Rambaut v. Tevis

164 A.D. 324, 149 N.Y.S. 993, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7806
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 A.D. 324 (Rambaut v. Tevis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rambaut v. Tevis, 164 A.D. 324, 149 N.Y.S. 993, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7806 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

This was an action on a promissory note for $5,000 made by the defendant to his own order and indorsed by him, and the question involved was whether the plaintiff was the holder in good faith and without notice of any infirmity therein.

The facts in regard to the making of the note and the delivery of the same with others, amounting in the aggregate to $150,000, by the defendant to Charles W. French, and the diversion thereof by French, have been set forth in the opinion in Coffin v. Tevis (164 App. Div. 314), handed down herewith.

It will be necessary, therefore, to consider only the evidence offered in rebuttal, by which the plaintiff undertook to show that he was the bona fide holder in due course and without notice.

The plaintiff has been a practicing attorney for twenty-seven years. He met Charles W. French for the first time May 3, 1907. He testified that French said he was chairman of the board of directors of the Pacific Steel Company, a corporation organized -under the laws of California with an authorized capital stock of $100,000,000; that the organization fee of $10,000 had been paid to the State of California; that General Harrison Gray Otis was the president of the company. He mentioned the names of a number of men who were wealthy and who were interested in the success of the enterprise, mentioning particularly William S. Tevis of Bakersfield, who was worth some six or seven millions in his own right and controlled four or five times as much property as trustee or manager of his father’s estate, the late Lloyd Tevis; that Mr. Tevis was particularly interested in the success of the steel enterprise because it involved the building of "a railroad from Bakersfield to a point on the Pacific coast. He said he repre[326]*326sented the gentlemen whose names he mentioned, and particularly Mr. Tevis, who was going to assist him with money and in working out the plans for the benefit of Tevis and these men. French “said he wanted me to draw up such legal papers and advise him regarding such legal proceedings as would be necessary to put the matter in such shape as it could be presented to Eastern Capitalists.” The first interview took probably two hours. “Thfen he said he would return in two or three weeks and expected me to advise him. I gave the matter some study during the month of May and thought out some plans. I saw him again on the 3d of June. * * * I advised that the plan could be carried out best by the organization of certain independent corporations to deal with the iron ore, the limestone, the coke-making coal, railroads, a line of ships on the Pacific coast, and there was also a proposition about colonization of the place where the steel company would be located with people who were skilled in manufacturing steel * ". I drafted an underwriting agreement and a trust company agreement and stock participation certificates, which I submitted to him from time to time * * *. When I got an underwriting agreement drafted up in a tentative way he told me he wanted me to go with him to the Astor Trust Company, as he wanted that trust company to become the trustee under the underwriting agreement. * * * 1 had several interviews with their counsel.”

He finally drafted the agreement so that it was satisfactory to them. Shortly after French went to the Pacific coast with Mr. Coffin and some other gentlemen. Then came on the stringency of 1907, and Mr. Coffin when he returned “told me about how severe it was out there and that he would probably hear nothing more of the thing for some time, and we did not. * * * He related the interview he had with Mr. Tevis.” On the 16th of March, 1909, Mr. French came into his office. “ That was the first time I had seen him since he went out west with Mr. Coffin in 1907, and he stated that now Mr. Tevis was going ahead with this proposition irrespective of the actions of the other parties so far, particularly, as the railroad was concerned, that Mr. Tevis had given him promissory notes to furnish him with means to pay for preliminary expenses and surveys [327]*327of the railroad, and getting underwriting signed and so on, and showed me then a bunch of notes. He said that there were forty of them, twenty of $5,000 apiece, and twenty of $2,500 each, * * * and he handed me two letters signed in the name of William S. Tevis, and I read the letters. * * * He said that there would be a construction contract with the Mac Arthur Brothers of Chicago for the construction of the railroad; there would be a railroad mortgage with bond issue; * * * he told me he wanted the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company to act as the trustee on the bonds and mortgage, and he requested me to be prepared to advise him regarding such contracts and bonds and mortgages. * * * In a day or two I went around with him to the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company and we had a long conversation with Mr. Marsden the president [lasting] very near two hours. Mr. Marsden said that the business seemed to be very good, and that as soon as MacArthur Brothers signed the contract, to come right in there and we would start in taking up the preparation of the mortgage, the bond issue and such usual proceedings as followed. * * * I told him there that I advised that there be an underwriting agreement, as I had before, and in that case it would be an underwriting agreement as to bonds for a railroad, and he wanted me to see the Windsor Trust Company regarding the underwriting agreement and trust agreement and participation certificates that would be used because he wanted to try to negotiate with them to see to the advancing of money on the underwriting to get the enterprise under way. I went to see Mr. Young of the Windsor Trust Company, I went alone and I went with him several times, and we discussed the forms of underwriting agreement, * * * and I drew up some tentative papers and clauses * * * and made quite a study of the situation particularly in regard to the railroad and also in regard to the Steel Company.”

Shortly after this French went west, stating that he was going out to have Mr. Tevis come back to Hew York with him. I think it was somewhere in the latter part of May. * * * Q. When he said that he was going, did you have anything to say to him as to compensation ? A. Yes, I told him I thought I had done enough now without receiving compensation, that I [328]*328wanted to be paid something, I wanted to be paid at least a retainer of $5,000 or something on account anyhow; I thought my services were worth twice that, take it all in all from beginning to end. * * * He said that he thought so, too, but he did not have any money to give me and he would offer me one of Mr. Tevis’s notes for $2,500. I think he pulled it out of his pocket. I would not look at it. * * * (I said I won’t take it.’ I thought it was too small a payment at that time, and he said, Then if you insist upon it I will give you one of his notes for $5,000.’”

French gave him the note on the fourth of May, and it went to protest at maturity.

On cross-examination he said he had never seen Mr. Tevis or had any communication from him, except through Mr. French and Mr. Coffin; “they were talking to me, telling me what he said.” When he received this note from Mr. French he did not render any bill; it was a payment on account, as he told him. He gave him no receipt. He made no entry in his books of account. He made no apportionment between his services in 1907 and 1909; he included them all in this charge of $5,000. He had not previously, in 1907, when the matter lapsed, rendered any bill for his services.

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Related

Rambaut v. Tevis
152 N.Y.S. 1139 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 324, 149 N.Y.S. 993, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rambaut-v-tevis-nyappdiv-1914.