Maryland Finance Corp. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser

128 S.E. 294, 99 W. Va. 230, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 139
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1925
Docket5296
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 294 (Maryland Finance Corp. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser) 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
Maryland Finance Corp. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser, 128 S.E. 294, 99 W. Va. 230, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 139 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

This is an action of motion for judgment, based on a certificate of deposit. Defendant pleaded non-assumpsit. By agreement of the parties, the case was heard by the court in lieu of a jury. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for $1,494.90.

On August 13, 1921, B. H. Dundon, the vice-president and general manager of the Maryland Finance Corporation, a Maryland corporation, wrote Mr. T. D. Leps, cashier of the Peoples Bank of Keyser, a West Virginia corporation, the following letter:

“Dear Mr. Leps:
Mr. Wiley has taken up with me several times regarding Taylor matter.
While no doubt this matter is causing you some anxiety, Mr. Taylor is still trying to get this matter adjusted. I have seen a letter from him dated August 9th, stating that he will be in Mid-dlesburg on August 15th to take up the matter with Moss and Gordon. As soon as I hear anything definite will immediately communicate with you. As most of Mr. Taylor’s property is in West Virginia, as under the laws of this state the courts do not open up to October and should you secure *232 judgment, same cannot be executed until the end of the term, which is between the middle of November and the first of December.
You still have plenty of time to take whatever action you contemplate taking. I am extremely sorry this matter has been drifting along in this manner and hope that same will’ be closed out to your satisfaction before long.
The writer could pay $100.00 for a $1,000.00 C-D due in four months, if you can handle same. Will not need the paper until around the 5th of September.
Hoping to see you in the near future, I am,
Yery truly yours,
B. H. Dundon, Y. P. & G. M.”

The foregoing letter was written on the official stationery of the corporation, and under the title “officers” appear the following: “William Stanley, President; W. Mitchell Digges, Chairman of the Board; John L. Swope, Vice-President; Bernhard H. Dundon, Vice-President and General Manager; John L. Tregellas, Treasurer; Don G. Fithian, Secretary and Assistant Treasurer; Robert G. Merrick, Assistant Treasurer. ’ ’

On December 21, 1921, .the following letter was written on the Maryland Finance Corporation’s stationery:

“Dear Mr. Leps:
My note for $1,500.00 will be due December 24th. In view of the unusual circumstances which have developed here within the last month, I am unable to take care of this obligation in full as expected.
I am enclosing herewith check for $130.00 and renewal note for $1,400.00 due in four months. I feel by the time that this matures I will be able to take care of same in full.
Trusting that this renewal will be acceptable and regretting the necessity of asking for the extension, with best wishes for a happy Christmas and prosperous New Year, I am,
Very truly yours
1709 W. Lombard St.,
Baltimore, Md. B. H. Dundon.”

*233 On December 28th, Leps, without authority or knowledge of the President of the Bank, its Board of Directors, or any member thereof, issued the certificate of deposit in question, which is as follows:

“PEOPLES BANK OF KEYSER'
No. 308 Keyser, W. Va., Dee. 28, 1921.
B. H. Dundon has deposited in this bank Fourteen Hundred & No-100 Dollars payable to the order of Himself with interest at 3 per cent, per annum if left for four months on return of this certificate properly endorsed. Not subject to ch.6ck.
$1400.00 T. D. Leps, Cashier.”

The records of the bank do not show this transaction. A note of Dundon without indorsement for $1400.00 was taken by said cashier and placed in a private bos of said cashier, and not discovered until some time after the bank was closed.

One of the witnesses, J. Frank Duke, who had been with the Maryland Finance Corporation since May 22, 1921, as bookkeeper and general office man,'stated that Dundon presented his resignation as vice-president and general manager of the corporation on December 5, 1921, and that the Board of Directors accepted it as of the 5th on the 7th day of December, 1921; that Dundon was paid his regular salary by said corporation up until the 31st day of December, 1921, and that since that time has had no connection with said corporation.

On January 6, 1922, Dundon sold said certificate of deposit, which showed on its face that $1400.00 was held by the Peoples Bank of Keyser subject to withdrawal, on proper endorsement (at any time at sacrifice of interest), with interest at the rate of 3 per cent, per annum if left for four months, to the Maryland Finance Corporation (from which he, Dun-don, had just withdrawn as an executive officer), for the sum of.$1315.00, or at a discount of $85.00. The Commissioner of Banking of this State, on April 27, 1922, closed the doors of the Peoples Bank of Keyser, because of the fraudulent and unauthorized issuance by the said T. D. Leps, *234 its cashier, of this and other certificates of deposit. On the following day the said certificate of deposit was protested at the First National Bank, in Keyser, W. Va. A certificate of deposit, similar to the one in question, also issued by Leps, without authority, to E. J. Wiley, and sold to the plaintiff corporation, for $2300.00, dated December 2, 1920, at the same rate of interest if left for three months, was introduced in evidence. This $2300.00 certificate bore the following notation on its face: “Protested for non-payment at The First National Bank, Keyser, W. Va., Mar. 2. 1921.” This was relied on to impute knowledge to the plaintiff of prior defective paper of the defendant bank. The Maryland Finance Corporation claims, however, that it did not know of this protest, and Duke states that the books of that corporation show that the same was paid on March 3, 1921, but that such record fails to state by whom paid, or how paid. Duke further testifies that the Maryland Finance Corporation had purchased approximately $20,000.00 worth of certificates of deposit issued by the said Peoples Bank of Keyser. The bank’s records show none of these transactions.

The defendant bank relies on the following as error: (1) That the court erred in holding the plaintiff to be a holder in due course, without notice, of a valid negotiable instrument, and as such entitled to recover on it, notwithstanding the equities of antecedent parties, when the evidence shows that plaintiff had knowledge prior to purchasing the certificate sued on, through B. H. Dundon, its then vice president and general manager, of the fact that T. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 294, 99 W. Va. 230, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-finance-corp-v-peoples-bank-of-keyser-wva-1925.