Lawhead v. Lucas

168 S.E. 803, 113 W. Va. 540, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 185
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1933
Docket7450
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 S.E. 803 (Lawhead v. Lucas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawhead v. Lucas, 168 S.E. 803, 113 W. Va. 540, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 185 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

KeNNA, Judge:

Charles E._ Lawhead, Receiver of Clarksburg Trust Company, brought this action of assumpsit against C. F. Lucas, as indorser of the note of Derbrah Silk Company, the Silk Company being the maker, and M. S. Bredbenner, J. F. Cole, C. A. Cole, C. F. Lucas and S. A. Burnett, the indorsers, upon a note dated January 15, 1929, in the amount of $3,000.00. They had made the note payable to “ourselves” and it had been discounted and had come ultimately into the hands of the Clarksburg Trust Company in the manner detailed hereinafter. The sole question presented by the record is whether the indorsers were entitled to the steps of diligence, or, on the other hand, whether (a) they were accommodated indorsers who did not expect the principal to pay, or (b) the circumstances pleaded were such as to constitute a waiver of the steps of diligence on the part of the payee and holder of the note.

Charles F. Lucas was the only party to the note who was sued, and after all of the plaintiff’s testimony was in, the court below, on motion of the defendant, directed a verdict for the defendant and that plaintiff nil capiat.

The first question presented arises under chapter 98-A, section 80, Code 1923, which reads as follows: “Presentment for payment is not required in order to charge an indorser where the instrument was "made or accepted for his accommodation, and he has no reason to expect that the instrument will be paid if presented. Chronology of events plays a highly important part in reaching the conclusion necessary, under the *542 complicated circumstances of this case. The following accurately sets down the circumstances in order of time:

May 13, 1921. Derbrah Silk Company incorporated under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania. July, 1923. Affairs of the Silk Company liquidated under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania. August 15, 1924. Derbrah Silk Company made its note for $14,000.00, indorsed by Lucas, Cole and three other directors of the Silk Company. September 10, 1924. The $14,000.00 note was discounted and the proceeds placed to the credit of the Silk Company in the First National Bank of Shinnston. December, 1924. The account of the Silk Company with the First National Bank of Shinnston closed out. December, 1925. First National Bank of Shinns-ton carrying the $14,000.00 Silk Company note with the original indorsers. December 8, 1925. Note for $3,000.00 signed by Silk Company and indorsed by Lucas, Cole and three other directors of the Silk Company. December 12, 1925. Date of note in renewal in full of the $14,000.00 note of the Silk Company with the indorsements of the five directors. December 18, 1925. Credit item received by the First National Bank of Shinnston from the Bank of "Wyatt in the amount of $2955.00 entered upon the Bank of Shinnston’s books, preceded by the word “Derbrah”. December 18, 1925. Deposit tickets crediting Lucas and Cole each with $1,000.00 in the First National Bank of Shinnston without further explanation. The ledger account of Lucas shows this credit. Cole’s ledger account not located. December 38, 1925. Credit item of $1,000.00 on the books of the First National Bank of Shinnston preceded by the word “Derbrah”. December 21, 1925. $3,000.00 note of the Silk Company with the indorsements of Lucas and Cole discounted at the Bank of Wyatt. December 28, 1925. Entry, on the books of the First National Bank, of Shinnston showing the discount (by way of renewal) of the note of the Silk Company in the amount of $14,000.00, indorsed by Lucas, Cole and three other directors of the Silk Company. January 6, 1926. Board of directors of Bank of Wyatt approved the discount of the $3,000.00 note of the Silk Company with the indorse-ments stated. March ...., 1926. “Out of existence affidavit” filed for Silk Company in Pennsylvania. July 5, 1927. The $14,000.00 note of Silk Company, with the indorsements, re- *543 clticed. to a note of $11,000.00 with the same indorsements, as shown by the books of the First National Bank of Shinnston. January 25, 1929. Note sued on made by Silk Company with the indorsements of Lucas, Cole and the three other directors of Silk Company, in renewal of the $3,000.00 note originally made and carried in the Bank of Wyatt up to this time. March 11, 1929. The renewal note dated January 25, 1929, transferred by the Bank of Wyatt to the Clarksburg Trust Company. April 26, 1929. Bank of Wyatt closed. May 6, 1929. Collection slip made out by the Clarksburg Trust Company for the purpose of sending the $3,000.00 note to the First National Bank of Shinnston, where it was payable, for collection. This collection slip contains specific directions that the note should be protested upon dishonor. May 22, 1929. First National Bank of Shinnston closed. June 7, 1929. Clarksburg Trust Company closed.

The items of December 18, 1925, above detailed, appear upon the general ledger but not upon the journal of the First National Bank of Shinnston.

The witness Swann, in accounting for the item of $2955.00 under the date of December 18, 1929, credit in the First National Bank of Shinnston to the Bank of Wyatt, says that it represented the' note of Bonasso Brothers, received in the First National Bank of Shinnston.

Upon the proof showing the foregoing facts, the learned trial judge took the case from the jury and instructed for the defendant. In the course of an extended and able opinion, the trial judge set forth clearly his reasons for ,the directed verdict, and made it clear that he considered that there was no proof from which a reasonable inference could be drawn that Lucas had been benefited from the original discount of the $3,000.00 note. The trial court said, among other things:

‘ ‘ What the court desires to stress here is that it is not sufficient that the indorser know at the time he executed the note that the maker is bankrupt or that he is out of business, to relieve of presentment or to relieve of notice of presentment and dishonor; but that with that knowledge, there must also flow to him some value for the note.” Again: “He (counsel for plaintiff) urges that the defendant, Lucas, knew that this Silk Company was a defunct organization at the time of the execu *544 tion of this note and the original note, and that the circumstances in the case show that the note was executed for his accommodation. But no witness so declares; even an interpretation of the books does not go that far. The fact that $1,000.00 was credited to the account of Lucas on December 18, 1929, is a mere coincidence, so far as this record is concerned. ’ ’

We cannot agree with this conclusion of the trial court. Prom the evidence, it appears that Lucas was one of the directors of both the Bank of Wyatt and the First National Bank of Shinnston. These two banks were the ones that dealt with the -$3,000.00 note in question. Lucas was also a director in Derbrah Silk Company.

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Related

Rinehart v. Lucas
190 S.E. 772 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.E. 803, 113 W. Va. 540, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawhead-v-lucas-wva-1933.