State Bank v. Lawrence

96 N.E. 947, 177 Ind. 515, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 40
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1912
DocketNo. 22,090
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 96 N.E. 947 (State Bank v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bank v. Lawrence, 96 N.E. 947, 177 Ind. 515, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 40 (Ind. 1912).

Opinion

Morris, C. J.

Suit by appellant, on note, for $120, executed by appellee, on September 12, 1905, to W. A. Magee, due one year after date, payable at a bank of Hammond, and indorsed by Magee, and delivered to appellant before maturity.

Several paragraphs of answer were filed, among which was one alleging that the note was procured by fraud, and another that the sole consideration of the note was medical services rendered by Magee, who, at the time, had no license to practice medicine.

There was a trial by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for defendant.

Appellant filed a motion for a new trial, in which 142 causes therefor were alleged. This motion was overruled, and this action of the lower court is the only error assigned here.

Appellee claims that the verdict is fully sustained by undisputed evidence, and that the judgment should be affirmed, regardless of intervening errors, if any.

The uncontroverted facts are, that for some years prior September, 1905, the payee of the note, “Doctor” W. A. Magee, was a resident of Chicago, Illinois, and claimed to be a medical and surgical specialist. He had no license to practice in Indiana. He carried on an extensive system of swindling operations in a number of counties in Northern Indiana. His scheme was somewhat similar to the [518]*518Bohemian oats swindle, which was used extensively in this State some years ago.

The “doctor’s” plan was to call on people in the country who were in ill health, and assure them that he could cure them in a definite time, the patient to execute to him a note, due at the end of such time, for the treatment, and he to execute a written agreement to return the note when due, if no cure were effected. lie then sold the note before maturity.

When the note in issue was executed, Magee was driven to appellee’s farm residence in Jefferson township, Huntington county. Appellee was lying on a couch. Magee told him he was from Chicago, and was a specialist, with a capital of $175,000; that he was out on a vacation, advertising his business, and had heard appellee was ill. He examined appellee and told him he had catarrh and kidney trouble, and was in a very dangerous condition, and would soon be beyond relief; that he could cure appellee in one year.

Appellee’s wife was present, and the “doctor” found her also in great need of his treatment. For $120 he agreed to visit appellee and wife once each month for a year, to furnish them medicine to take and to insure a cure. As a result of his solicitation, appellee executed this note, and Magee gave appellee a written agreement signed by himself, by the terms of which the note was to be returned to him in case appellee and his wife were not cured within the year.

They never saw the doctor again. He sent them medicine, which they took for some time. Each time they took it, however, it made them worse. Finally, after about eight months, they quit taking Magee’s medicine, called in a local physician, who prescribed for them, and their ailments readily yielded to his treatment.

Shortly after the note was executed, Magee sold and indorsed it to appellant for $108.

[519]*5191. [518]*518When the note was executed, the practice of medicine [519]*519without a license was prohibited in this State, under penalty of fine. §8410 Burns 1908, Acts 1897 p. 255. Consequently the note in the hands of Magee was not enforceable, because the consideration therefor was an illegal one.

2. The bank purchased the note before maturity, for value. The note was not void. In the hands of an innocent holder, it was enforceable. Schmueckle v. Waters (1890), 125 Ind. 265, 268, 25 N. E. 281.

Appellee claims, that if it be conceded that appellant had no actual notice of the note’s infirmity, the uncontroverted evidence discloses such facts as legally put appellant on inquiry into its consideration, and if inquiry had been made, appellant could not have failed to discover the illegality of the consideration, and fraud in its procurement.

3. The law is well settled in this State that persons dealing in commercial paper are required to use reasonable diligence where the paper is offered for sale under eireumstances that are calculated to excite the suspicion of a reasonably cautious person. Citizens Bank v. Leonhart (1890), 126 Ind. 206, 25 N. E. 299; Giberson v. Jolley (1889), 120 Ind. 301, 22 N. E. 306.

4. Where the circumstances show that the purchaser refrained from making inquiry, lest he should thereby become acquainted with the transaction out of which the note originated, he cannot occupy the position of a holder in good faith without notice. Schmueckle v. Waters, supra; Shirk v. Neible (1901), 156 Ind. 66, 59 N. E. 281, 83 Am. St. 150; Coffin v. Anderson (1837), 4 Blackf. 395, 408.

In State Nat. Bank v. Bennett (1894), 8 Ind. App. 679, 36 N. E. 551, that court said of the above doctrine: “The rule thus laid down we regard as an extremely equitable and salutary one. No man should be permitted to wilfully close his eyes and then excuse himself upon the ground that he did not see. ” •

[520]*5205. When the illegality of the consideration of the note was shown, the burden devolved on appellant to show the purchase was made in good faith, without notice. Schmueckle v. Waters, supra.

6. It is shown by the evidence that appellant bank was located in Greentown, Howard county; that it was organized in 1903, and was the successor of the Commercial Bank, a private institution, which had transacted business in the same building since 1896. In the latter year, Prank R. Hill became cashier of the old bank, and continued as such until the reorganization in 1903, since which time he has been appellant’s cashier. Doctor S. T. Murray was president of appellant bank since its incorporation. Both Murray and Hill were directors.

In this case, the note was offered for sale to the cashier, who consulted the president about it. After consultation, these officers investigated appellee’s solvency, through the auditor of Huntington county and the Bank of Warren, in the same county. The president and cashier then purchased the note for the bank. No inquiry was made except as above stated. The bank frequently purchased commercial paper, and the purchases were always made by Hill and Murray.

At the trial, which occurred in 1908, Doctor Murray testified that before he became president of the bank, he, for many years, practiced medicine in Greentown and vicinity, and was a member of the Howard County Medical Association. “Doctor” Magee was not a member of the society. About six years ago the witness heard, through his patients, that Doctor Magee, a traveling specialist from Chicago, was practicing in that vicinity, and since that time Magee has made frequent visits there. Did not become acquainted with him personally until after he became president of the bank, when he was introduced to him by the bank’s bookkeeper at the bank as “Doctor Magee.” Witness knew Magee as a Chicago specialist, and did not know that he had any other profession or business in that vicinity.

[521]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 N.E. 947, 177 Ind. 515, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-v-lawrence-ind-1912.