Rutherford v. Elliott

23 F.2d 250, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
DocketNo. 4849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 250 (Rutherford v. Elliott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rutherford v. Elliott, 23 F.2d 250, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158 (6th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

This case is here on appeal from an order of the District Court affirming an order of the referee in bankruptcy made in the matter of the estate of the above-named bankrupts, disallowing the claim of appellant upon a note for $38,000 given to appellant by W. P. T. Varney /hereinafter called Tolby Varney), dated March 26, 1925, and indorsed by the two bankrupts April 6, 1925. The defenses made by the trustee, so far as important here, are (a) that the consideration for the bankrupt’s indorsement was illegal, viz. the compounding of a felony alleged to have been committed by Tolby Varney in obtaining from claimant $26,000, part of the consideration of the $38,000 note here in question, by representing as genuine certain securities accompanying the $26,000 note, which securities were spurious to the extent of about 90 per cent, thereof; (b) undue influence and (c) duress practiced upon the indorser bankrupts; and (d) fraudulent representations by claimant to procure the bankrupt’s indorsements. The referee’s order disallowing and expunging the claim did not state the specific ground of the conclusion reached. The District Judge based his affirmance of the order on the ground that the consideration for the bankrupts’ indorse-, ment was the compounding of a felony, so finding it unnecessary to consider the other defenses.

In our opinion the order of the District Court must be affirmed.1 We content our[251]*251selves with setting out what appear to be the salient facts. The $38,000 note here in question was a renewal of tho note for $26,000 above mentioned and another note for $12,-000, both given claimant by Tolby Varney at separate dates in 1924, while the latter was an officer of a bank at Williamson, W. Va. The bank was closed by the state banking authorities on Mareh 28, 1925, while Tolby Varney was in charge of its affairs. The bankrupts- are mother and daughter. Both are widows. They lived together. They had no large means, except an estate for the mother’s life, and after that for the life of the daughter, in a large tract of coal lauds, which yielded an annual rental of about $12,-000 by way of coal royalties. They were related — more or less remotely — to Tolby Varney, and apparently had had great confidence in him and in his ability. They had usually, perhaps always, indorsed his paper, for his accommodation, when requested. When the bank was closed, they were indorsers on such paper to ah amount apparently $85,000 to $100,000 (possibly more), including a note for $15,000 likewise given by Varney to claimant. With the closing of the bank there were rumors of misconduct on Varney’s part in connection with the bank’s affairs, and some question had been raised, at least by rumor, whether the bankrupt’s indorsement on the $15,000 note was genuine.

The record is convincing that the $26,000 loan was procured through Varney’s representation to claimant that the collateral stock was genuine, and with knowledge that it was spurious to the extent already stated. Under the laws of West Virginia, the obtaining of money by false representations constituted a felony (Barnes’ West Virginia Code 1923, c. 145, § 23), and the compounding of a criminal offense was made a crime (Id., c. 147, § 19).

On April 1, 1925, claimant learned, through the officers and state authorities in charge of the bank, of the spurious nature of the securities held for tho $26,000 note. Three days later (on Saturday, April 4, 1925) claimant (who lived at Welch, W. Va.), his father-in-law, Harris (who lived at No-Ion, 8 miles from Williamson), and his brother-in-law, Stevenson (who lived at Huntington), were together at the office of Claimant’s attorney in Williamson, where Harris and Stevenson were told that the stock held as security for the $26,000 note was at least of questionable genuineness and value. On the afternoon of that day (which was Saturday) Harris and Stevenson went to the home of tho bankrupts, about a mile and one-half from Williamson, to learn, first, whether bankrupts’ purported indorsement of tho $15,000 note was genuine; and, second, whether they would indorse a prospective note of Tolby Varney to the claimant for $38,000, in renewal of the $26,000 note and the $12,000 note, both of which were then past due. Harris had had close relations, including business relations for several years, with Alexander Varney, who was the husband and father, respectively, of the two bankrupts, and who had died several years previously. Harris had also had pleasant relations with both these women, and had visited at their home during the then last few years. Stevenson appears not to have been acquainted with them. He and Harris arrived at the women’s homo on Saturday afternoon, somewhere from 3 to 5 o’clock. They stayed there all night and until about 10 a. m. on Sunday. The validity of the $15,000 indorsement was admitted by the bankrupts. The desired indorsement was not given, and, we are satisfied, was not promised. Harris says the ladies did not refuse to indorse the proposed note for $38,000, but indicated they were willing to do anything to help Varney out.

The daughter testified that neither she nor her mother on that occasion agreed to sign the note; on the contrary, that she (the daughter) had then no idea of indorsing it; that she thought it was not just and right for them to do so; that when they indorsed the earlier notes they had confidence in Tolby Varney, and did not think there would be any trouble, but that they had lost that confidence to some extent; that she may have talked with her mother about it, but that the latter did not realize or understand the situation, and said that night (apparently Saturday) not to talk to her anything about it. In the forenoon of the day next following this visit, viz. on Monday, April 6th, Harris and Stevenson again appeared at the bankrupts’ home, this time accompanied, not only by the claimant, but by Tolby Varney, the latter coming at the express request of claim[252]*252ant> who, in company with Harris and Stevenson, brought Yamey from his home. On that morning, before the arrival of this party, an attachment had been levied upon the property of the bankrupts at the instance of certain of the bank’s, or Tolby Vamey’s, creditors. It not unnaturally appears from the testimony of the daughter that both she and her mother were greatly disturbed and depressed by this attachment. As’ the result of this last visit the mother and daughter indorsed the $38,000 note, which was antedated to correspond with the maturity of the notes which it was to take up.

The record, considered in its entirety, is persuasive that this indorsement was procured largely through representations, made on the April 6th visit, that claimant would prosecute Tolby Yamey criminally unless this indorsement was secured, but that, if it was secured he would not prosecute, and that the misrepresentation about the $26,000 note was the only thing that Yamey could be prosecuted for. The daughter testified that claimant said' that, if the indorsement was not given, he would prosecute Yamey, and indicated that he would also bring suit on the $15,000 note indorsed by the bankrupts; also that, after a conference out of doors between claimant, Harris, and Yamey, one of them stated, while all three and claimant were together in the house, that they had fixed up an agreement that claimant was not to prosecute Varney “when I indorsed the note”; also that claimant said that, if.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 250, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutherford-v-elliott-ca6-1928.