Proctor v. Baldwin

82 Ind. 370
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 9155
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 Ind. 370 (Proctor v. Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proctor v. Baldwin, 82 Ind. 370 (Ind. 1882).

Opinions

Morris, C.

This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant upon the following note:

[371]*371“$1,000. Goshen, Ind., Jan. 31st, 1880.
“Sixty days after date I promise to pay to the order .of Henderson Cole one thousand dollars, payable at the St. Joseph Valley Bank, Elkhart, Indiana, for value received, without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws, with ten per cent, interest from after due, and attorney fees.
“¥m. Proctor.”

The complaint states that the payee sold and transferred the note, by endorsement, to one Myron E. Cole, before due, and that said Myron E. Cole, for value, endorsed the same, before maturity, to the appellee; that the note is due and unpaid. Copies of the note and endorsements are filed with the complaint.

The appellant answered the complaint in two paragraphs. The first states that the payee of the note had deposited the same with the First [National Bank of Elkhart, Indiana, as collateral security for a loan of $50, and that he afterwards, on the 23d of February, 1880, sold the note to one Myron E. Cole, who was at the time a clerk in said bank; that said Henderson Cole at the time specially endorsed said note to the. said M. E. Cole, who agreed to pay the $50 for which the bank held it as security, though it was not then due; that this was done clandestinely, without the knowledge or consent of the bank; that after the note had been endorsed M. E. Cole returned it to its proper place in the vaults of the bank, where it remained. It is further stated that on the 25th day of February, 1880, the appellant purchased a note executed by the said Henderson Cole, not knowing at the time that he had transferred the note sued on; that said Henderson was then, and for ten years last past had been, and is still, hopelessly insolvent and worthless; that the appellant at once commenced a suit in the Elkhart Circuit Court against the.said Henderson Cole on the note so purchased by him, and in said suit procured a temporary injunction prohibiting him from disposing of the note sued on until the further order of the court; that said M. E. Cole, after he and said bank [372]*372lmd notice of said injunction against the said Henderson Cole, took the note in suit from the bank and sold for its face and by endorsement transferred it to the appellee; that this was done without the knowledge or consent of the bank of which the appellee was at the time a director; that the appellee at the time he purchased said note had no actual knowledge of said injunction, nor of the fact that said note had been pledged to said bank; that on the 26th day of February, 1880, the appellee paid said M. E. Cole for said note $600, and agreed to cancel certain notes and indebtedness held by him against the said M. E. Cole, equal to the balance of said note purchased by him from said Cole; that on the same day the appellee was notified of said injunction, and was also notified by appellant not to pay anything further on said note to said M. E. Cole, which he has not done. It is also averred that the appellant, afterwards obtained judgment against the said Henderson Cole, in the suit commenced against him, for $4,135, and a decree declaring said injunction perpetual; that on the 22d day of April, 1880, the appellant tendered the appellee $603.50, in gold coin of the United States, being the amount of the money paid by him to the said M. E. Cole on and for said note, and the interest^ accrued thereon, which sum the pleader brings into court for the appellee; that the appellee refused to accept the sum so tendered.

The second paragraph states that Henderson Cole is indebted to the appellant in a sum exceeding the- amount due on the note in suit, and offering to set off the same.

A demurrer was filed by the appellee to each paragraph of the answer, and sustained by the court. The appellant elected to stand by his answer, and final judgment was rendered for the appellee.

The ruling of the court upon the demurrers is assigned as error.

The first question presented for decision upon the demurrer to the first paragraph of the answer is, what title, if any, did Myron E. Cole acquire to the note sued on by the sale and [373]*373endorsement of the same to him by Henderson Cole, the payee ? The endorsement is in these words: “ Feb’y 23d, 1880. Pay M. E. Cole or order.” Signed “Henderson Cole.”

The note is payable to the order of Henderson Cole, at a bank within this State. The delivery of it to the First National Bank of Elkhart, without endorsement, as collateral security for $50 loaned by the bank to Henderson Cole, did not pass to the bank the legal title to the note. The title remained in Henderson Cole. Farwell v. Tyler, 5 Iowa, 535; Allen v. Newberry, 8 Iowa, 65; 2 Parsons Notes and Bills, p. 438. Though the bank had possession of, and was entitled to hold, the note as security for the payment of the $50, yet Henderson Cole was still the legal owner of the note, and could, subject to the rights of the bank, transfer, by endorsement, the legal title'and his interest in the note to M. E. Cole or any one else. In doing this, he would do no wrong to the bank. Nor would the fact that M. E. Cole was the clerk of the bank incapacitate him from accepting by endorsement the title and interest of Henderson Cole in and to the note. The transfer of the note by Henderson Cole to M. E. Cole, coupled with the agreement on the part of the latter to pay the bank, amounted to a transfer of the note subject to the rights of the bank. There was nothing wrong or unusual in this. Henderson Cole had the right so to sell and transfer, and M. E. Cole had the right so to purchase the note; and the possession of the note for this purpose was not in violation of, but altogether consistent with, the rights of the bank.

It is alleged in the answer, that the note was taken from the bank, and that the assignment was made to M. E. Cole, without the knowledge or consent of the bank, but it is also averred that, as soon as made, the note, with the endorsement upon it., was returned to the vaults of the bank. This latter statement, in connection with the agreement of M. E. Cole to pay the $50 to the bank, frees the transaction from even a suspicion of fraud or unfairness. The note being thus in the vaults of the bank, with the endorsement to M. E. Cole upon it, [374]*374the officers of the bank, if chargeable with a knowledge of its affairs and the condition of its securities, must be presumed to have known of the transfer of the note to its clerk, and to have assented to it. The officers of a bank are affected with notice of its condition and 'transactions as well as of its rights and the action, of its board of directors. Morse Banks, 115; Lyman v. Bank of United States, 12 How. 225; Gillet v. Phillips, 13 N. Y. 114. We think that, in view of the facts stated in this paragraph of the answer, it is fair to presume that the bank was informed of the agreement of M. E. Cole to pay to it the $50, and that it accepted or agreed to accept him as its debtor for the $50. It is not averred that M. E. Cole did not pay the bank said $50, as he had agreed, nor that the bank in any way objected to his disposition of the note in controversy. Had M. E. Cole taken the note from the possession of the bank without paying the $50, and sold and transferred it to the appellee without authority to do so, he would have been guilty of a gross violation of duty, if not a crime.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Ind. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-baldwin-ind-1882.