Traders Securities Co. v. Canton Drug Co.

143 S.E. 452, 38 Ga. App. 165, 1928 Ga. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1928
Docket18781, 18782
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 452 (Traders Securities Co. v. Canton Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traders Securities Co. v. Canton Drug Co., 143 S.E. 452, 38 Ga. App. 165, 1928 Ga. App. LEXIS 106 (Ga. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Luke, J.

Traders Securities Company sued Canton Drug Company on three “trade acceptances,” payable February 25, 1925, 'April 25, 1925, and July 25, 1925, respectively, and “exactly similar” except as to their dates of maturity. The copy of the first acceptance set out in the petition follows:

“Trade Acceptance.”
“$59.60. St. Louis, Mo., July 25, 1924. No. 12809.
“Seven months after date, pay to the order of ourselves, at our office at St. Louis, Mo., fifty-nine and 60/100 dollars.- The obligation of the acceptor hereof arises out of the purchase of goods from the drawer.
[Signed] Blackstad, Inc.
“To Canton Drug Company, Canton, Ga.
Due Feb. 25, 1925.”

The following words are written across the face of the paper: “Accepted. Canton Drug Co., W. W. F.;” and on the back of the acceptance appears the following: “Pay to the order of Traders Securities Co. Blackstad, Inc., per W. A. Blackstad, President.” Paragraph 7 of the petition follows: “Plaintiff shows further that each of said acceptances herein referred to were, before the maturity thereof, for value, transferred and assigned by the payee therein to the plaintiff herein, and that the plaintiff is now the holder and owner thereof.”

The defendant denied indebtedness, denied the allegations of paragraph 7 of the petition, and pleaded that on July 25, 1924, it made five trade acceptances aggregating $298, given Blackstad, Inc., for a lot of jewelry, represented in a schedule to be merchantable at certain prices listed therein; that when the jewelry was shipped, the defendant learned that it was “worthless, made of all sorts of inferior metals, tarnished, turned black, and was not suited [167]*167for the purposes intended;” that the few sales made of it injured defendant’s business; that upon learning that the jewelry was worthless the defendant returned it to the seller; that “before the discovery of the fraud” the defendant sold $42.20 worth of the jewelry, but returned the remainder; that the defendant had already paid said company $119.20; that “the entire plan of said company for the advertising and sale of the jewelry . . was a scheme to cheat and swindle” the- defendant; that if the plaintifE has said acceptances as alleged, “the same were received by it for the purpose of aiding and abetting the perpetration of the fraud upon the defendant;” that the same, if transferred as alleged, were so transferred in order that the defendant should be shut off from its defense of failure of consideration; and that if the plaintiff has such acceptances, it took them with full knowledge and notice of the worthlessness of the goods for which they were given.

The jury found for the defendant, and Traders Securities Company assigns error upon the overruling of its motion for a new trial, based upon the general grounds. Canton Drug Company, by cross-bill of exceptions, alleges that the court erred in admitting the said acceptances in evidence.

We shall first consider the cross-bill. The ruling of the trial judge as therein complained of can not be considered by this court, for the reason that the assignment of error, complaining of the admission of documentary evidence, does not set out the evidence, either in form or in substance.

At this stage of our discussion, then, Traders Securities Company is presumed to be the holder of the said acceptances bona fide and for value; but Canton Drug Company, as it has the right to do, pleads, and undertakes to prove, fraud in the procurement of the acceptances (Civil Code of 1910, § 4288), in order to let in its defense of failure of consideration. Civil Code (1910), § 4290. Of course, if the plaintiff acquired title to the acceptances or to any one of them after maturity, it took subject to all the equities existing between the original parties, and was not a bona fide purchaser (Civil Code, § 4287); and the plea and answer presents this defense. See also Parker v. Daniel, 16 Ga. App. 23 (84 S. E. 483).

Frank Coffman, who was secretary and treasurer of Traders Securities Company and at times acted as its attorney, testified that his company was in the business of buying and selling commercial [168]*168paper of all kinds; that it did not finance Blackstad, Inc., and that its only connection with the latter was that at times it bought its papers outright and for value at a discount; that on September 8, 1924, his company, acting through him, bought from Blackstad, Inc., five trade acceptances, due respectively three, five, seven, nine, and twelve months after date; that the first two of said acceptances were paid through American Trust Company, to whom they were given for collection, but that the last three were not paid; that each acceptance was for the principal sum of $59.60; that neither Traders Securities Company nor the witness had any knowledge whatsoever of any infirmity or defect in the acceptances, or of any defense to them, either prior to or at the time of the purchase; that the papers were purchased for $268.20, and that the three sued on represented three fifths of that amount; that he had no connection, personal, financial, or official, with Blackstad, Inc., and that the stockholders of one company were not the stockholders of the other; that the Traders Securities Company “did not advise Blackstad, Inc., on March 11, 1925, that the defendant failed and refused to pay the trade acceptances which had become due,” and “Blackstad, Inc., did not at that time advise us that the defendant had refused to pay for the balance of the jewelry; there was no conversation of that kind,” and “we did not know that Blackstad, Inc., was engaged exclusively in selling jewelry under a plan of installment payment;” and that the acceptances sued on were the only ones his company had received from Blackstad, Inc., that it had not been able to collect from the maker, and that approximately five per cent, of his company’s business was with that concern.

It appears from the record that the acceptances sued on were similar, except as to due dates, and as to the fact that the one due February 25, 1925, had “also on the back thereof indorsement of American Trust Company scratched out with pencil, the name Traders Securities Co.’ being stamped in the blank space in the indorsement in ink of different color from that used in the other words of indorsement.”

W. F. Fincher, manager of Canton Drug Company, testified that he had no notice from Traders Securities Company that it had the acceptances, until suit was filed; that he paid two of the acceptances by check sent direct to American Trust Company, these checks being dated respectively October 28, 1924, and December 23, 1924, [169]*169payable to American Trust Co., signed “Canton Drug Co., by W. W. F.;” that the two acceptance paid had on them an indorsement in blank of Blackstad, Inc., and the indorsement of the American Trust Company; that before the acceptance maturing in February, 1925, became due, he received a notice from American Trust Company, of St.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.E. 452, 38 Ga. App. 165, 1928 Ga. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-securities-co-v-canton-drug-co-gactapp-1928.