Wheeler v. Wardell

3 S.E.2d 377, 173 Va. 168, 1939 Va. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1939
DocketRecord No. 2062
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 S.E.2d 377 (Wheeler v. Wardell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Wardell, 3 S.E.2d 377, 173 Va. 168, 1939 Va. LEXIS 184 (Va. 1939).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

We have here a'suit by the Receiver of the Potomac Savings Bank of Georgetown, District of Columbia, who will hereafter be referred to as the receiver, against the plaintiff in error by notice of motion for judgment on two notes, one for $1173.00, dated December 20, 1933, signed by James E. Wilson and Ethel Wilson, payable thirty days after date to the order of Wheeler Milling Company at the Hamilton National Bank of Washington, Potomac branch, and endorsed “Wheeler Milling Co., by J. A. Wheeler.” The second note, dated January 11, 1934, and payable one month after date in the amount of $690.00, is like the first in all respects, except that the sole maker was James E. Wilson.

The defendants, James E. Wilson and Ethel Wilson, in the case of the first note, and James E. Wilson as to the second, made no defense to the actions. They were not served with notice. A judgment against them, or either of them, would not have availed anything.

“The plaintiff introduced the two notes; identified the signature of the defendant, Wheeler, as endorser on them; proved that they had not been paid and had been duly protested when due and notices mailed to all parties; that they were part of the receivership trust; that they were not taxable in Virginia; that the whole amounts of principal, interest and attorneys’ fees were due; and rested his case.”

The defendant, in both actions, filed three pleas. The first was general in its nature, denying his liability as complained and alleging that the plaintiff was not a holder in due course; that the said notes were not taken in good faith and for value, and that at the time of their negotiation the plaintiff had notice of the infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating them. The second was a plea of accord and satisfaction, and the third was a plea of release.

The entire defense grows out of these alleged facts, Which the defendant offered to prove: That the notes grew out of a transaction which took place in 1931 when he se[173]*173cured them from his customers, Wilson and Jenkins, who were operating a dairy situated near Wheeler’s mill, and who owed him for mill stuffs that they had purchased for the purposes of the dairy; that at that time he informed the bank that he intended to sue on these notes because Jenkins was making no effort to pay and was getting deeper in debt; that Mr. Offutt, president of the bank, said that he, Jenkins, also owed the bank, and had abandoned any idea of paying anything even on his personal notes; that Offutt said that the bank didn’t want to press him for payment, and asked Wheeler to ascertain if Jenkins would make over to Wilson all his interests in the firm, and that would afford Wilson an opportunity to proceed with the business and work the thing out, and he, Offutt, expressed the belief that Wilson could do it; that, pursuant to Wheeler’s efforts, Jenkins transferred to Wilson all of his interests in the property of the firm, including the real estate, and that cotemporaneously therewith, Wilson executed a deed of trust on all of this property and assigned all of his income from the sale of milk to secure the payment of a bond for $15,000.00, which was taken and held as collateral security for all the notes bearing Wilson’s signature at the bank, including the two notes herein.

It will be noted that when the original notes were given in 1931 by Wilson and Jenkins for indebtedness due by them, Wheeler had them discounted at the Potomac Savings Bank, in which he was a depositor. The money which they produced, after the discount charges were deducted, was paid to Wheeler, or placed to his credit. The notes were renewed from time to time from their inception to their dates at the time of the notices of motion for judgment. The renewals were for the same amounts, with Wilson as maker and Wheeler as endorser.

As has been indicated, the defenses set up to defeat liability upon the part of Wheeler include the charge that the receiver was not a holder in due course, and that the notes were given conditionally, in that there was some mutual agreement between the immediate parties to the transaction [174]*174prior to and at the time of the giving of the notes, and that parol evidence is admissible to show what the conditions referred to were. These defenses were embodied in the defendant’s exception to the ruling of the court in excluding from the consideration of the jury the evidence sought to be introduced by the defendant.

It will be noted that this does not include the substance of his pleas, heretofore mentioned, and neither the pleas nor the exceptions set out the defense that there was no consideration for the endorsement. In other words, that defense is not found in the transcript of the record, unless by implication, but it is accentuated for the first time in this court in the petition and reply brief of the defendant. If we are correct as to this, then this defense cannot be considered by this court. If we are in error and it is alive here we think that the trial court was correct in excluding the proffered testimony as being offensive to the rule that parol testimony will not be received to vary the terms of a written contract.

In Bigelow on Bills, Notes and Checks, Third Edition (Lile), page 354, section 460, we find the following:

“Holder in Due Course—What Constitutes.—The statute, following the unwritten rule, declares that in order to occupy this highly favored position the plaintiff must be a ‘holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions:—
‘1. That it is complete and regular upon its face;
‘2. That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if- such was the fact;
‘3. That he took it in good faith and for value;
‘4. That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.’
“A fair syllabus of these requirements is: Such a holder must be: (1) a holder—in the sense of the Law Merchant; (2) A holder in good faith—that is, having taken the paper without notice, in fact or in law, of existing [175]*175defects or defenses, and with such caution as is required by the Law Merchant; and (3) A holder for value.
“It will appear, however, in a later section, that one who claims through a holder in due course stands in the latter’s shoes, with all the rights himself of a holder in due course.”

Every requisite element thus enumerated to constitute a holder in due course is present in the transactions with which we are concerned. The bank was a holder in due course as was the receiver, who was appointed by the U. S. Comptroller, and if the receiver, per se, is not a holder in due course, then he stands in the shoes of the bank with all of the rights which it had. The status of the bank as a holder in due course precludes the admissibility of parol evidence even as to the defense of no consideration.

We quote again from the learned author last mentioned, found on page 385, section 491:

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.E.2d 377, 173 Va. 168, 1939 Va. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-wardell-va-1939.