Smith v. Lawson

18 W. Va. 212, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 29
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 18 W. Va. 212 (Smith v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Lawson, 18 W. Va. 212, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 29 (W. Va. 1881).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

If we assume, that James C. McFarland, the president of the Branch-Bank of Virginia at Charleston, had authority to make the assignment on January 1,1864, of the note sued on in this case; and that on January 25, 1865, II. J. Miller, the teller of the Bank of Virginia at Richmond, had'authority to receive payment of this note, then the recprd in this case shows [223]*223substantially, that on June 28, 1861, Anthony Lawson made his note negotiable and payable at the office of the Branch-Bank of Virginia at Charleston ninety days after its date for $2,578.50 payable to the order of James A. Nighbert. It was endorsed by him and at once discounted by the Branch-Bank of Virginia at Charleston for the accommodation in part of the drawer and in part of the endorser. When it matured it was not protested, though not paid, the war preventing its protest; and after the close of the war it was not protested. Some two years and three months after this note became due, it being in the possession of James C. McFarland, the president of the Branch-Bank of Virginia at Charleston, it with a number of other notes was assigned by him, we will for the present assume, by proper authority of “The president and directors of the Bank of Virginia,” to whom it belonged, to Isaac N. Smith fora valuable consideration and was delivered to said Isaac N. Smith without any endorsement on it except the blank endorsement of the payee, J. A. Nighbert.

About one year thereafter Janies A. Nighbert, the endorser, paid on this note by a deposit in the Bank of Virginia at Richmond to the credit of J. C. McFarland, the president of the branch bank of Charleston, W. Va., $3,100.00, -which was received by R. J. Miller,' the teller, as we will for the present assume, by proper authority as a payment on this note, though by mistake the note was stated by Nighbert to have been drawn by him and endorsed by Lawson. When this payment was made, the drawer and endorser believed, that it was still owned by “the president and directors of the Bank of Virginia,” and that it was still in the possession of J. C. McFarland, the president of the branch bank at Charleston. Isaac N. Smith afterwards transferred this note to B. H. Smith, the plaintiff, as collateral security to indemnify him for moneys he had paid as the security of Isaac N. Smith; but after the suit was instituted, this money was repaid by Isaac N. Smith, and the suit was thereafter for his benefit.

Assuming for the present, that this note was legally transferred and deliver’d to Isaac N. Smith for a valuable consideration and afterwards paid off to the authorized agent of “the president and directors of the Bank of Virginia” without notice of this transfer to Isaac N. Smith, the plaintiff had a right [224]*224to recover in this suit the whole amount of this note. This is in effect decided in Davis v. Miller, 14 Gratt. 1.

In this case the negotiable note was made by Davis payable at the Exchange Bank of Richmond to Fant & Co., who endorsed it, and it was discounted by the bank for Davis’s accommodation. It was not paid at maturity, and was protested, and then Fant & Co., the endorsers, paid the note to the bank, and it was tranferred and delivered to them and was then delivered to Miller and Mayhew as security, for the payment of a debt, and they brought suit upon it against the maker, Davis. He pleaded nil debet and payment and proved, that two days after the note had been transferred and delivered to Miller & Mayhew, he paid the note to the payee and endorser, Fant & Co., without any notice, that they had transferred it, and that it was not transferred by them for more than a month after it matured for payment. It was held, that this payment did not constitute a defence. From that case it appears, that a negotiable note can be transferred as well after as before it becomes due, though the rights of the transferee will be very different in the two cases. In the case of a transfer of a note before it becomes due to a bona fide holder for value he will take it free of all equities between antecedent parties, of which he had no notice. But in the case of a transfer of an over-due note the holder will take it as a dishonored note subject to all the defences and equities, to which it was subject in the hands of his immediate endorser, whether he has any notice thereof or not. In such a case he will receive nothing but the title and rights of such endorser, except that if it be an accommodation note, which, though endorsed after it was due, gives to the endorsee a right, though the endorser, under whom he claims, might have none.

There has been much controversy as to the question whether, when an over due negotiable note is endorsed, the endorsee takes it subject to all the offsets, to which it was liable in the hands of his immediate endorser, or only to such equities as attach to the note itself, as illegality or want or failure of consideration. But be this as it may, it was expressly decided in that.case, that offsets acquired or payments made after the endorsement of an oyer-due note, though the offsets were acquired: or payments were made before notice of the endorse[225]*225ment, constitute no defence as against the endorsee. The reason assigned for this by Moncure, Judge, is, that “the law-merchant, which is a part of our law, has made certain paper negotiable. The payee orperson legally entitled to it may passthelegal title to another; and the title of that other is just as perfect, as if he had been the original payee ; or just as perfect, as would be his title to any other kind of property legally transferred to him. It follows, that after the transfer payment can only be made to him; and if made to another, would be a payment in the payer’s own wrong or at his risk. To say, that a payment made to the endorser without notice of the transfer is a good payment, is to beg the question, or is in effect to say, that such notice is necessary to pass the legal title. If it were necessary, to pass the legal title, then it would follow, that payment to the endorser before notice of the endorsement would be a good defence against the endorsee. But if it be not necessary, to pass the legal title (and it is not), then it follows, I think, as clearly, that such a payment is not a good defence against the endorsee.”

Judge Moncure then proceeds to show, that endorsement and delivery with intent to pass the property is a complete transfer of the legal title of a negotiable note. Lloyd v. Howard, 69 Eng. C. L. R. 995. So far as the transfer of the legal title is concerned, such an endorsement and delivery of a negotiable note for such purpose is just as effectual, when *the note is over-due, as when it is made before the maturity of the note. The conclusion he reaches is: “The legal title to negotiable paper may be transferred without value, whether before or after maturity; and in either case the endorsee takes it subject to all equities then existing, but not to matters of defence accruing afterwards between the first parties.” See Davis v. Miller 14 Gratt. 17.

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Bluebook (online)
18 W. Va. 212, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-lawson-wva-1881.