Scott v. Davis

214 S.W.2d 504, 214 Ark. 19, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 1, 1948
Docket4-8627
StatusPublished

This text of 214 S.W.2d 504 (Scott v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Davis, 214 S.W.2d 504, 214 Ark. 19, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 459 (Ark. 1948).

Opinion

BobiNS, J.

Appellant, Leslie Scott, brought this suit to recover balance alleged to be due on a note for $3,000, executed by appellees, Eugene Davis and Ernestine Davis, his wife, to appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., transferred to the first named appellant, and also to foreclose a mortgage on a small restaurant building and fixtures in Fort Smith. The defense of appellees was that the note and mortgage had been obtained by appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., through fraud and that appellant, Leslie Scott, had knowledge of such fraud when he obtained the note and mortgage.

The lower court upheld the contentions of appellees and rendered a decree denying recovery on the note, cancelling it and the mortgage securing same and granting judgment in favor of appellees for $50, which represented an overpayment on the amount which the court found was actually due. This appeal ensued.

The business property involved was owned up to February 20, 1947, by A. J. Pratt. A few days before that time Thomas Scott, Sr., father of appellants, Leslie Scott and Thomas Scott, Jr., had a conversation with Mr. Pratt, in which the latter expressed a willingness to sell the building and fixtures for $4,000. Thomas Scott, Sr., told Pratt that he thought he had a buyer for the property, and a short time later Thomas Scott, Sr., and appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., went -to see Pratt and Pratt repeated the offer to them. Said appellant told Pratt that he had a partner, appellee Davis, and that he and his partner would buy the place. Later in the day said appellee went in the place with appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., to look it over, but the price was not discussed with Pratt. Appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., thereupon told Pratt that they would take the place and told appellee Davis to give Pratt a check for $3,000 and that he would pay Pratt $3,000 on the following day. Pratt had been cautioned by Scott not to tell Davis the price at which he was selling the place.

Appellee Davis gave Pratt his check for $3,000 and thereafter appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., in the absence of appellee Davis, gave Pratt $1,000 in money. The property was then conveyed to appellee, Eugene Davis, and appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr.

According to Davis’ testimony, appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., approached him in regard to the purchase of the property and suggested that they buy and operate the business as partners, and told him it could be bought for $6,000; and said appellee never knew, until a short time before the institution of the suit, that the price was, in reality, $4,000 instead of $6,000.

Thomas Scott, Sr., who was the father of both of the appellants, testified that, under the arrangement with Pratt, he was to get all over $4,000 that the property would bring, and that appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., paid him $2,000 in one hundred dollar bills, which was in the nature of a commission.

It was not denied, however, that Pratt had been warned not to let appellee Davis know that he was actually receiving only $4,000 for the property.

The note and mortgage sued on were given for the purchase money of the one-half interest in the business owned by Thomas Scott, Jr., when it was bought by appellee, Eugene Davis. According to Davis’ testimony, after they had operated the business about a month, appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., proposed that he would sell to appellee Davis his one-half interest in the business for what he (Scott) had paid for it, or the sum of $3,000, and that, in acceptance of this proposition, and believing the representations as to the original cost, he had executed the note and mortgage sued on. Payments amounting to $1,050 were made on. this note by said appellee before the snit was instituted.

The misrepresentations as to the price paid Pratt for the property were the basis of the fraud pleaded as a defense by appellees.

For reversal appellants contend:

(1) That the evidence fails to show that the execution of the note and mortgage was obtained by fraud.

(2) That there was no proof that appellant, Leslie Scott, was other than an innocent holder for value of the note and mortgage.

I.

It cannot be well disputed that appellee, Eugene Davis, was deceived in regard to the amount for which the property was bought from Pratt. Pratt and his wife both testified that the real purchase price of the property was $4,000 and that they were asked not to let appellee, Eugene Davis, know this fact. It is conceded that appel-lee Davis was led to believe that $6,000 was the price, and that he was paying only half thereof. While it is true that there was testimony to the effect that the younger Scott paid his father a $2,000- commission in connection with the sale, neither Pratt nor his wife knew anything about such a commission and they thought the sale was being made for $4,000 directly to the parties named in the deed, and $3,000 was being paid by appellee, Eugene Davis, and $1,000 by appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr. If the transaction was fair as between the Scotts and Davis there could have been no reason for the warning, which they admitted giving Mr. Pratt, not to disclose the true purchase price to Davis.

The business was operated for only thirty days, when, according to appellee, Eugene Davis, appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., proposed to Davis that he would sell him his one-half interest for “exactly what he had paid Mr. Pratt”, and appellee Davis, still believing that appellant, Thomas Scott, Jr., had actually paid $3,000 for his half interest, accepted the proposal and gave his note and mortgage for that amount.

The evidence clearly showed that the note and mortgage sued on were obtained from appellee Davis by fraud and deceit, and that, as between the makers and the payee, they were void on this account.

II.

Under the Negotiable Instrument Law (Pope’s Digest, § 10217) every holder of a negotiable instrument is deemed prima facie a holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated such instrument is defective the burden is on the holder to prove that he or some person under whom he claims acquired title as a holder in due course. In 8 Am. Jur., § 1024, p. 610, it is said: ‘‘Apart from a few cases, the authorities are unanimous, that fraud in the inception of a negotiable instrument casts upon one who claims to be a bona fide holder, or holder thereof in due course, the burden of proving his character as such. This rule is supported by a multitude of authorities decided prior to the Uniform Act ...” Such was the holding in a comparatively recent case decided by this court. See McCollum v. Graber, 207 Ark. 1053, 184 S. W. 2d 264.

"While there was no direct proof that appellant, Leslie Scott, had actual notice of the fraud that had been perpetrated on appellee Davis, the testimony showed that the two appellants had had many business transactions with each other and lived a comparatively short distance away from each other.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCollum v. Graber
184 S.W.2d 264 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 S.W.2d 504, 214 Ark. 19, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-davis-ark-1948.