Matlock v. Scheuerman

93 P. 823, 51 Or. 49, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 29
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 93 P. 823 (Matlock v. Scheuerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matlock v. Scheuerman, 93 P. 823, 51 Or. 49, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 29 (Or. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Commissioner Slater.

1. All the errors assigned are included in two principal propositions, which alone are necessary to be considered, viz.: (1) Is the plaintiff a holder in due course? and (2) was he under any legal duty to stop payment on his own check, after having been denied payment of the check held by him? The statute declares that one is a holder in due course, “who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: (1) That it is complete and regular upon its face; (2) that he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, If such was the fact; (3) that he took it in good faith, and for value; (4) that at the [53]*53time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument, or defect in the title of the person negotiating it”: B. & C. Comp. § 4454. But a check, the consideration for which is money won by playing at a game of cards, is void and of no effect as between the parties to the same, and all other persons, except holders in good faith, without notice of the illegality of such contract: B. & C. Comp. § 1945.

It having been admitted by the pleadings that the check was given in consideration of a gambling debt, the burden of proof is with the plaintiff to establish all of the elements necessary to constitute him a holder in good faith for value: Owens v. Snell, 29 Or. 483 (44 Pac. 827); Kenny v. Walker, 29 Or. 41 (44 Pac. 501); Brown v. Feldwert, 46 Or. 363 (80 Pac. 414). The check sued on was offered in evidence, and is in the following form:

“Pendleton, Oregon, Dec. 12, 1906. No.The First National Bank $400.-— order Pay to L. Swagard or bearer Four Hundred Dollars J. Scheuerman.”

Plaintiff testified that he had lived in Pendleton for 30 years and had been acquainted with Scheuerman for 20 years; that he was a man who did a great deal of business about town, of which plaintiff had more or less knowledge; that he had frequently seen defendant’s checks in circulation in the community, and now held one of them, and that he, plaintiff, was the present owner and holder of the check sued on; that he bought the check from Swaggart, who at the time indorsed the same to him; that no part of the check had been paid, and that he, plaintiff, gave his check for $400 for it, and that his check, so given to Swaggart, was cashed at the First National Bank, and the amount charged to his account by the bank; that within two or three days after he got Scheuerman’s check he demanded, payment thereof of the [54]*54First National Bank, but was told by the .cashier that Scheuerman had stopped its payment; that at the time he paid Swaggart for the check he had no knoweldge as to what the consideration of the Scheuerman check was, nor that it was given for a gambling debt, nor that the maker and payee thereof had been engaged in gambling. On cross-examination the witness also testified that he bought the check on December 13, 1906, about noon. In answer to the question, “Tell the jury the circumstances under which you bought it?” plaintiff testified as follows :

“That day about 12 o’clock I was going home to my lunch, and I met Mr. Swaggart on the corner of the Boston store, and he stopped me and said, T have a check of Scheuerman’s which he asked me to wait two or three days for, and I may need the money,’ and I said: ‘All right. Give me the check, and I will give you my check for it, and you can go to the bank and get the money.’ And he signed the check, and I went to my lunch and came back from lunch, and went to the hotel and got a blank check and gave it to John Endicott.”

Knowing that Endicott was well acquainted with Swaggart, he asked him to hand the check to the latter, which he did. Endicott, it appears, had been interested with Swaggart in the results of the gambling game; but plaintiff swears he knew nothing of that. The plaintiff’s evidence further shows that he is vice-president of the First National Bank, and was in the bank on the morning of the 13th, but he did not then learn that Scheuerman had ordered payment on his check stopped; that he presented the check at the bank for payment on' the morning of the 14th, which was refused; that he made no inquiry at the bank to ascertain whether the check he had issued to Swaggart in exchange therefor, had been paid or not, nor did he notify Swaggart of the nonpayment of the Scheuerman check, but he immediately gave it to his attorney for collection; that on the 15th Swaggart cashed at the bank the check received by him [55]*55from plaintiff. Upon this state of the record, has plaintiff made out a prima facie case of a holder in due course? We shall discuss in the order of their statement in Section 4454, B. & C. Comp., the several elements of fact, the existence of which is necessary to constitute one a holder in due course.

2. It is necessary that the instrument be complete and regular on its face, and it is argued by the defendant that Swaggart’s remark at the time of .the negotiation that Scheuerman had asked him to wait two or three days for presentation of the check, disclosed to plaintiff that the instrument did not represent on its face, all of the contract between the parties and rendered it indefinite as to time of payment. Such a request, however, was not binding on the payee. It did not vary the terms of the writing. It added nothing to it and took nothing from it that was essential to its character as a negotiable instrument. From such a request one would usually and rightly infer that the maker had not funds on deposit to meet the check when issued, but would deposit sufficient funds within the time, and, .by the use of such language, notice of that fact might be given; but it is not calculated to carry notice of any infirmity in the contract.

3. It is urged that the check was overdue when negotiated. It is payable on demand, and when such paper is negotiated an unreasonable length of time after issue, the holder is not deemed a holder in due course: B. & C. Comp. § 4455. What is a reasonable time has been fixed by judicial decisions. As between the drawer and payee the rule is that, when the payee to whom the check is delivered receives it in the same place where the bank on which it is drawn is located, he may preserve recourse against the drawer by presenting it for payment at any time before the close of banking hours on the next day: 2 Daniel, Neg. Inst. (5 ed.), § 1590.

[56]*564. The presumption raised by the statute is, that if the instrument is presented within a reasonable time it would be paid, if a valid instrument on its face; but, when such reasonable time has passed and the instrument is still in circulation, it carries with it the inference of dishonor, and is notice to any one taking it of any latent inherent infirmity that may ' exist. The check having been issued on the 12th, and bearing that date, and negotiated at' the noon hour on the 13th, was not overdue, so as to carry notice to plaintiff of its illegality or of its previous dishonor.

5. It is next urged that the check was not received in the usual course of business, but in a very unusual manner, not in the course of a business transaction, or a transaction free from suspicion. As to what transactions are included “in the usual course of business” it is not easy to determine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P. 823, 51 Or. 49, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matlock-v-scheuerman-or-1908.