McLemore v. Hawkins

46 Miss. 715
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 Miss. 715 (McLemore v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLemore v. Hawkins, 46 Miss. 715 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Simrall, J. :

McLemore, Rayburn & Co., being indebted to the Louisiana State Bank $6,525, by promissory note, payable four months after the 3d March, 1862, pledged as security therefor to the bank the note of J. D. & F. Hawkins, dated January 1, 1861, and one 1st March, 1862, for $9,333. The note [717]*717of the Messrs. Hawkins was payable to J. 33. McLemore, and by Mm indorsed in blank. By the contract of pledge, wMch was in writing, if McLemore, Rayburn & Co. did not, at maturity, pay tkeir note, or any renewal thereof, then the president and cashier of the bank, or either, of them, as agents, were authorized to sell the note for cash at public or private sale. The note of the Messrs. Hawkins was delivered by McLemore, with Ms blank indorsement upon it, to McLemore, Rayburn & Co. (of which commercial firm he was a member), for the purpose of being pledged as above stated, for the credit and accommodation of Ms firm.

Long after the maturity of the note, in 1865, Messrs. Carroll, Hoy & Co., the factors and agents of the defendants, the makers of the paper, and for their account took up this note from the bank, by paying less than its face, in the circulation notes of the bank then at a discount or depreciation of forty-two cents on the dollar. The note was defaced with the canceling hammer and the word- “paid” was written upon it.

The contract of pledge was attached to the note at the time of this transaction with Carroll, Hoy & Co., who had notice of the pledge, and the conditions upon which the bank held the paper.

These may be accepted as the leading facts ; the questions of law arise upon them on the offer to make proof of them on the trial.

Much was said at the argument as to the effect of a blank indorsement of negotiable paper. A bill or note thus indorsed passes from hand to hand by delivery, like a note payable to bearer. A dona fide holder, however remote from the payee and indorser, has implied authority to write over the blank indorsement an order to pay to himself or any other person, without noticing the immediate holders who necessarily negotiate it, until it came to himself.

It is quite well settled by authority, giving effect to commercial convenience and usage, that the holder of such [718]*718paper may accompany the transfer with a trust, and when that has failed or been accomplished, and the paper has been returned to the beneficial owner, he may sue without a re-indorsement. The general rule, as stated by Story in his treatise on notes, p. 452, § 246, is, that the possession of a note by the payee or a subsequent indorser, is prima facie evidence, notwithstanding subsequent indorsements thereon, that he is the lawful owner and has re-acquired the legal title. And this is so where the paper had been negotiated for value in due course of business. In Dugan v. United States, 3 Wheat. 183, the court explicitly states the doctrine to be, that if one who indorses paper to another, either for collection or value, shall come to the possession thereof again, he shall be regarded as bona fide owner and holder, unless the contrary shall be proved ; although there may be one or more subsequent indorsers, and that he may strike from the paper such indorsers or not, at his pleasure. In such circumstances, if nothing else appeared, the legal presumption would be, that the last holder had procured payment from the party who negotiated to him, and so on until the paper came to him, or that he, being liable, had paid the last holder, so that no party subsequent to him had any interest in it, or was subject to. any liability. Whether, therefore, such names were stricken out or. not, would be purely a matter of form, possession by the prior indorser without receipt or re-indorsement from subsequent parties restored him to his original position and title as against all antecedent parties. If the law indulges the presumption that subsequent indorsers have no interest in, or claim upon, the paper, or the money due upon it, to insist upon erasing their names as a condition precedent to the perfection of his title and right to sue the maker or a prior indorser, would be amere ceremony, empty and without meaning. It would be to cling to the shadow, to adhere to mere form without a particle of substance. It is the return and possession of the note which is the evidence of his right against prior parties. It would be by virtue of this title that he would have [719]*719authority to obliterate subsequent names, not to aid or perfect his right, but to extinguish any semblance or color of claim in others. United States v. Barker, 1 Paine, 162; Squeer v. Stockton, 5 La. Ann. 121; Wood v. Tyson, 8 ib. 104; Norris v. Badger, 6 Cow. 450; Bank of Utica v. Smith, 18 Johns. 238.

A large part of the commercial and financial business of the country is conducted by a transfer of negotiable paper, on trust and conditions. Indorsement for collection is a familiar illustration. Bankers and commercial men distinctly understand that indorsed notes and bills, placed in the hands of an agent for collection, does not transfer to the agent the beneficial ownership. As against all the world, except the real owner, the legal title passes for the purposes of demand, protest, notice and collection. If paid, the agent holds the proceeds, just as he did the note or bill, as agent for account of his principal. In this day of active, ramified commerce and business, to trammel remedies on negotiable paper in favor of the real owner with formalities which may tend to embarrass, but can subserve no beneficial end, does not comport with wise policy. We think, therefore, that whenever a trust or agency is coupled with the transfer, when the transferee no longer sustains that relation, but the end has been accomplished, the true owner, upon the return of the paper to him, is, ipso facto, restored to his original title, and he may deal with the note as though he had never negotiated it. The indorsement by McLemore, and the delivery of the note to McLemore, Bay burn & Co., was for the purpose of the pledge to the bank, he remaining the proprietor, subject to the claims of the pledgee. As to the bank, McLemore, Bayburn & Go. were the apparent legal holders, as competent to make the pledge as though the paper were their property.

This brings us to consider the relations of pledgor and pledgee, and their respective rights. This transaction, having been made in New Orleans, is governed by the civil law of Louisiana. By that system, as well as the common law, [720]*720tlie pledgor remains owner of tbe- thing, whether a chattel or negotiable paper, and the pledgee, with whom is the possession, must use the care and diligence with respect to the thing, according to its nature, which men of ordinary prudence bestow about their own affairs. Upon default made in the conditions upon which the pledge was made (as non-payment of the principal debt), the title does not vest in the pledgee; it still retains character as security, or indemnity for the principal obligation, to be made effective by a disposition according to the law. 2 Kent’s Com. 773, 774; 2 Pars. on Cont. 110. If negotiable paper be the subject, the pledgee, at his peril, must protect the rights of the pledgor by making demand, protesting and giving notice to drawer or indorsers; for by negligence in this behalf he makes the debt his own. Nolan v. Clark, 10 B. Monr. 239; Jamison v. Parker, 7 Mitch. 355.

Such are the rules of the civil' law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Central Optical Merchandising Co. v. Estate of Lowe
160 So. 2d 673 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1964)
Ralston Purina Co. v. Como Feed & Milling Co.
206 F. Supp. 188 (N.D. Mississippi, 1962)
Gables Racing Ass'n v. Persky
156 So. 392 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. v. Turner
127 So. 291 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1930)
Llano Granite & Marble Co. v. Hollinger
212 S.W. 151 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1919)
Eckert v. Searcy
74 So. 818 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1917)
Kentucky Title Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. McClarty
191 S.W. 892 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Nickless v. Pearson
26 N.E. 478 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1891)
Murdock v. Columbus Insurance & Banking
59 Miss. 152 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Miss. 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclemore-v-hawkins-miss-1872.