Waynesville Nat. Bank v. Irons

8 F. 1
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 8 F. 1 (Waynesville Nat. Bank v. Irons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waynesville Nat. Bank v. Irons, 8 F. 1 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Matthews, Justice,

“ $10,000. LEBANON, Onto, April 15, 1878.
“ One year after date, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of the treasurer of the Miami Talley .Railway Company ten thousand dollars, for value received.”

It is signed by Samuel Irons, William I. Dill, Daniel Perrine, F. Hutchinson, William Morlatt, and William V. Bone. On the back of it is the following indorsement: “Demand and notice of protest waived. W. B. Sellers, Troas. M. Y. By. Co.”

The note is what is known as negotiable paper, and the production of it by the plaintiff, with proof or admission of the genuineness of the signatures and of the indorsement, without any additional evidence, entitles it to recover from the parties the full amount thereof, with interest, unless the defendants make out some satisfactory de-fence. The railroad company is sued together with the makers, and they defend separately. The answer of the railroad company sets up that the note was not indorsed or delivered by the treasurer to the bank, neither for a valuable consideration nor otherwise; denies that there is anything due thereon, and denies that the plaintiff is the legal or equitable owner of it, and alleges that the plaintiff came into possession of it wrongfully and illegally, and without authority from, or consent of, the defendant. It sets up the circumstances in detail of the original negotiation of the note, as collateral security, by Mr. Irons and the treasurer of the company, at the Lebanon National Bank, to secure a demand note of the company for $3,000, and that it was obtained from the possession of that bank, and discounted by the plaintiff, without any authority.

The relation that the railway company occupies to the paper is different from that occupied by the other defendants, and it is proper to dispose of the questions arising on the defences of the railway company independently, in the first instance, and with a view to that I give you this charge: If the jury are satisfied from the testimony that the note in suit, having previously been indorsed in blank by the treasurer of the railway company, was delivered to the plaintiff by Israel Wright, assuming to represent the railway company in the transaction, and in consideration thereof the plaintiff paid to Israel Wright the amount thereof, less the discount, or paid, at Wright’s request, an equivalent amount in obligations of the railway company, [4]*4so that the railway company in fact received the value thereof, and the transaction was reported by Wright to the secretary of the company, and by him to its treasurer, and the company has continued ever since to enjoy the benefit of the proceeds of said discount without any offer to return the consideration, then the railway company is not entitled to set up the defence upon which it relies. *

The answer of Mr. Irons is filed separately. He denies that the plaintiff is the owner or holder of the note. It avers that the note was made by the defendant herein and his co-defendants, except the railway company, jointly and severally, and all as principals, for the accommodation of said railway company, and loaned to it upon the agreement and understanding that said company should, upon the maturity of said note, pay the same, and that the proceeds of said note, should be applied exclusively by said company to the purchase of right of way for said company’s- road, and the further construction and completion of the same; of all which the plaintiff had due notice before said note came into plaintiff’s possession. He alleges that the note came into the possession of the plaintiff without the knowledge or consent of himself or of any of his co-defendants, and with notice that the proceeds would be applied to the payment of debts of said company incurred prior to the making of said note, and to purposes other than those aforesaid for which said note was made. He further alleges that no part of said proceeds was applied by said plaintiff to the purposes aforesaid for which said note was made, nor by any other person to whom they may have paid the same. The third defence alleges the insolvency of the railway company prior to the time when the note came into the possession of the plaintiff, and its final and complete suspension of work upon its road, and all attempts to complete the same, whereby, and in consequence of other facts in the prior defence which I have just read-, of which it is alleged the plaintiff also had notice, it is claimed that the negotiation of the note was illegal. The fourth defence alleges the circumstances in reference to the original deposit of the note with the Lebanon National Bank, and claims that possession of the note was obtained from the Lebanon National Bank without the authority, knowledge, or consent of the defendants. The fifth defence denies that Sellers, as treasurer, assigned or transferred the note to the plaintiff, or that the railway company authorized him to do so. Then comes the [5]*5sixth defence, in reference to which a ruling has already been made excluding testimony offered in its support, and which is not, therefore, open to any further consideration.

The answers of the oilier defendants, except in one particular, in respect to which it is not necessary to refer you, contain substantially, if not literally, the same defences which I have just enumerated as contained in Mr. Irons answer. And without referring to them by number, inasmuch as the same defences seem to bo reiterated several times in different forms, I will state in the first place that the defence of these gentlemen rests upon a denial of the title of the plaintiff to this note, based upon the want of authority alleged to exist on the part of Mr. Sellers to make the transfer, and of Mr. Wright to make the negotiation, and a denial of the fact that the company, through any of its officers, assented to the arrangement whereby the plaintiff became the owner of the note. In respect to that I give you this charge: That if the title of the plaintiff, so far as it depends upon the question of indorsement and delivery, and the authority of Wright to bind the railway company in its negotiations, is sufficient as against the railway company, it is equally valid as against the other defendants.

And the further question is whether the legal title to the note, which was in the railway company, passed by the acts done in its name to the plaintiff. The note having been indorsed in blank by the treasurer of the railway company, the title w'ould thereafter pass by mere delivery, and would be sufficient in the hands of a bona fide holder, for value paid, receiving the same before due in the ordinary course of business, without any notice of want of authority or other defect of title in the party transferring its possession. In other words, if this note, being indorsed in blank by the treasurer, was found in the possession of Israel Wright on a certain day before its maturity, and was by him presented for discount to the bank, and the bank discounted it and paid to him the proceeds of it, without any notice that Wright had no authority, and without notice that the railway company was not assenting to the transaction, and without notice of a.ny other facts which would constitute a defect in the authority of either the treasurer or the agent representing himself to b*’ such, then the plaintiff is what inlaw is termed a bona fide holder, for value, prior to maturity, without notice of defect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waynesville-nat-bank-v-irons-uscirct-1881.