Nashville Lumber Co. v. Fourth National Bank

27 L.R.A. 519, 94 Tenn. 374
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 L.R.A. 519 (Nashville Lumber Co. v. Fourth National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville Lumber Co. v. Fourth National Bank, 27 L.R.A. 519, 94 Tenn. 374 (Tenn. 1895).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is a suit for damages for wrongfully transferring negotiable paper to an innocent holder for the purpose of imposing upon the complainant, as indorser, a liability that would not [375]*375Rave existed if the note' had not been so transferred, and thereby securing an advantage for the transferer of the paper. There was a demurrer to the declaration, which was sustained by the Court, and plaintiff appealed, and has assigned errors.

The case, as made out by the declaration, is that certain notes made by the Bond Lumber Company had placed upon them the indorsement' of the Nashville Lumber Company. This indorsement was made by the secretary of the Nashville Lumber Company, not only for accommodation, but without any legal authority, and was ultra virea and void. The defendant bank held the notes thus indorsed, with legal notice of their infirmity when made and indorsed, and, while so holding them, the plaintiff company further notified it that the indorsement was without consideration, illegal, and void, and that the company would recognize no liability on account of the same.

Prior to maturity, the defendant bank indorsed the notes to the Merchants’ National Bank" of Louisville, and had them rediscounted by that bank. The maker of the notes was insolvent when the notes were transferred to the Louisville bank, and the declaration states that the Nashville bank fraudulently re-discounted the notes for the sole purpose of creating a liability against the plaintiff company which did not before exist, and, because of the creation of this liability, plaintiff claims the right to sue. Judgment has been rendered in favor of the Louisville bank against plaintiff company for the amount of the [376]*376notes, it not being able to defend against the Louisville bank, and a part of the same has been paid. Such is the case as made out in the bill. Several of the grounds of demurrer are not well laid, but we treat them together, as raising the real question at issue in the cause, which may be briefly stated as follows:

Can the holder of negotiable paper, upon which there is the void indorsement of a corporation, known to. be void- by the holder, transfer it to a third party with no knowledge of the infirmity, and thus create a liability against the indorser, which did not exist in the hands of the holder before transfer ? The gist of the action is the knowingly transferring the paper for the express purpose of creating such liability as did not exist before the transfer, and by which the transferer is to be benefited.

While some special objections are raised by the demurrer to' the form of the declaration and the statements contained in it, these objections are more technical than real, and the effect of the demurrer is virtually to concede that the defendant bank had no right to recover upon the paper when it made the transfer, and that it was transferred to the Louisville bank, apparently in due course of trade, for the express purpose of enabling that bank to collect the note despite the infirmity in it, the proceeds to be held for the use and benefit of the Nashville bank, and thus imposing a liability on the indorser that did not exist while the Nashville bank held the note. [377]*377On the other hand, plaintiff concedes that the Nashville bank might, if holding in good faith, have transferred the note in due course of trade, and made plaintiff liable to the transferee, without liability against it, for such transfer; but the gravamen of the charge is that the transfer was made not in due course of trade, so far as the Nashville bank was concerned, but fraudulently, to enable the Louisville bank, as an apparently innocent holder, to collect the proceeds and hold them for the use and benefit of the Nashville bank, thus enabling the Nashville bank, through the Louisville bank, to collect the note from plaintiff as indorser, which it could not do if it retained the note in its own possession.

The plaintiff insists that, while the notes affected by this infirmity, so far as the Nashville bank is concerned, were in the hands of that bank, it had two remedies to protect itself — one to enjoin the transfer of the notes till the indorsement was erased, and the other to notify the holder of the illegality of the indorsement, and of its non-liability on account of it. It is said the former course was doubtful and embarrassed, as the plaintiff company could not allege insolvency of the Nashville bank, nor that it was about to make the transfer. Hence, the latter course was pursued, and the claim now is for damages for malting the transfer under the circumstances. We have been cited to no case directly in point, and perhaps there is none to be found, [378]*378though, we think the principles involved . have been settled upon a somewhat different state of facts in several cases. ■

The case of Metropolitan Elevated, Railway Co. v. Kneeland, 8 L. R. A., 253, is relied on. That was an action for damages by the corporation against its directors, . first, for illegally voting a salary to the president of the company, and, second, authorizing the issuance of negotiable notes therefor, which went into' the hands of an innocent holder. The Court held that no liability attached to the directors for voting the salary, for that, being illegal, created no liability, but that such of the directors as voted to issue the negotiable1 notes were liable, because such notes did create a liability when they came ■ into' the hands of an innocent ' holder. The Court said: “-We think the cases relating to this subject rest upon the principle that a person who fraudulently places in circulation the negotiable instrument of another, whether made by him or his apparent authority, and thereby renders him liable to pay the same to a hona fide purchaser, is guilty of a tort, and liable for the value of the - note. The essential injury common to all cases of this character is the fraudulent imposition of liability. Hence, there Should be a common remedy, whether it is called an action for conversion or in the nature of a conversion, or a special action on the case.”

The case proceeds: ■ “In what respect do the wrongful acts of the directors who negotiated the [379]*379notes differ from those cases which were held to authorize an action for conversion or an action in the nature of conversion of negotiable paper ? Is there not in each the same presumption of damages springing from a liability wrongfully imposed? Were not all of these actions founded on the fact that the maker, real or apparent, of a negotiable instrument had, through the wrongful acts of . another, become chargeable, so that he could be compelled to pay such instrument, which would not have ripened into a valid obligation against him but for such wrongful act ? ’ ’

There are numerous cases holding a party liable for the unauthorized conversion of negotiable paper. In Decker v. Mathews, 12 N. Y., 313, it is said, in substance, that the gravamen of such action is the wrongful act of the defendant in causing a note without value, except to a bona fide holder, to become valuable by a sale thereof to such a purchaser as could enforce it against the plaintiff, and the right of action accrues as soon as the transfer is made, and before payment enforced.

In Thayer v. Manly, 73 N. Y., 305, defendant fraudulently induced plaintiff to execute and deliver to him these notes, but, before they matured, plaintiff demanded their return to him, which was refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 L.R.A. 519, 94 Tenn. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-lumber-co-v-fourth-national-bank-tenn-1895.