Simons v. Fisher

55 F. 905, 20 L.R.A. 554, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2027
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 F. 905 (Simons v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simons v. Fisher, 55 F. 905, 20 L.R.A. 554, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2027 (3d Cir. 1893).

Opinions

ACHESON, Circuit Judge.

This was a suit brought by the receiver of the Spring Garden National Bank against the firm of Simons, Bro. & Co. upon a promissory note dated Philadelphia, February 18, 1891, at three months, for f5,000, made by the defendants to their own order, and by them indorsed.

At the trial the plaintiff, instead of relying upon the presumption arising from the mere possession of the note that the bank was a bona fide holder for value, for the purpose, evidently, of anticipating and precluding the defense, examined, as part of his case in chief, the note clerk of the baiik, who testified to entries on the discount book indicating that the note in suit was discounted by the hank on February 17,1891. He then stated:

“The account of the proceeds — $4,940.67—was handed to President F. W. Kennedy, who put his signature on it, making it an order on the teller for that much money. After the president had put his signature on this O. K, [907]*907alip, it was returned to me with his own check for $59.3,3, the two together mailing it §5,000. It was used to pay a former note of Simons, Bro. & Co. of §5,000.”

Touching the former note which bore date October 15, 1890, this witness testified to entries on the discount book indicating that it was discounted by the bank on November 20, 1890, and he stated that for the proceeds “an O. K. slip was issued and deposited to the credit of F. W. Kennedy in Ms ledger account.” F. W. Kennedy was the president of the bank.

Such being the plaintiff’s case, the defendants’ counsel made the following offers, one of the defendants being on the witness stand:

First. “I offer to show that this note, dated October 15,1890, at four months, for $5,000, was delivered to the president of the Spring Garden National Bank on or about November 20, 1S90, which note was the first of a series of four notes given by the firm to the president, and taking from Mm at the time an acknowledgment in writing, signed by him as president of the bank, that he received this note for the use of the bank, and to be paid by it at maturity; and saying also at the same time to the witness that he desired to use this note in the clearing house; that he had a large quantity of small mercantile paper that he did not care to put through the clearing house, as it would look better for the bank to have a large note of a responsible firm like Simons, Bro. & Go. to go into the clearing house, and that ho would retain those small mercantile notes to protect Simons, Bro. & Oo. I propose to show that the receipt was given, by the president in the banking house.”
Second. “I offer to show that on the 8th of December, 1890, the witness, having been called upon by the president of the bank to give two additional notes to the one of October, 1890, visited the banking house, and there had a conversation with the president, in which he stated that it was necessary for the bank to have large promissory notes of a firm of the standing of Simons, Bro. & Oo. for use in the clearing house; that the bank was entirely solvent, that they had a quantity of mercantile paper of small amounts, which the president would lay aside for the protection of Simons, Bro. & Go. if they would loan them the use of their credit by giving the notes he asked for,— four in all; and that at the date of this interview, December 8, 1890, at the banking house, the president gave the witness the receipt dated December 8, 1890.”

Each of these offers was overruled. The defendants’ counsel then recalled the note clerk, and made the following offer:

“I recall the witness for the purpose of showing that in the actual management of the business of the Spring Garden National Bank the president was the sole managing officer; that the cashier occupied the position more of a clerk than of actual cashier in the sense in which that word is used In the authorities cited by my friend.”

This offer was also overruled.

In connection with the above offers of evidence, the defendants offered receipts given them by the president of the bank, of which the following are copies:

“Dec. 8/90. Received of Simons, Bro. & Oo. their four promissory notes for $5,000 each, dated as follows: No. 1,151, Oct. 15/90; No. 1,152, Oct. 31/90; No. 1,172, Nov. 15/90; and No. 1,174, Dec. 8/90; all at four months,— which notes are for the use of the bank and to be paid by it.
“Francis W. Kennedy, Pt”
“February 24/91. Received of Simons, Bro. & Oo. their note 1,231, dated February 13/91, 3 mos., $5,000, which note is for the use of the bank, and to be paid by it
Francis W. Kennedy, Pres’t”

[908]*908By direction of the court the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff.

In dealing with this case we must at the outset assume two things: First, the actual good faith of the plaintiffs in error in the transactions between them and the president of the bank; and, second, that they could have shown the facts to be as set forth in their offers. Were those offers properly rejected? In answering this question it is first to be noticed that Simons, Bro. & Co. were not in court as plaintiffs seeldng to enforce as against the bank a contract made in its behalf by its president. They were defending against a note, for which they had received no consideration, made for the accommodation of the bank at the instance of its president, and delivered to him in his official capacity for the use of the bank in its clearing house business. How, it is a familiar principle that in an action by the indorsee against the maker of a promissory note proof by the defendant that the note was fraudulently obtained from him puts the plaintiff to proof that he is a bona fide holder for value. Lerch Hardware Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Columbia, 109 Pa. St. 240; Stewart v. Lansing, 104 U. S. 505. The evidence here made the ground for excluding the defendants’ offer strikes us as very meager and inadequate. The circumstances connected with the alleged “regular discount” of the paper were not shown. Whether the paper came before the board of directors at all was left to mere inference from book entries. Indeed, the testimony of the note clerk rather suggests that in this matter Francis W. Kennedy, the president of the bank, was permitted to exercise unlimited control. Hor did it appear that the bank directly paid any money to Kennedy. The most shown was that a credit was entered in his account with the bank, but the state of that account then or afterwards was not disclosed. How, if a bank, or its receiver, can successfully maintain an action against an innocent maker of a promissory note which came to it by the hands of its own president, who, acting in its behalf, and as its representative, procured the note for the accommodation of the bank in the course of its regular business, surely it can only be upon fuller proofs than this record discloses that the bank became a bona fide holder of the note for value.

But the defense did not rest alone upon Kennedy’s official character as president of the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
55 F. 905, 20 L.R.A. 554, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simons-v-fisher-ca3-1893.