President of City Bank v. Thorp

64 A. 205, 79 Conn. 194, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 A. 205 (President of City Bank v. Thorp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
President of City Bank v. Thorp, 64 A. 205, 79 Conn. 194, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 31 (Colo. 1906).

Opinions

Hall, J.

The defendant complains in his appeal of certain rulings of the trial court upon questions of evidence, of the refusal-of the court to charge the jury as requested, and' of' the instructions given to the jury. A proper understanding of the questions thus raised calls for a some *196 what extended statement of the pleadings and rulings, and of the facts proved at the trial.

The complaint contains six counts, the first of which alleges that on or before the 12th of June, 1903, the E. S. Wheeler & Company, a Connecticut corporation located in blew Haven, and which we shall refer to as the company, sold and delivered goods to the defendant at the agreed price of $148.63, payable sixty days after said date; that on said 12th of June, 1903, the E. S. Wheeler & Company, for value received, assigned in writing said claim against the defendant to the plaintiff, of which assignment the plaintiff on said day gave the defendant written notice; that said account is due and unpaid; and that the plaintiff is the actual and bona fide holder of said chose in action.

The five other counts are like the first, excepting that they describe subsequent assignments of accounts of different amounts, the date of the last of which is August 22d, 1903. The aggregate amount of the six assigned accounts is $840.17.

The first defense to the first count admits the allegation of the sale and delivery of the goods, and in effect denies the remaining allegations.

A second defense, as afterward amended and called a fourth defense to said count, and which will be so called hereafter, alleges, in substance, in paragraph 1, that the said account of $148.63 was assigned to the plaintiff by the E. S. Wheeler & Company as collateral security for a loan from the plaintiff to the company, made June 6th, 1903, and payable on demand, and made in consideration of an agreement that the latter would apply the proceeds of said account, when collected, on said loan, unless sooner paid by the company: in paragraph 2, that said assignment was one of a series of assignments of such accounts made by said company to the plaintiff during a continuous period of five years, as collateral security for loans by the plaintiff to the company, payable on demand, and in consideration of an agreement that the company would apply the- proceeds of such accounts when collected on said loans, unless *197 sooner paid; that in all cases the company, before the loans to secure the payment of which said accounts had been assigned to the plaintiff had been fully paid, collected the accounts and paid the loans, and that the plaintiff “permitted, suffered, and authorized ” the company to retain control over the assigned accounts so that it might collect them and so apply the proceeds thereof; that in no case did the defendant pay the plaintiff the accounts so assigned, but in each case he paid the company; and, in paragraph 3, that relying upon this course of business, the defendant was induced to believe, and did believe, that the plaintiff had permitted and suffered and authorized said company to retain control over and collect the account described in said count, and that, being so induced to believe, the defendant in good faith paid said company the full amount of the account.

A third defense to the first count alleges that the plaintiff appointed said company its agent to collect the account described in that count, and that the defendant paid it to such agent.

The plaintiff replied, denying the allegations of said third defense, and demurred to the fourth defense, which demurrer was sustained by the trial court; and upon a subsequent trial to the jury there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff upon all the counts of- the complaint.

Upon the defendant’s appeal to this court it was held, among other things, that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the fourth defense, and the judgment was set aside and the case remanded. City Bank v. Thorp, 78 Conn. 211, 61 Atl. 428.

Said demurrer to the fourth defense was thereupon overruled by the trial court, in accordance with the decision of this court upon said appeal, and the plaintiff thereupon filed a reply denying the allegations of paragraphs 1 and 2 of said defense.

As the same three described defenses were made to each count of the complaint, and the pleadings to these defenses and the rulings upon them were the same as to each count, *198 attention need only be called to the pleadings and decisions upon the first count.

Upon the second trial of the case to the jury.the parties stipulated that certain facts should be taken as proved without the introduction of evidence. Those stipulated in behalf of the plaintiff were in substance these : The several accounts against the defendant, stated in the six counts of the complaint, were respectively assigned by said company to the plaintiff on the dates named,in the complaint, by writings, each signed by an officer of the company, and each containing a statement of the amount of the account assigned, without the items thereof, of the. time when the account would be due, and the following statement : “ Sold for account of the City Bank of New Haven, New Haven, Conn. 'Settlement to be made only by remittance direct to them.” Each of said assignments was made as partial collateral security for a separate loan by the plaintiff to said company, the amount now due upon each of which loans exceeds the amount of the account assigned to secure it. On the day that each assignment was made, the plaintiff sent to the defendant the .original assignment, and a letter saying: “We inclose invoice of The E. S. Wheeler & Co. for [stating the amount of the account assigned] assigned to us, for which please remit at maturity direct to this bank,” and signed by the cashier of the bank. “ None of said accounts have been paid ■ to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff is now the equitable and bona fide holder of each of the same, unless the facts proved by the defendant constitute a defense to this suit.”

In behalf of the defendant, the stipulated facts briefly stated were these : The assignments of accounts named, in the several counts were made as part collateral security for separate loans, each of which loans was for a larger sum than the amount or the account assigned to secure it. A demand note was given by said company to the plaintiff for the amount of each loan which had remained unsecured from one to two weeks when an account was assigned to secure it. It was agreed between the plaintiff and Wheeler *199 & Company, that the former should credit upon each of said loans the amount of the account given to secure it, when paid, and that upon payment of any note the plaintiff’s interest in the account given to secure it should cease. The assignments of the -accounts in suit were part of a large number of similar assignments made during the period between January 18th, 1899, and July 12th, 1903, as collateral security for loans to the said company, not only of accounts for goods sold to the defendant, but to other parties, and some of which were assigned to secure loans from other banks.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 205, 79 Conn. 194, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-of-city-bank-v-thorp-conn-1906.