Court Opinion

ID: 7807943
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:08:52.164151+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:22.989708
License: Public Domain

McCulloch, C. J. The plaintiff, John H. Bumping, was. swindled by certain parties in the City of Hot Springs who induced him to wager his property in what was represented to be a pool room where bets were made on horse races. He staked certain drafts aggregating the sum of $3,778 on a race, and those drafts were placed in the hands of defendant Arkansas National Bank of Hot Springs for collection. The bank collected the drafts .and paid the proceeds out to one Ed Spear, the person who delivered the same to the bank for collection. The drafts were properly endorsed in blank by the plaintiff. This is an action instituted by the plaintiff against the bank and Spear to recover the 'amount of the drafts. There was a trial of the case before a jury, which resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Spear, but in favor of the bank. The plaintiff .alone has appealed. The transactions which formed the basis of this controversy occurred in January, 1913. Plaintiff resided in the State of Montana and came to Hot Springs for the benefit of his health. Shortly after he came to Hot Springs he met a man who introduced himself under the name of Minor, and the latter introduced plaintiff to another man who said that his name was Hamilton and represented himself to be the agent of a concern which he called the “Horse Breeders Association of America.” Minor disappeared soon after this transaction, bnt it turned out after-wards that Hamilton’s real name was JackPorter and that he resided in Hot Springs. The narrative of the plaintiff .was a long one, but the substance of his testimony was to ■the effect that he was taken to the pool room and induced ■to enter jointly with Hamilton and Minor in a bet on .a certain named horse which Hamilton told the plaintiff was sure to win. The pool room was a fake and it was represented to plaintiff that he .and his two companions, Hamilton and Minor, had won on their joint bet the sum of $108,000. Plaintiff, as his part of the stakes, put up certain drafts .aggregating $3,778 drawn by the German Trust & Savings Bank on the Continental & Commercial National Bank of Chicago, payable to the plaintiff’s order. He endorsed the drafts in blank and they were turned over to the beeper of the pool room with the other stakes. After the bet was won, the pretended keeper of the pool room claimed that it was against the rules to accept drafts and that the winnings would not be paid until the drafts were forwarded and collected so as to show that the bet had been made in good faith. This undoubtedly was a scheme in order to keep plaintiff quiet until the drafts could be collected and the proceeds made away with by the conspirators. In this the conspirators were successful, for they secured the collection of the drafts and got the proceeds before plaintiff suspected that anything was wrong. The drafts reached the hands of Spear who placed them in defendant bank for .collection. The bank forwarded the same in regular course of business for collection, and .after the returns were received the same were checked out by Spear. This action was instituted several months afterwards and the evidence adduced by the bank tends to show that it had no knowledge that there was .anything wrong with the transaction. The court submitted the case to the jury upon the following instructions, the first two of which were given at the instance of the plaintiff, and the last at the instance of the defendant bank. “No. 1. In order to recover, the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove that his drafts were stolen, and that the defendants received them with knowledge thereof. It is not necessary, however, that the plaintiff should prove that the defendants had actual knowledge that they were stolen. If they received the drafts under such circumstances as would cause a reasonable man to make inquiry as to how the drafts had 'been secured, then they are charged as a matter of law, with such information as a careful inquiry would disclose or reveal.” “No. 2. If you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff’s drafts were stolen from him, or that he wias swindled out of them by a fake race or pool room scheme, then you are instructed that it is your duty to carefully consider the circumstances under which the defendants received them. You are to determine from the evidence in the first place, whether they actually knew them to have been stolen, or whether the circumstances were such as to lead a prudent man to inquire as to the means by which they had been obtained. And if you find ■that the defendants, or either of them wilfully failed to make such inquiry, after knowledge of facts or circumstances which would place an ordinarily prudent man in their position on inquiry then they are responsible for such failure, and are presumed in law to know what such inquiry would have disclosed. ’ ’ “No. 3. If you believe from the evidence in this case that the drafts complained of in this case were received by the Arkansas National Bank from Ed Spear for collection iand that they were collected and placed to the credit of Ed Spear in said bank and were paid out to Ed Spear before this suit was brought and before the Arkansas National Bank had notice of any right, title, interest or claim the plaintiff in this case had on said drafts or money; and that the Arkansas National Bank had no knowledge that said drafts had been stolen from the plaintiff at the time they were received by the bank and that at the time they were received by the bank for collection from Ed Spear that Ed Spear was a regular customer of said bank and had for many years been such customer and that said drafts were received in a regular way and in the usual course of business by said bank and that the said bank did not know at the time it received said drafts or at any time before it paid the money collected on said drafts to the said Ed Spear, that said drafts had been stolen and had no reason to believe that they had been stolen; and had no knowledge of facts to place them on inquiry that they were of this character; then in that event you should find for the defendant, the Arkansas National Bank.”  (1) It is unnecessary to discuss the instructions on the (branch of the case involving Spear, for, as before stated, the judgment was against him and there has been no appeal. The contention of plaintiff is that the court should have given a peremptory instruction in his favor. It is argued that the transaction falls within the terms of the statute which declares to be void bills, notes and other securities, the consideration of which is for money or property won at gaming, or where it is money or property lent to be bet at gaming. The statute on that subject reads as follows: “All judgments, conveyances, bonds, bills, notes, securities .and contracts, where the consideration or any part thereof is money or property won at any game or gambling device, or any bet or wager whatever, or for money or property lent to be bet at .any gaming or gambling device, or at any sport or pastime whatever, shall be void. “The assignment of any bond, bill, note, judgment, conveyance, contract or other security shall not affect the defense of the person executing the same.” Kirby’s Digest, sections 3690-3691. It is clear, we think, that thé transaction does not fall within the terms of the statute. The drafts were valid ones, issued by one bank on another in plaintiff’s favor, and by him properly endorsed. The considerations for these drafts were not, in whole or in part, “money or property won at any game or gambling device,” nor ‘ ‘money or property lent to 'be bet at any gaming or gambling device. ’ ’ Tbe circumstances under which the assignments of the drafts were obtained from plaintiff amounted to larceny or .to obtaining property under false pretenses, but such assignments did not fall within the terms of the statute quoted above. Hindman v. State, 72 Ark. 516; Johnson v. State, 75 Ark. 427.  (2-3) The drafts constituted commercial paper which was good in the hands of any person except those who took them with knowledge of the fraud in the assignment thereof. The statute just quoted only reaches, by the express terms thereof, to notes or securities executed by the loser at a gaming device, or by one who has borrowed money or property to be bet at a gaming device. The statute does not include drafts which are issued upon a valid consideration and endorsed to .another, even if the assignment is a part of a gaming transaction. It is true there is another statute (Kirby’s Digest, section 3687) which gives a right of action against the person winning money or property at any game or gambling device or bet or wager, but the right of action is not given against anyone except the winner. It does not confer a right of action against one who receives commercial paper which has been received by a third person without actual knowledge of its infirmities.  (4) Therefore, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover .at .all from the bank it must be upon the ground that the bank participated in the scheme to rob the plaintiff or that it received information concerning the facts of the transaction at the time the drafts were placed there by Spear for collection or while it held the money to Spear’s credit. The bank, in receiving the drafts for collection, .acted merely as the agent of Spear, and the proof shows that the money was paid out to Spear after the proceeds of the drafts had been received by the bank. The court properly submitted the issues in the instructions herein-before quoted, and there was sufficient testimony to justify the jury in finding that the bank received the drafts for collection, and paid the proceeds ont to Spear when collected, in the regular course of business without any knowledge of the fact that the drafts had been fraudulently obtained from the plaintiff or anyone else. It is insisted that the testimony shows conclusively that the bank had been receiving drafts from Spear under circumstances which must have indicated that he was operating as a “fence” for swindlers of the type which Minor and Porter were shown to be. But officers and employees of the bank were introduced, who testified concerning' those transactions, and whose testimony, if believed, was sufficient to show that the bank was doing a legitimate business with Spear as one of its customers and had no knowledge that the latter was engaged in swindling visitors to Hot .Springs or was accepting drafts from parties who were carrying on those nefarious enterprises. Finally it is contended that the court erred in refusing to sustain plaintiff’s challenge of one of the jurors. Juror'Calvin Webb stated on his examination that he had been engaged in the mercantile business in the City of Hot Springs and had become indebted to the bank in various transactions, but that he had filed a petition in bankruptcy and that his estate was pending in the bankrupt court. He also stated that Spear had been endorser on some of his paper held by the bank. He stated in response to interrogatories of the court that those facts would not influence him in arriving at a verdict in this case, but that he could and would try the case according to the law as laid down by the court and the evidence as adduced from the witnesses. There was more reason for holding the juror to be disqualified so far as Spear was concerned than so far .as concerns the bank, but the verdict of the jury was against Spear and the question of the juror’s disqualification as to him has thus been eliminated. So far as concerns the bank, there is nothing tending to disqualify Webb as a juror except that he had been doing business with the bank and borrowed money in the regular course of business. That did not necessarily constitute (bias which rendered the juror disqualified. He stated that his feeling toward the bank was not such that it would influence his verdict either one way or the other, and we think that the court did not err in holding that he was not disqualified.  (5) The mere fact that the juror was indebted to one of the parties did not necessarily disqualify him. Jurors who are accepted by the court as men of sufficient intelligence to decide upon questions of fact, are expected to forget their friendships for one of the parties even though that friendly feeling should be based on past favors. Lavender v. Hudgens, 32 Ark. 763.  (6) The decision of the trial judge upon the question of a juror’s qualification must necessarily rest largely in the exercise of sound discretion, and the decision should not be set aside unless it clearly appears that there has been an abuse of discretion and that a biased juror has been forced upon the parties. Benton v. State, 30 Ark. 328; Lavender v. Hudgens, supra. We are of the opinion that this case was fairly presented to the jury and that there was no error committed. The judgment is therefore affirmed.