Lawhead v. Stewart

14 S.E.2d 1, 123 W. Va. 41, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 8
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1941
Docket9144
StatusPublished

This text of 14 S.E.2d 1 (Lawhead v. Stewart) 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. Stewart, 14 S.E.2d 1, 123 W. Va. 41, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 8 (W. Va. 1941).

Opinions

Kenna, President:

By this notice of motion proceeding C. E. Lawhead, assignee of the First National Bank of Pineville, sought to recover from L. W. Stewart, as maker, and F. N. *42 Stewart, as endorser, the sum of $7,545.00, being the principal and interest of a promissory note dated the twenty-third day of December, 1929, payable on the twenty-third day of April, 1930. From a judgment based upon a verdict for the defendants, the plaintiff below prosecutes this writ.

In addition to pleading the general issue, the defendants filed a special plea of failure of consideration, to which the plaintiff filed a demurrer and special replication alleging waiver and estoppel. The case went to the jury on the question of whether the note upon which recovery is sought is, in the hands of plaintiff, subject to the terms of a contemporaneous instrument executed by the maker and payee. The legal questions hereinafter discussed were properly raised by the motion of the plaintiff to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant him a new trial. This is the second review of this proceeding, the first opinion being reported in 122 W. Va. 80, 7 S. E. (2d) 350.

The plaintiff acquired this note on July 11, 1938. The origin of the indebtedness it represents dates back to October, 1926, when Dottie Wikel sold and conveyed to Lewis W. Stewart an undivided half interest in a fifteen-acre tract located in the suburbs of Pineville on the south side of the Guyan River for the sum of $5,000.00, all of which was represented by a note payable in four months and secured by a vendor’s lien. Simultaneously with the execution and delivery of the deed, Dottie Wikel and C. M. Wikel, her husband, executed an unrecorded instrument which, after recitals giving the correct consideration and terms which deviated from the recitals of the deed, contained a provision obligating Stewart, the purchaser, to sub-divide the available part of the fifteen acres into lots and proceed to dispose of them for the benefit of the mutual owners, the expense of the lay-out to be equally divided and the cost of sale limited to twenty per cent of the sale price. This collateral agreement also stipulated that the purchase money should be payable from the proceeds of the sale of lots and that the payee would “carry” the note or notes for the length of *43 time necessary to sell a sufficient number of lots to discharge the purchase price of the Stewart interest.

Shortly after this transaction was concluded, the Stewart note was discounted at the First National Bank of Pineville by C. M. Wikel the husband of Dottie Wikel, who was and had been its cashier and a member of its board and discount committee for a.number of years, the fifteen acres of land having been conveyed by the bank to Mrs. Wikel in nineteen hundred and nineteen.

By decree entered in February, 1930, the deed to Dottie Wikel and that from her to Stewart were annulled by a decree of the Circuit Court of Wyoming County as having been executed for the purpose of hindering the creditors of C. M. Wikel, who supplied the purchase money. This, of course, had the effect of cancelling the bank’s lien upon the fifteen acres. The defendants contend that it, by abolishing the only source of payment of a non-negotiable instrument upon which their signatures appear, relieved them of further obligation.

The question of whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover, therefore, rests upon two questions: (1) was the First National Bank of Pineville informed of the terms of the collateral instrument at the time of acquiring the Stewart note, so that it took it with knowledge that the source of its payment was limited to one-half of the proceeds of the sale of lots, and (2) if the bank was so informed, did both of the Stewarts, knowing that Mrs. Wikel had failed to keep her agreement that she would hold the note for the necessary length of time for its discharge in that manner, by paying interest upon the note and renewing it several times after it came into the bank’s hands, waive the agreement limiting the manner in which it should be met? The single instruction tendered by the defendants was drafted on that theory and was given without objection. As to the source of payment being expressly limited, see this Court’s opinion in the former review hereof, referred to above.

Wikel testified for the defendants and stated categorically that at a regular meeting of the board of directors of the Pineville National Bank the board was fully in *44 formed by him as to the terms of the side agreement and understood fully the definitely limited source of payment of the Stewart note. Will B. Cook, the only other surviving member of the then board of directors of the Pineville National Bank, testified that he had a faint recollection of the Stewart note, but that he had no recollection whatever of a contract limiting its source of payment.

The original records of the Bank of Pineville, including the minutes of its board meetings, had been burned at the termination of the receivership in compliance with an order of the Circuit Court. Mr. Cook, upon cross-examination, stated that his duties as assistant cashier prevented his constant attention to the meetings of the board of directors and that it was possible that the information concerning the side agreement might have been orally communicated to the- board in his absence.

In this state of the testimony, we are of the opinion that it cannot be said that a clear preponderance favors the plaintiff’s contention. Without doubting the veracity of either Wikel or Cook, it seems clear that the jury might well conclude that the board of directors was fully informed concerning the contents of the collateral instrument during Mr. Cook’s absence. It follows that if the Bank of Pineville, through its board of directors, acquired the Stewart note with notice of the conditions which were a part of the understanding out of which it grew, that Lawhead, the plaintiff, who purchased the paper after its due date took it subject to the same infirmities, terms and defenses that bound the bank. Certainly that is true as to the makers of the note, and since the nature of the paper is the foundation upon which rests the obligation incurred by placing a signature upon its back, it follows that the non-negotiability of the paper when it was transferred to the bank and the information with which it was then charged, served to qualify the contractual liability of the persons whose signatures appeared upon the paper at that time. The bank, it is true, became the owner of formerly indorsed paper, the appearance of which was that of a negotiable instrument, but *45 prior to acquiring title the bank was fully informed concerning the binding side agreement limiting its legal effect. As to the effect of assigning or endorsing nonnegotiable paper, see Nichols’ Ex’r. v. Porter, 2 W. Va. 13, 94 Am. Dec. 500, and Hughes v. Frum, 41 W. Va. 445, 23 S. E. 604. Neither of the cited cases, however, apply where the terms of the non-negotiable contract expressly limit the source of payment.

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Related

Lawhead v. Stewart
7 S.E.2d 350 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1940)
Nichols' Ex'r v. Porter
2 W. Va. 13 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1867)
Hughes v. Frum
23 S.E. 604 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.E.2d 1, 123 W. Va. 41, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawhead-v-stewart-wva-1941.