Court Opinion

ID: 6969123
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:59:11.534287+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:43.801305
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Wilkin delivered the opinion of the court: This is a suit brought against appellants by appellee, endorsee of two promissory notes claimed to have been executed by appellants, payable to the Diamond Rubber Company, and by it endorsed and discounted with appellee. A plea of the general issue was filed in the court below, and with it the following affidavit: “State of Illinois, County of Cook. } ss. “S. I. Yoder, being first duly sworn, on oath says that he is agent of the above named defendants in this behalf; that said defendants have a just and meritorious defense to the whole of plaintiff’s demand; that he has read the foregoing plea and knows the contents thereof, and verily believes the same to be true- S. I. Yoder. “Subscribed and sworn to,” etc. A second plea denied the assignment, by endorsement, of the notes to the plaintiff before their maturity. The fourth alleged want of consideration for the execution of said notes, and knowledge thereof on the part of plaintiff at the time of their assignment to it. The fifth alleged total failure of consideration for the notes by reason of the breach of warranty of the goods sold to defendants by the payee, and knowledge of such total failure of consideration on the part of the plaintiff at the time of the alleged assignment of the said notes to it. The sixth alleged total failure of consideration for the reasons stated in the fifth plea, and that the notes sued upon were assigned to and taken possession of by the plaintiff after maturity of the same. The seventh alleged want of consideration for the notes, and that the same were'assigned to the plaintiff after their maturity. By replications, issue was taken upon each of these special pleas. On the trial the notes were introduced in evidence, over the objection of defendants, without proof of their execution, and the defendants, after showing that the notes in question were discounted by the payee of the same with the plaintiff, and that at the time of such discount the proceeds thereof were credited to the payees, attempted to introduce evidence in support of their pleas, but on objection it was excluded by the court and exceptions taken. An instruction to the jury to find the issues for the defendants was refused, and one to find for the plaintiff and assess the damages at the sum of $1915.58 was given. A verdict for that amount was accordingly rendered. After overruling defendants’ motion for a new trial the court rendered judgment on the verdict. That judgment has been affirmed by the Appellate Court. The amount for which the jury was directed to return a verdict was the amount due on the notes, and it is not claimed that the court erred in giving that peremptory instruction if its rulings upon the admissibility of testimony was correct. It is, however, insisted that error was committed in that regard, first, in overruling defendants’ objection to the introduction of the notes in evidence without proof of their execution. This assignment of error is based upon the assumption that the affidavit attached to the plea of the general issue was sufficient to bring it within the provisions of paragraph 34 of the Practice act. (Rev. Stat. p. 779.) It will be seen by reference to that statute that the affidavit necessary to put a party upon proof of the execution of an instrument sued on, must, if to a plea, be the affidavit of the defendant. Here, neither of the defendants to the action swears to the plea. They are the parties charged with the execution of the notes upon which the action is brought, and they alone could, within the meaning of the statute, make affidavit that they did not so execute them. They could not do so by an agent. Stevenson v. Farnsworth, 2 Gilm. 715; Warren v. Chambers, 12 Ill. 124; Davis v. Scarritt, 17 id. 202. But counsel insist the affidavit is sufficient under the proviso to the foregoing section. This position is also untenable. Under the proviso the one making the affidavit must still be a party to the suit. “The party making such denial” is fixed by that part of the section preceding the proviso. There is nothing, either in the body of the statute or proviso, authorizing a third party,—i. e., one not a party plaintiff or defendant,—to deny the execution of an instrument upon which an action is brought. The second and only other ground of reversal urged is the refusal of the trial court to admit evidence offered by the defendants in support of their special pleas. This assignment of error is based solely upon the proposition that under the evidence produced upon the trial the plaintiff was not such an innocent holder of the notes as to be entitled to protection against defenses existing against the payee. The president of the bank, being called by the defense, testified that the §1500 note was discounted July 3 and the $400 note August 19, and was then asked the question, “Will you tell just what was done when you say they were discounted?” and he answered: “I have the duplicate deposit tickets here, showing the credit to the parties for whom we discounted them, of the proceeds, upon those days.” Upon this evidence counsel lay down the legal proposition “the plaintiff cannot claim the protection of an innocent purchaser of said notes for value before maturity,” and they say: “The bank parted with nothing of value to the payee in said notes, but merely extended additional credit to the said payee. Until it appears that said credit was used and the bank account drawn upon or exhausted by the said payee, the bank has parted with nothing of value.” The Appellate Court declined to pass upon the point, on the ground that it was not-raised by the pleas filed. The question is, however, treated by both parties as before us, and while we think there is force in the position taken by the Appellate Court, we shall pass upon it as properly raised. We think the authorities fully sustain the proposition that a bank does not become a purchaser of negotiable paper by discounting the same for one not indebted to it at the time, and merely placing the amount which the assignor