Sands v. Parker

153 Tenn. 664
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 153 Tenn. 664 (Sands v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sands v. Parker, 153 Tenn. 664 (Tenn. 1925).

Opinion

Mb. Chiee Justice GreeN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The only question presented to us herein is the liability of certain indorsers upon a promissory note. The chancellor decreed against these indorsers in favor of the holder. The court of appeals reversed the decree of the chancellor in this particular, and the case is before us upon the holder’s petition for certiorari, heretofore granted.

On December 9, 1919, W. IT. Underwood purchased a tract of land in Giles county, and in payment for same executed his four notes of that date payable, respectively, on January 1, 1921, January 1, 1922, January 1, 1923, and January 1, 1924, for $462.50 each. Lien was retained to secure the payment of these notes. The note in suit was the second of this series, payable to the order of E. B. Parker January 1, 1922.

On January 7, 1921, E. B. Parker transferred this note to his mother, Mrs. L. M. Harwell.

Parker and Mrs. Harwell resided in Pulaski, and Underwood, the maker of the notes, resided near Lynnville.

During the summer of 1921 the complainant Sands, who also resided‘in the Lynnville community and was a friend of Underwood, told Underwood that he had some money he wished to invest. Underwood called the attention of Sands to the notes above mentioned, and Sands authorized Underwood to say to Parker that he (Sands) would purchase one of the notes. About thirty days after this conversation, Underwood told Sands one of the notes would [667]*667be sent to the Bank of Lynnville. Thereupon Sands went to the Bank of Lynnville, found the note there, and bought it, paying to the bank the face of the note and accrued interest.

It seems that instead of writing to Parker that Sands or any one else wished to buy a note, Underwood wrote to Parker that if the latter would send one of the notes to the Bank of Lynnville it would be paid. As stated above, Parker had previously transferred the note in question to his mother, and it was in the Citizens’ Bank of Pulaski for safekeeping. Parker instructed the Cit-zens’ Bank of Pulaski to send the note to the Bank of Lynnville for collection. Mrs. Harwell had not indorsed the note, and an officer of the Citizens’ Bank of Pulaski wrote her name on the back of it. No question is made about this. The same officer of the Citizens’ Bank of Pulaski then indorsed the note with a' stamp bearing the name of the cashier of that bank, and forwarded the note to the Bank of Lynnville, with a memorandum attached thereto, containing no definite instructions.

In the face of this note, demand, notice and protest were waived by each party thereto.

The note reached the Bank of Lynnville the latter part of July, about five months before it fell due. It bore the following indorsements:

“For value received I transfer all my right, title and interest in this note to Mrs. L. M. Harwell, waiving demand, notice and protest. This January 7, 1921.

“E. B. PARKER.”

“Mrs. L. M. Harwell.”

“Pay to the order of any bank, banker or trust com[668]*668pany. All prior indorsements guaranteed. July 26,1921. 87-134. Pulaski, Tennessee. 87-134.

“W. L. AberNathy, Cashier.”

The cashier of the Bank of Lynnville testified that before the note arrived Underwood had told him it would he sent there for Sands to “take up.” He further said that Sands “represented to me, or I understood he bought the note from Parker, and it was sent to us to facilitate the transaction.” “I just received it as carrying out the trade that Underwood represented to me he (Sands) and Parker had. I was acting as a go-between between them. He had bought the note from Parker.”

It is true that the cashier of the Bank of Lynnville testified that he considered the Pulaski hank’s indorsement to be one for collection and that he did not consider that his hank was authorized to pass title to the note.

Whatever he may have thought at the time his deposition was taken about the matter, the fact is that the cashier of the Bank of Lynnville did undertake to pass title to this note to Sands, for he indorsed it:

“Transferred to Joe Sands without recourse either m law or equity. July 30, 1921. Bank of Lynnville, by George B. Witt, Cashier.”

Transferring without recourse only clears the particular indorser making such indorsement, not previous in-dorsers. Murray v. Nelson, 145 Tenn., 459, 239 S. W., 764, 21 A. L. R., 1392.

There is nothing in the evidence of the cashier of the Bank of Lynnville to indicate that Sands did not suppose he was buying the note, nor anything to indicate that Sands knew the note was sent on for collection rather than negotiation. Sands himself testified that he had no [669]*669knowledge of what passed between Underwood and Parker before the note was sent to Lynnville.

Under the circumstances detailed, we think that Sands must be regarded as an innocent purchaser of this note for value and without notice. Reference has been made in the case to circumstances which it is insisted should have put Sands upon inquiry, and it is argued that such inquiry would have disclosed the fact that the note had been sent to the Bank of Lynnville for collection only. It was not incumbent upon Sands, however, to make such inquiry.

To deprive one purchasing a note of the status of a holder in due course, he must have “ actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.” Section 56, chapter 94, Acts of 1899, Negotiable Instruments Act.

The old rule of constructive or implied notice was abolished by the Negotiable Instruments Act. Whether one is a holder in due course is tested by his honesty and good faith in the purchase of a negotiable instrument and not by a speculative issue as to his diligence or neg ligence. One can only be deprived of the rights of a holder in due course by proof of actual notice of a defect in the instrument or by proof of circumstances indicating bad faith. Starkey & Allison v. Nixon, 151 Tenn., 637, 270 S. W., 980; Corinth Bank & Trust Co. v. Security Nat. Bank, 148 Tenn., 136, 252 S. W., 1001; Bank v. Butler, 113 Tenn., 574, 83 S. W., 655.

No matter what instructions were given by Parker to the Pulaski bank, no matter what instructions were given by that bank to the Lynnville bank, even if the sale of the [670]*670note by the Lynnville bank to Sands be held a breach of trust, Sands nevertheless acquired good title unless he took the note with actual knowledge of such breach of trust, or with knowledge of such facts that his action amounted to bad faith.

We see no bad faith on the part of Sands and no evidence of actual knowledge, unless the indorsement placed on his note by the Pulaski bank be treated as a restrictive indorsement, and this is the determinative question in the case.

The Negotiable Instruments Act, chapter 94 of the Acts of 1899, provides as follows:

“An indorsement is restrictive which either:

“1. Prohibits the further negotiation of the instrument'; or,

“2. Constitutes the indorsee the agent of the indorser; or,

“3. Vests the title in the indorsee in trust for, or to the use of some other person.

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Bluebook (online)
153 Tenn. 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-parker-tenn-1925.