Oppenheimer v. Bank

33 L.R.A. 767, 97 Tenn. 19
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 L.R.A. 767 (Oppenheimer v. 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
Oppenheimer v. Bank, 33 L.R.A. 767, 97 Tenn. 19 (Tenn. 1896).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

Complainants filed this bill to enjoin the defendant bank from prosecuting three several suits before a Justice of the Peace, for the collection of certain promissory notes. It is charged in the bill that said notes were procured by fraud and are without consideration, and that the bank received the notes from the payees with actual or constructive notice of the fraud. It is further charged said notes were not negotiable, for the reason that each contained a stipulation for the payment of reasonable attorney’s fees, and that said bank is not protected in its title to said notes as an innocent holder for value in due course of trade. The Chancellor, upon final hearing, was of opinion that the defendant bank purchased said notes without actual [21]*21or constructive knowledge of the fraud, but held that the stipulation in respect of attorney’s fees, destroyed the negotiability of said instruments, and thereby defeated the claim of said bank; that it was an innocent holder for value within the meaning of the law merchant. The Court decreed that said notes had been procured by fraud and were void in the hands of defendant bank, and perpetually enjoined their collection. The bank appealed, and has assigned as error the action of the Chancellor in adjudging said notes non-negotiable on account of the stipulation in respect of attorney’s fees.

The facts out of which the present controversy has arisen may be briefly stated. The record discloses that Curtis Bros, were the proprietors of a patent churn, which they were engaged in selling in Gibson County. Complainants purchased of Curtis Bros, the exclusive right to sell this churn in the State of Louisiana and certain counties of Mississippi, for which they agreed to pay the sum of $2,000, evidenced by four notes, each for the sum of $500, and payable, respectively, in seven, eight, nine, and ten months from date. The following is a specimen of the notes in controversy, viz.:

‘ ‘ TREnton, Tenn. , June 3, 1889.
“Nine months after date we promise to pay to the order of Curtis Bros., or bearer, the sum of five hundred dollars, negotiable and payable at the Exchange Bank of Trenton, Tenn., for value received. The drawers and indorsers severally waive present[22]*22ment for payment, protest, and notice of protest and nonpayment of this note, and, in case of suit, agree to pay all reasonable attorney’s fees for collecting the same.
“$500 due February 3, 1890.
“L. Oppeni-ieimer,
“ C. T. Love,
“R. F. Ross,
“H. R. Camp.”

On the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth of June,. 1889, three of these notes were purchased by the defendant bank at a discount of twenty per cent.— that is to say, the bank paid twelve hundred dollars-for the three notes of the aggregate face value of fifteen hundred dollars. H. R. Camp, one of the signers of the notes, was in the employment of Curtis Bros, in the capacity of salesman, and negotiated the. sale to Oppenheimer of the exclusive right to sell this churn in Louisiana and • Mississippi. It was agreed between the original parties, ■ at the time the notes were executed, they were not to be transferred, and were alone payable out of the profits of the new business. Curtis Bros., Camp, and Ames, soon after the execution of the notes, left the State clandestinely, and their whereabouts is unknown. The proof abundantly shows that Curtis Bros, were in collusion with Camp, and that said notes were procured to be executed upon false and fraudulent representations, and as between the original parties there was a total failure of consideration. The defendant [23]*23bank, however, relies upon the plea of innocent purchaser for value before maturity, in due course of trade, and without notice. Defendant’s counsel insist that, complainant not having appealed from the ruling of the Chancellor that the bank had no actual or constructive notice of the fraudulent conduct of the payees in procuring the execution of the. notes, this question cannot be reopened in this Court. But this position is manifestly erroneous, since, upon the appeal of the bank, the whole case is open for reexamination, and if the decree in favor of complainant is found correct upon any ground, although incorrect upon the ground assigned by the Chancellor, we should affirm it.

The contention of learned counsel for complainant is that the purchase of the notes in suit from strangers at a discount of twenty per cent., when the bank knew that Oppenheimer, one of the makers, was perfectly solvent, indicates knowledge of the fraud, or that the bank had such constructive notice as to put it upon inquiry. As said by this Court: “When the indorsee takes negotiable paper before maturity under circumstances which might reasonably create a suspicion that it was not good — as, where he buys a note on a solvent man, having less than one year to run, for $333.33 at $126, with an agreement to pay $25 more if collected without suit, he takes it at his peril and subject to the equities between the original parties.” Hunt v. Sanford, 6 Yer., 387; 7 Heis., 163.

[24]*24Says Mr. Tiedeman, in Ms work on Commercial Paper, Sec. 291: “It is said that inadequacy of price paid for negotiable paper may be so gross as to justify the conclusion that the purchaser is charged with notice of a fraudulent or defective title on the part of the vendor. And it has been held there was constructive notice, of fraud or of some other equally effective defense to the paper where the purchaser paid $125 for a note of $333.33, $50 for a note of $300, $5 for a note of $300. On the other hand, it has been held that the purchaser of a commercial instrument was a holder for value, and hence took it free from equitable defenses, when he paid $100 for a note of $250, $50 for a note of $100, or $12.50 for a note of • $25. It is certain that a purely nominal consideration would not make the purchaser a holder for value. And it may be stated, subject to an explanation of terms, that an inadequate price always puts' the person upon inquiry and may, certainly, along with other suspicious circumstances, charge him with notice of existing defenses. But every price is not inadequate which is less than the face value of the instrument purchased. Commercial paper of every kind has its commercial value, rising above or falling below par, according to the financial credit of the person liable on it. Only that price is inadequate which falls below the market value, and if the disproportion between the price paid and the market value be very great, it is fair and just to presume that the pur[25]*25chaser had reasonable grounds for suspecting fraud or some other defense to the instrument. ■ Each case must, therefore, stand on its own merits. One-half the face value may, under some circumstances, be a grossly inadequate price, while, under different circumstances, it may be greatly in excess of what the instrument is worth on the market.” Tiedeman, Sec. 291.

We think the rule laid down by Mr. Tiedeman is sound, and furnishes an intelligible basis for the determination of what constitutes inadequacy of price in the purchase, of commercial paper. We cannot say, however, in view of this rule and the proof in the record, that there was any such gross disparity between the commercial value of the notes and the price actually paid, as to awaken suspicion in the minds of the officers of the bank of any infirmity in the paper.

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Bluebook (online)
33 L.R.A. 767, 97 Tenn. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oppenheimer-v-bank-tenn-1896.