Osborn v. McClelland

43 Ohio St. (N.S.) 284
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Ohio St. (N.S.) 284 (Osborn v. McClelland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. McClelland, 43 Ohio St. (N.S.) 284 (Ohio 1885).

Opinions

Johnson, J.

The evidence establishes the following facts :

1. The note and mortgage in controversy were the separate property of Jennie L. Faxon, given to her by her mother, Mrs. Osborn, in payment of a legacy from her father, and was, up to the 20th day of April, 1875, in her sole possession and under her exclusive control.

2. Bartlit & Smith had for many years been engaged in the banking business in the city of Columbus, where the plaintiff, McClelland, as well as Mrs. Osborn and Mrs. Faxon resided; that McClelland since 1861 was a customer and depositor in said bank, and in the habit of transacting banking business with said firm.; that Vm. C. Faxon, the husband of said Jennie L., was the cashier of said bank, intrusted by the firm with the transaction of business of the bank under the general direction of the firm, especially in the absence of Smith.

3. That on the 19th of April, 1875, said Wm. C. Faxon, at the instance of Smith, who expressed a strong desire to raise money to meet some pressing necessity of the bank, informed Smith that his wife owned this note and [293]*293mortgage, and that he believed he could get her to loan the same to the bank to enable it to get out of its present difficulty; that at the request of Smith he' asked his wife to loan said note to enable it to raise money temporarily, stating to her that they needed funds to help them for a short time, and he assured her the note would be safely returned within thirty days at the farthest. She consented to do so, and the next morning delivered the note, without her indorsement, and the mortgage, to her husband, who on the same day handed the same to Benjamin E. Smith, of the firm of Bartlit & Smith. Soon thereafter, at Smith’s request, Mrs. Eaxon, who was called into the bank for that purpose, indorsed the note iu blank; that in this transaction Eaxon acted entirely for the bank, and not in any sense for his wife.

4. That thereafter, until the 5th of April, 1877, two days after the note became due, it, with the mortgage, remained in the possession of said bank, never having been used for the purpose for which they were borrowed.

5. On the 15th of March, 1876, the firm of Bartlit & Smith was dissolved by the death of Bartlit, leaving Smith as survivor in possession of the property of the firm, with authority as such to settle and wind up its business, but without any authority to continue the business in the firm name. Notwithstanding this he did continue business in such firm name until after the transaction with plaintiff hereinafter stated.

6. That Mrs. Eaxon suffered or permitted said note and mortgage to remain in the possession of said firm and of said Smith, survivor, until after the same became due, but neither said firm nor said Smith, as survivor, had any ownership or interest therein, nor authority to hypothecate them to McClelland, but simply kept the same as the property of Mrs. Eaxon, aud as her bailees.

7. On the 5th of April, 1877, plaintiff, McClelland, being in the bank, was applied to by Eaxon, as cashier, to loan to the bank $4,000 of first Toledo railroad bonds, offering as collateral security this note and mortgage, stating [294]*294that the note would be paid. McClelland made no inquiry either of Smith or of the cashier, Faxon, or of Mrs. Osborn, the maker, as to title or ownership thereof, but took the same upon observing the blank indorsement of Mrs. Faxon on the note, and delivered the railroad bonds as a loan, supposing the note and mortgage were the property of Bartlit & Smith, and upon the faith and belief that Smith was the owner of the note. It did not appear, nor was there any injuiry as to when, Mrs. Faxon indorsed the note, but the fact was that she had done so April 21, 1875.

8. It appears that on the 21st of July, 1875, Bartlit & Smith executed a receipt for this note, showing that it was to be returned or accounted for to Mrs. Faxon, but as it was never delivered to her, and she had no knowledge of it or its provisions until the first trial of this case, it can not affect her rights, especially as it was not known to McClelland until after he acquired the note. It formed no basis of his action. He took the note upon the evidence alone of Mrs. Faxon’s indorsement and the presumption arising from possession.

As between Bartlit & Smith, or Smith, as survivor, and Mrs. Faxon, they were mere bailees or custodians, with no interest in the note. They borrowed the note temporarily, to be used to tide them over a present emergency. "While it retained the character of commercial paper, they never exercised the right to so use it. After it fell due they did, or rather Smith did so use it. In doing so Smith was guilty of a wrongful conversion. McClelland made no inquiry as to the ownership, but took the same, relying solely on the indorsement of Mrs. Faxon, but in good faith and for value, supposing Smith to be the owner. Smith did not indorse or guarantee the paper, nor was he asked to. No assurance was given, orally or otherwise, that the bank was the owner. Mrs. Faxon had never authorized this transaction, nor did she know of it, or in any way ratify or approve it.

McClelland does not ask for legal relief, but for a fore[295]*295closure of the mortgage, basing his right on the ownership of the note, and of the incident equity to the mortgage.

The defense of the maker, Mrs. Osborn, and t'he indorser, Mrs. Eaxon, is that plaintiff is not the owner; that the note is in fact the property of Mrs. Eaxon, and the latter, by cross-petition, asks that it be surrendered with the mortgage to her. It is urged that McClelland, having acquired the note after due, got no better title or right than Bartlit & Smith had. On the other haud, he claims that he acted in good faith upon the strength of the indorsement by the payee, and for value, without notice or knowledge of any equities, and that Mrs. Eaxon is estopped from claiming any thing as against him.

Let it be assumed that this note was negotiable after due, so as to confer upon the indorsee the legal title, and that prima fade he is entitled to recover.

At common law this authorized the indorsee to sue in his own name, and it was no defense to show he was not the owner.

By the code the action must be brought in the name of the real parly in interest, except in cases of express trust, etc. If, therefore, the indorsee is not the real party in interest, nor the trustee of the real owner of a negotiable note, his action may be defeated by showing that some other person is the owner.

As to choses in action assigned, suits at law could only be brought in the name of the assignor for the use of the assignee before the code, but since then the assignee is to be regarded as the holder of the legal title and entitled to sue in his own name, as was always the rule in equity. Allen v. Miller, 11 Ohio St. 374.

The same rule as to proper party plaintiff applies to commercial paper, unless the indorsee is protected as a holder for value acquired in the usual course of business before due.

In Edwards v. Campbell, 23 Barb. 423, which was an action on a note payable to bearer, the plaintiff had possession of the note, and on that ground obtained a judgment, [296]*296but this judgment was reversed on the ground that he was not the real party in interest.

So in Killmore v.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ohio St. (N.S.) 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-mcclelland-ohio-1885.