National Bank of Shamokin v. Waynesboro Knitting Co.

172 A. 402, 314 Pa. 365, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 508
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketAppeal, 60
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 A. 402 (National Bank of Shamokin v. Waynesboro Knitting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Shamokin v. Waynesboro Knitting Co., 172 A. 402, 314 Pa. 365, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 508 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Graeber was the cashier of the National Bank of Shamokin. He was also a director, large stockholder, and owner of $50,000 bonds of the Republic Radiator Company, a Maryland corporation. John B. Eader, president, treasurer, general manager, director, and owner of approximately one-third of the stock of Waynesboro Knitting Company, was likewise a director, owner of some 5% of the stock, and $50,000 bonds of the Republic Radiator Company. This company, in July, 1929, was in financial difficulty; Graeber and Eader, with two others, Landis and Penney, also heavily *369 interested, were endeavoring to finance it and avoid its failure.

Sometime before July, 1929, the bank had discounted two notes for $10,000 and $7,500 respectively for the radiator company’s benefit, made by Landis and Eader, payable to and endorsed by Penney. Graeber stated to the parties interested that his bank could not rediscount these notes at the Federal Reserve, but they would be able to rediscount corporate obligations. lie requested such notes. Thereafter, Eader sent Graeber a note dated July 9, 1929, for $17,500, made by the knitting company payable to “Ourselves” and endorsed by it. The execution and endorsement of the note was as follows: “Waynesboro Knitting Company by J. B. Eader, President and Treasurer.” This note was substituted for the $10,000 and $7,500 notes, renewed from time to time, and reduced to $13,500.

In the same month, the same parties agreed to raise $200,000 necessary for the radiator company; of this, Eader, Landis and Penney were to secure $150,000, on which a bonus was to be paid. Graeber refused to endorse any notes but stated that if he had the corporate paper of appellee, he could raise his share ($50,000) by discounting it at appellant bank. A note was executed in the knitting company’s name by its president and treasurer for $55,000, and endorsed by Eader, Penney and Landis personally. The $55,000 note represented the $50,000 credit plus a bonus of $5,000 for the bank itself. Furthermore, Graeber secured $60,000 worth of'bonds of the Republic Radiator Company to protect the bank’s loan. The note was discounted by appellant bank and the proceeds credited to the radiator company, which then sent Graeber a check payable to him individually for $5,000 as a bonus. This check was endorsed and credited to appellant bank. The note was reduced to $54,000 prior to the commencement of this action.

A third note for $6,250 of the radiator company was refused by appellant and returned to the company. *370 There was substituted for it the knitting company’s note which was discounted by the bank. The note was renewed and reduced to $2,500. The note and all renewals were executed and endorsed by appellee “By J. B. Eader, President and Treasurer.”

Action was brought on all notes against the knitting company. The court in its charge instructed the jury that the knowledge of Graeber was imputed to appellant bank and, if he knew the notes were accommodation notes of appellee, executed by Eader without authority, and the knitting company received no benefit from them, their verdict should be for the knitting-company. The jury so found.

The Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 615, * relied on by appellant to relieve it of the defense of notice of illegality, was not intended to limit defenses to negotiable instruments issued by a corporation, to forgery, payment or set-off, but provided that the by-laws, as regulations among the stockholders, should have no effect on the execution of contracts with persons having no knowledge of such by-laws. Notes issued by a corporation when signed by the president or vice-president, and secretary or treasurer, shall be considered as being properly executed for and in behalf of the corporation. It *371 does not follow that though notes are properly executed by and on behalf of the corporation such notes are valid obligations of the company through negotiation and delivery. The act did not validate acts performed beyond the power of the corporation of which the holder had or was affected with knowledge, or acts grounded in fraud; nor under similar circumstance does the act justify an abuse of powers by officers in issuing corporate instruments, as for instance, when they are to be used in payment of a personal debt of the officer or for the benefit of the officer or of a third party without consideration going to the corporation issuing them.

The notes in question were the accommodation notes of a manufacturing company. It is ultra vires for a manufacturing corporation to lend its credit to another by issuing or endorsing bills or notes as an accommodation (Federal Nat. Bank v. Coal Co., 220 Pa. 39). But if a corporation having general power to issue and endorse negotiable paper for its own benefit in the course of business becomes accommodation maker or endorser for another, the corporation will be presumed to have acted within the scope of its powers, and will be liable on the instrument to a holder in due course: Cox & Sons Co. v. North. Brwg. Co., 245 Pa. 418; Putnam v. Ensign Oil Co., 272 Pa. 301. We said in the latter case that even though it is known by the holder in due course that, at the time of taking the instrument, it was accommodation paper, liability followed because absence of consideration was no defense to the holder in due course; but, in that case, we did not decide that, where a holder in due course knew that the accommodating party had no power to accommodate, this knowledge would not be a bar to recovery. Lack of consideration and complete want of authority to issue or abuse of power in issuing accommodation paper, when known to a holder before he becomes such, is a defense to the enforcement of payment of such notes. Were it otherwise, *372 ultra vires acts of corporations (and the acts of insane people) would in all such cases be held valid and binding. Where it appears that the title to a note is defective because of the absence of power in the company to execute the instrument or do a thing sought to be enforced, a presumption is raised in the maker’s or endorser’s favor, and the burden is on the holder to show that he or some one before Mm was a holder in due course.

When the notes were brought to the bank by the president of (the maker) the knitting company, with the endorsements thereon, and the proceeds of the notes were deposited to the credit of the Republic Radiator Company, the party accommodated, the possession by the maker and its negotiation to the bank indicated prima facie that the note negotiated was accommodation paper: Oppenheim v. Simon Reigel Cigar Co., 90 New York Supp. 355; Rudolph Sav. Bank Co. v. Anchor Oil & Gas Co., 101 Ohio State 217, 128 N. E. 266. It may be this circumstance might be conclusive, but we need not depend on this type of notice since here we have actual notice.

It is admitted that the cashier of a bank who was interested as a stockholder in the accommodated corporation, knew that the knitting company was lending its credit as maker of the accommodation paper to the radiator company. It is also testified that the cashier knew the knitting company could not lend its credit, but his bank was willing to accept it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 A. 402, 314 Pa. 365, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-shamokin-v-waynesboro-knitting-co-pa-1934.