William Whitman, Inc. v. York

133 S.E. 427, 192 N.C. 87, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 227
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 427 (William Whitman, Inc. v. York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Whitman, Inc. v. York, 133 S.E. 427, 192 N.C. 87, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 227 (N.C. 1926).

Opinion

CONNOR, J.

Manifestly, plaintiff’s assignments of error, based upon exceptions, with respect to the issues and to the holding as to the burden of proof, upon the first seven issues, cannot be sustained. Plaintiff’s consent that these issues should be answered by the jury, in accordance with the contentions of defendants, make it unnecessary to consider or to discuss the exceptions upon which these assignments of error are based.

The burden upon the first seven issues, involving exclusively matters alleged in the answer, upon which defendants contend that the notes sued on are invalid, was upon defendants, who admitted the execution of the notes by them; the consent of plaintiff that these issues should be so answered as to sustain these allegations precluded the necessity of the introduction of evidence by defendants to sustain their contention that the title of the Paul Rubber Company, payee, to the notes, was defective, within the meaning of C. S., 3036, and C. S., 3040. The truth of this contention was, in effect, admitted by plaintiff, when it agreed that the issues should be answered as contended by defendants. Fuller v. Smith, 58 N. C., 192; Shingle Mills v. Lumber Co., 171 N. C., 410. The title of the Paul Rubber Company to the notes was, upon the facts found by the jury, with the consent of plaintiff, defective. Proctor v. Fertilizer Co., 189 N. C., 243; Phosphate Co. v. Johnson, 188 N. C., 419; Bank v. Felton, 188 N. C., 384; Moon v. Simpson, 172 N. C., 576, and 170 N. C., 335; Bank v. Walser, 162 N. C., 54. Plaintiff acquired title to the notes from the Paul Rubber Company; the burden upon the eighth and ninth issues was therefore upon plaintiff to prove that it had acquired title to the notes, and held same, as a holder in due course. C. S., 3040; Bank v. Howard, 188 N. C., 543; Discount Co. v. Baker, 176 N. C., 546; Smathers v. Hotel Co., 168 N. C., 69; Mfg. Co. v. Summers, 143 N. C., 102. If plaintiff failed to sustain this burden by evi *91 dence, from which, the jury could find, by its greater weight, that plaintiff was such holder in due course, the notes, although in its hands as a holder, other than a holder in due course, are subject to the same defenses as if they were nonnegotiable. C. S., 3039. The notes are, admittedly, in form negotiable instruments; notwithstanding this fact, they are subject to the same defenses in this action as they would have been in an action by the Paul Rubber Company, unless plaintiff is a holder of the notes in due course, as defined in C. S., 3033. It is but just that plaintiff, who relied upon the special protection which the law gives to the bona fide holder of a negotiable instrument, to enforce payment of these notes, admittedly procured by the fraud of the payee, should be held to strict proof of all the facts involved in its allegation that it is a holder in due course, and therefore not affected by the equities of defendants. But for the principle underlying the law of’ negotiable instruments, plaintiff could not recover, for it is 'a general principle of law that no one can transfer a better title to property than he has. The party who claims the benefit of the exception to the general principle must bring himself within all the conditions on which- it depends. Combs v. Hodges, 62 U. S., 397, 16 L. Ed., 115.

In their answer defendants deny the allegation in the complaint that plaintiff is a holder in due course of the notes set out in the complaint; in their further defense they allege “that if said notes were delivered to plaintiff herein, or transferred by the Paul Rubber Company to the plaintiff, which is expressly denied, then defendants allege that, as they are informed and believe, the plaintiff is engaged in the business of a note broker and is not the owner of said notes, but is a mere collecting agent.” On the trial, before the introduction of evidence, and while the court had under consideration its ruling .as to the burden of proof upon the issues, which it had announced would be submitted to the jury, defendants admitted that “plaintiff is now the holder of said notes, denying, however, that plaintiff is the holder in due course.” This admission was immediately qualified by the statement, appearing in the record, that defendants further admitted that plaintiff was “the equitable owner of said notes.” Thereafter, and before any evidence was introduced, the court ruled that the burden upon the issues involving the allegations that plaintiff was a holder in due course, and was entitled to recover upon the notes, was upon plaintiff. Plaintiff, without objection, or exception to this ruling, assumed the burden, and introduced in evidence the deposition of the secretary and treasurer of plaintiff, taken in the city of Boston, Mass. This deposition,. and exhibits attached thereto, including the notes sued on, and correspondence, by letters and telegrams, between plaintiff, at Boston, Mass., and the Paul Rubber Com *92 pany, at Salisbury, N. C., constitute all tbe evidence submitted to the jury. No evidence was offered by defendants.

Each of the notes offered in evidence, executed by defendants, is a negotiable instrument, complete and regular on its face; there is evidence, from which the jury could find that both notes were received by plaintiff at Boston, Mass., through the mail, from the Paul Rubber Company, at Salisbury, N. C., before maturity; that plaintiff took both notes in good faith, and for value, without notice of any infirmity in either note or of any defect in the title by which the Paul Rubber Company, payee, held the said notes. On the back of each note, at the time it was identified by the witness and attached as an exhibit to the deposition, were written the words, “The Paul Rubber Company, by W. M. McConnell, Pres.” There is no evidence tending to show by whom these words were written, or when they were written on the back of the notes. The notes are dated 12 November, 1923; they are due, according to their tenor, on 12 April, 1924. They were received by plaintiff on 18 February, 1924, and were identified and attached to the deposition on 20 November, 1925.

The court instructed the jury that there was no evidence, and no admission in the record, tending to prove that the notes were endorsed by the Paul Rubber Company, or when the words appearing on the back of the notes were written thereon. It thereupon instructed the jury that if they believed the evidence, they should answer the eighth issue, “No” and the ninth issue, “Nothing.” To these instructions defendants excepted. Assignments of error based upon these exceptions are chiefly relied upon by plaintiff, on its appeal to this Court.

We find no error in either instruction. The only witness, whose testimony was offered as evidence, was the secretary and treasurer of plaintiff. He testified in his deposition taken in Boston, Mass., that all the transactions between plaintiff and the Paul Rubber Company were by correspondence; that he did not know W. M. McConnell, whose name appears on the back of each note, and upon letters included in the correspondence, as president of the Paul Rubber Company; that the notes sued on were received by plaintiff, through the mail, on 18 February, 1924.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 427, 192 N.C. 87, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-whitman-inc-v-york-nc-1926.