’s claims to protection as a holder in good faith.

TJpon the origin of the endorsement as executed on Sunday there was no question. Plaintiff’s own witness William Freedman, testified on cross-examination that he went to the room of his aunt, who was at the time in bed indisposed on •Sunday evening, and by various statements procured her signature on the back of a blank form of promissory note, of which no part was filled up, and which was not signed, and that on the same night he went to Chicago with it, and that he filled it out the next day. Another similar instrument not involved in this-suit was prepared in the same way. There was also testimony to go to the jury, which seems not open to question (although this we need not consider), that the next day she revoked the authority to use it, before it had become transferred to any holder for value ; and there was further testimony that the Chicago firm acknowledged the receipt of this prohibition and promised not to use the paper and did not use it in the course of business. William Freedman testified to an attempt to negotiate the note at once, but that the person with whom they dealt preferred to and did furnish money on different security.

The questions of evidence presented refer directly or indirectly to the reception of testimony concerning the equities between the makers and endorser, and the circumstances and considerations connected with their dealings. And as this subject was somewhat fully discussed by the witnesses it requires attention.

It was urged by plaintiff that the mere fact that the defendant’s signature was appended on Sunday would not prevent the note being made valid by subsequent facts. And he introduced testimony to show that in fact the relations of the parties were such that in giving this paper Mrs. Freedman was only providing means which she was really bound to furnish to satisfy her own obligations to her nephew and his partner, and that, although in form accommodation paper [324]*324it was not so in fact. But he now claims that this was immaterial and therefore not open to complete investigation and answer by the defense, although he himself began the inquiry.

We cannot understand on what principle such inquiries on consideration can become immaterial unless on the assumption that plaintiff is not bound by such equities. But this was necessarily one of the important questions in dispute. If there were no original equities, and if defendant was bound to make the paper good at all events, the plaintiff’s title might not require the same degree of support in consideration and good faith that might otherwise be very essential. But if it was against honesty and good faith for the makers of the note to give it currency, then no one else could acquire any better right unless receiving the paper under circumstances which would legally exonerate him from the equities which his assignors could not evade.

The facts which defendant sought to rely on were partly shown by plaintiff’s witnesses on cross-examination, and partly by other testimony. They tended to show that when she signed the endorsement defendant was out of health and to-some extent affected by anodynes, that she was deceived by her nephew concerning his financial condition, and the purpose for which the paper was to be used, and the sum which was to be provided for, and that advantage was taken both of her condition and of her ignorance of such business. And in answer to so much of plaintiff’s testimony as set up any consideration existing against her, she not only contradicted the account given by plaintiff’s witnesses concerning the transaction of Sunday night, but she also introduced testimony which tended to show that there was no truth in the showing of consideration. There was enough to go to the jury not only to show that the endorsement was entirely for accominodation and without consideration, but that the paper was obtained by fraud and used without right.

None of the testimony objected to, the ruling on which is now relied on for reversal, was improperly dealt with if the subject was open to proof at all. The arguments of coun[325]*325sel do not seriously urge any ground outside of this. And if there was no right in Sampson & Freedman to ask this paper as equitably due to them, it was not only purely accommodation paper, but used if defendant’s testimony is believed, for directly fraudulent ends.

The charges given or refused, on which errors are alleged, bore on the question of plaintiff’s good faith in receiving the note as collateral security. One error alleged is not sustained by the record. The charge made-that Kelly was not to be treated as a bona fide purchaser if he was not to release Sampson & Freedman if he failed to collect of defendant, was not confined to the note, as the printed record suggests, but included the account also, while the exception and assignment confine it to the note. Had it been confined to the note, however, it would be worthy of some consideration how far it is proper for a creditor to agree with a principal debtor not to look to him until he has pursued an accommodation surety and exhausted his remedy against the surety, and how far such a transaction would give the creditor the claims of a bona fide holder against a surety who has been led to enter into that relation by fraud. The law does not favor dealings which will put the surety in a worse position than the principal, and such an arrangement would be unjust, whether legal or not. The case does not require us to decide on its legality.

As counsel for defendant does not dispute the doctrine that a person who takes a note merely as collateral security is not a bona fide holder, we need not discuss the law on that question. And inasmuch as this transaction was had in New York, if anywhere, the law of that state certainly would not favor the plaintiff. The error urged on the argument was not the legal proposition but the absence of any testimony to which it could apply. The court did charge very broadly that acceptance of such a note in payment would make plaintiff a bona fide purchaser. ¥e are not informed whether the jury found the paper was taken as collateral, or found there was no honest taking without notice.

It is not our duty to decide upon the facts in the case ; it was for the jury to determine all such questions. And where [326]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.W. 820, 56 Mich. 321, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-freedman-mich-1885.