is to receive to his credit by way of deposit. It is well understood that by a general deposit in bank the relation of debtor and creditor, merely, is created between the bank and depositor; and if in this case the bank only became such a debtor to the rubber company, and if that indebtedness continued to exist at the time of the trial, it could have protected itself, iE the defenses set up prevailed against the notes, by refusing to pay the deposit, and therefore could not claim the protection of being an innocent holder for value, or if it had paid any part of the deposit it would be entitled to protection pro tanto. Drovers’ Nat. Bank v. Blue, 110 Mich. 31; Central Nat. Bank v. Valentine, 18 Hun, 417; Foxy. Kansas City Bank, 30 Kan. 441; Mann v. Second Nat. Bank, id. 412; Manufacturers’ Nat. Bank of Racine v. Newell, 71 Wis. 309; Dougherty v. Central Nat. Bank, 93 Pa. St. 227; Lancaster County Nat. Bank v. Hewer, 114 id. 216. The more difficult question here is, did the defendants prove the plaintiff to be within the rule announced, by merely showing that no money was paid for the notes at the time of the discount, or were they not bound to go farther and prove the state of the account between the rubber company and the bank. The theory of appellants is, that the proof offered by them showed prima facie that the plaintiff did not become a purchaser of the notes by the discount, and that the plaintiff could only claim the benefit of an existing indebtedness by the rubber company, or the subsequent payment of the deposit, by proving it. The position is untenable. The rule deducible from the authorities on which the defense is based is accurately stated in 4 Am. & Eng. Ency of Law, (2d ed.) p. 298, as follows: “Where a bank discounts paper for a depositor who is not in its debt, and gives him credit upon its books for the proceeds of such paper, it is not a bona fide holder for value, so as to be protected against infirmities in the paper, unless, in -addition to the mere fact of crediting the depositor with the proceeds of the paper, some other and valuable consideration passes. Such a transaction simply creates the relation of debtor and creditor between the bank and the depositor, and so long as that relation continues and the deposit is not drawn out the bank is held subject to the equities of prior parties, even though the paper has been taken before maturity and without notice.” The plaintiff was in possession of the notes endorsed by the pasme and introduced them in evidence on the trial. That was sufficient prima facie proof that it acquired them bona fide for value, in the usual course of business, before maturity, and without notice of any fact or circumstance impeaching their validity, and that it was the owner of them and entitled to recover the full amount due thereon against the makers. On the introduction of the notes the plaintiff therefore properly rested its case. (Palmer v. Nassau Bank, 78 Ill. 380; Daniel on Neg. Inst. sec. 812.) Possession of the notes endorsed in blank by the payee was prima facie evidence that the bank was the proper owner of them, and nothing short of fraud,—not even gross negligence, if unattended with mala fldes,—would have been sufficient to overcome the effect of that evidence or to invalidate the title thus shown. (Collins v. Gilbert, 94 U. S. 753.) Both upon principle and authority the defendants could not overcome the prima facie case thus made by merely showing that the original transaction between the plaintiff and the payee did not, of itself, amount to a purchase of the notes. It will be seen that one of the requisites of the rule as quoted above is that the depositor is not in the bank’s debt at the time of the discount, and proof of that fact would therefore be necessary to bring a defense within its provisions. The defense here insisted upon has received careful consideration by the Supreme Court of the State of Kansas in the several cases above cited; and in Mann v. Second Nat. Bank, supra, it was held that mere evidence that, at the time when such an instrument was discounted by a bank, the" bank merely gave credit for the amount of the instrument to the person selling the same, who had an account with the bank, without showing the state of the account at that or at any other time, will not, of itself and alone, prove that the bank was not a purchaser for value, the court saying: “If we should assume that the bank did not pay the value of the note at the time it was discounted, but simply gave a credit to the Champion Machine Company therefor, still there would be nothing to show whether at that time the bank owed the Champion Machine Company or the machine company owed the bank. The machine company, for anything" that appears in the case, may have owed the bank more than §143 at the time the note was discounted, and if it did, the bank would have obtained the note unaffected by the equities existing between the antecedent parties of which it had no notice. (Draper v. Cowles, 27 Kan. 484.) And the Champion Machine Company may have continued to owe the bank ever since.” We think the defendants could not claim that the bank did not become a purchaser of the notes sued upon, without proving, not only that it took the notes upon a discount, crediting the payee with the amount as a deposit, but what the state of the account between the bank and the payee was at the time of the discount, and that the amount due on that deposit, if any, had not been drawn out prior to the trial, there being no claim that notice of the defenses set up in the special pleas came to the plaintiff prior to the trial. We do not think it can be said that the state of the account between the bank and the payee of the notes was a fact so peculiarly within the knowledge of the plaintiff that the burthen of proof should be cast upon it. The defendants, having the president of the bank on the witness stand, could have as readily proved by him the state of the account as they could just what was done at the time the bank g'ot the notes, by asking him to state the fact, or if it was necessary to prove the fact by the bank books, they had ample power by the process of the court to compel the production of them in court. The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.