Taylor v. National Bank

62 N.W. 99, 6 S.D. 511, 1895 S.D. LEXIS 139
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 N.W. 99 (Taylor v. National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. National Bank, 62 N.W. 99, 6 S.D. 511, 1895 S.D. LEXIS 139 (S.D. 1895).

Opinion

Kellam, J.

The complaint in this action is quite lengthy, but, for the purpose of a discussion of all the questions raised and argued on this demurrer, the following condensed statement will probably sufficiently present the facts stated in the complaint: Defendant Stick was a stockholder in, and the president and active manager of, £he National Bank of Dakota, a duly organized national bank at Huron. In August, 1889, he sold to plaintiff, Taylor, 90 shares of the capital stock of said bank, under and upon the strength of certain false and fraudulent representations to Taylor as to the condition of the bank, its business and its assets. That, in payment therefor, Taylor [513]*513paid to Stick $1,000 in cash, ‘‘and executed to him one note of $5,000, signed by himself, and delivered to him one note of $3,350 and one note of $1,000, signed by Josephine Taylor, plaintiff’s wife, all of said notes dated August 12, 1889, and drawing interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum. That said notes were, at the request of said defendant Stick, made payable to the National Bank of Dakota, the other defendant herein, but the same were delivered to defendant Stick, and were so delivered to him as part payment of said stock.” “That subsequent to the execution and'delivery of the notes to defendant Stick, in payment of said stock, as hereinbefore stated, and at about the time of their delivery to him, he placed the same with the defendant bank herein.' That the only consideration moving between said bank and the defendant Stick for said notes were certain notes held by said bank against defendant Stick and members of his family, as plaintiff is advised and believes; and that the entire transaction between said bank and said Stick in substituting the notes of plaintiff and his wife in said bank for the notes of said defendant Stick and his family was done by said defendant Stick acting as the president of said bank; and that said bank took said notes so executed by plaintiff and his wife, Josephine Taylor, as hereinbefore stated, with full notice and knowledge of all the false and fraudulent statements and representations so made to plaintiff by said defendant Stick, as hereinbefore stated, and with full notice and knowledge that said notes were obtained from this plaintiff by said defendant Stick through said false and fraudulent statements and representations aforesaid, and in no other way. That plaintiff did not immediately discover the false and fraudulent character of the representations inducing the execution and delivery of said notes, and from time to time paid advanced interest, and executed renewals thereof, at the request of said defendant Stick, as the president of said bank; but that no interest has been paid and no renewals of said notes have been [514]*514made by plaintiff since his discovery of said fraud, and of being advised of his rights to rescind said contract. And plaintiff avers that such renewals were not in payment of said notes, but simply and solely in renewal thereof. * * * That defendant bank still holds said notes, claiming to be a holder in good faith and for value.” To this complaint the defendant bank demurred, on the ground that it does not state a cause of action against the bank. This appeal is from an order overruling such demurrer.

The obligation of a party to a negotiable instrument may be extinguished 1 ‘in like manner with that of parties to contracts in general.” Comp. Laws, Sec. 4515. A party to a contract may rescind the same ‘ ‘if the consent of the party rescinding * * * was obtained * * * through fraud, * * * exercised by or with the connivance of the party as to whom he rescinds.” Id. Sec. 3589. In this case Taylor seeks to enforce a rescission of his contract of purchase of the stock, and to recover from the appellant bank both his own and his wife’s notes, given in part payment for such stock.

Appellants’s first proposition in support of the claim that the complaint does not state a cause of action is a double one, and is thus stated in his brief: ‘‘The notes never had any legal existence, and could not have been the subject of an action, until they had been discounted to thiá defendant. The passing of the notes to Stick, a person not named or intended as payee, was not a good delivery, and gave no vitality to the notes.” If we apprehend appellant’s thought, it is that, the notes being made payable to the bank, a delivery to Stick did not vitalize them, and that, never having become operative notes for want of delivery, they have never become the subjects of discount, and consequently the bank never has discounted them. This conclusion is neither tenable nor available to appellant. By the terms of the purchase, Stick was entitled to these notes from Taylor. At Stick’s instance and request, they were made payable to the bank, instead of himself. They wei’e so made, [515]*515and then passed over to him. Everything was done necessary to constitute a delivery. Taylor intended to give, and Stick intended to take, and the delivery was complete. What would have been the rights, or remedies of the parties if the bank had refused to take the notes so made payable to it is an independent question, and does not arise here; but, accepting the allegations of the complaint as admitted, appellant cannot occupy the position indicated, for it is distinctly alleged that the bank did accept and discount said notes, and claims to be the bona fide holder of the same for value. It cannot admit these allegations to be true, and at the same time insist that the notes have no vitality or legal existence, because never delivered.

In the cases cited by appellant in support of the proposition under consideration, the notes were made for the purpose of discount at a designated bank, but upon presentation to said bank it refused to take them, — in this respect precisely the reverse of the fact in this case. In the cited case of Prescott v. Brinsley, 6 Cush. 233, the court held that, as to the sureties, the purpose of making the note was never accomplished, and that the subsequent unauthorized use of the note by the principal was not binding upon the sureties. The note was by its terms payable to the bank at which it was to have been discounted. Upon the refusal of the bank to take it, the principal maker, without the knowledge or consent of its sureties, made other use of it. The court held that the sureties were not bound. The facts in the other cited cases of President, etc., of Mechanics’ Bank v. Ross, 1 Blackf. 316, and First Nat. Bank v. Strang, 72 Ill. 559, were substantially the same, except that the parties who were held not to be bound were not sureties, but principal makers, whose notes, after refusal by the bank to which they were made payable, and at which they were to be discounted, were, without their consent, sold to other parties. It will thus be seen that the very fact upon which the foregoing cases turned, to wit, the non acceptance by the banks named as payees, and the consequent defeat of the very conditions upon [516]*516which the notes were to become operative, is not only lacking ■in this case, but the very reverse is expressly shown, to wit, that the bank named as payee did accept the notes, and still holds them. The notes were given to Stick by Taylor in partial payment for the stock. Stick could not disconnect himself from the transaction by having the notes made payable to the bank, nor would it relieve the bank of the consequences of Stick’s fraud, of which it had full knowledge when it took the notes, that Stick’s name did not appear as a party of the notes.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.W. 99, 6 S.D. 511, 1895 S.D. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-national-bank-sd-1895.