Court Opinion

ID: 6695939
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:50:43.889264+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:13.758612
License: Public Domain

APPEAL OP PLAINTIFF.
Walker, J.,
after stating tbe case: First exception. Tbe judge properly refused to submit tbe first and second issues tendered by plaintiffs, because they bad already been answered at a previous term. They merely related to tbe indebtedness of tbe Toxaway Hotel Company to plaintiffs and tbe fraudulent character of tbe notes, deed of tbe Hotel Company to Jacobs, and tbe latter’s deed of trust to tbe Wachovia Bank and Trust Company. Tbe two issues already answered could have been referred to in tbe argument of counsel to tbe jury, if desired, and we presume they exercised tbis right, and it appears from tbe case that tbe jury must have understood clearly tbe nature and bearing of those two issues and tbe answers thereto.
Second exception. Tbe court was correct in refusing to permit tbe reading of tbe original complaint to tbe jury, and tbe answer of tbe Toxaway Hotel Company thereto, as tbe issues raised thereby bad been decided. It allowed all plaintiffs were entitled to, viz., tbe reading of tbe interplea of tbe intervenors and plaintiffs’ reply thereto. Tbe court *474afterwards allowed tbe plaintiffs to read section 21 of tbeir complaint, not as evidence, but as merely showing tbe nature of tbe allegations and to inform tbe jury as to tbe 'character of tbe issues they were trying. This was quite sufficient for tbe plaintiffs’ purpose.
Third, fourth, fifth, and sixth exceptions. These exceptions fall under tbe same bead as tbe second. Tbe intervenor McMichael was permitted to read from tbe interplea and tbe reply thereto for tbe evident purpose of explaining tbe issues to tbe jury.
Seventh, eighth, and ninth exceptions. If McMichael knew tbe facts to which be testified, there is no reason why be should not have been allowed to state them. Tbe corporation of J. C. McMichael, Inc., was recognized and dealt with as such by tbe hotel company, indorser of tbe notes to it, and this is sufficient, with tbe other evidence, to show prima facie, at least, its incorporation and capacity to contract. R. R. v. Johnston, 70 N. C., 348; Dobson v. Simonton, 86 N. C., 492. In their reply to McMichael’.s intervention plaintiffs do not deny tbe allegation of the incorporation which appears therein, but rather admit it by “replying to the further answer of the said J. C. McMichael, Inc.,” and then proceeds to answer the other allegations. Besides, the objection to Mc-Miehael’s answer to the question is too general, as his testimony relates to several distinct matters, some of which, at least, he was competent to speak of.
Tenth exception. It was competent for the witness J. C. McMichael to state that the notes were accepted by him in good faith as a payment of a valid indebtedness then due by the hotel company to him. He conducted the transaction for the corporation and knew the fact. His good faith had been impeached, and when this is the case, it has been held that he may speak' of it to the extent of saying whether or not he acted fraudulently or in bad faith, or not. Phifer v. Erwin, 100 N. C., 59, and Sanford v. Eubanks, 152 N. C., 697, citing 1 Wharton on Ev., sec. 482, and S. v. King, 86 N. C., 603. In the last case Chief Justice Smith said that when one is charged with a bad motive or intent, it is competent for him to disavow it and to deny the specific intent which it is alleged vitiates the transaction or shows his criminality, and to this effect is Phifer v. Erwin, supra, where the intent charged was a fraudulent or dishonest one, involving bad faith. As McMichael acted for the corporation, its intent could only be shown or disproved by his intent. It could not act very well, either honestly or dishonestly, except through • its officers. McMichael was virtually the corporation and the corporation was McMichael. It could think, speak, and act only through him. It was a distinct legal entity, but he was the intermediary through whom its dealings were conducted with others.
*475Exception eleven. The question here presented is whether there was any evidence that the notes were indorsed by the hotel company. There was an indorsement on the note purporting to have been signed by the company. Ve think there was some evidence of its genuineness. It is true, we said in Tyson v. Joyner, 139 N. C., 69, that an indorsement does not prove itself, but requires some outside or extraneous evidence to show the handwriting of the alleged indorser, but this appears in this case by the testimony of Thomas II. Shipman and J. C. McMichael, and there were facts and circumstances which tended to prove it.
Exception twelve. The court sufficiently instructed the jury as to the burden of proof being upon the intervenors, and substantially complied with the request for instructions on that point. The charge was confined to the rule as stated in the 'statute, Eevisal, see. 2208, and as construed in Bank v. Fountain, 148 N. C., 590, and Bank v. Branson, 165 N. C., 344, and numerous cases therein cited.
Exceptions thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, and twenty. Of these, exception thirteen refers to Frank & Co. and is not available to plaintiffs on this appeal. Besides, they recovered as to him. Exceptions nineteen and twenty are merely formal, being addressed to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict, and we will hereinafter consider the one to the judgment entered t'hereon. The remaining exceptions relate to the charge upon the question as to knowledge of the fraud by McMichael and his bad faith in acquiring the notes. Our statute provides (Eevisal, ch. 54, sec. 2205): “To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.”
In this case when here on a former appeal (162 N. C., 346), Justice Hoke traces the changes in the rule which disqualified one to claim as innocent purchaser or holder in due course; the repudiation by the courts of Lord Tenterderis “due care and caution” rule, and the substitution of the more definite and safer principle introduced by Lord Denman, requiring actual knowledge of the fraud or defect, or of such facts as would make the act of acquiring the note amount to one of bad faith. The two rules are contrasted in Hamilton v. Vought, 34 N. J. L., 187, and it was shown that decided preference and sanction has been given by the courts to the later and more modern rule of Lord Denman, which has been incorporated into our statute.
We have examined the charge of the court in this case, and while it might have been a little more explicit and kept in closer touch with the language and spirit of our law, it was sufficiently definite and clear to fully inform the jury, without danger of misleading them, as to what the *476intervenors must show in order to establish their claim of being holders in due course, and as to what would constitute actual knowledge of the fraud or defect in the execution of the notes, deed, and deed of trust, or, if there was no such actual knowledge, then what would constitute bad faith on their part in the transaction.
The case has been fairly tried upon its merits. We really can discern no clear indication of a fraudulent knowledge or of bad faith, so far as McMichael is concerned. The corporation appears to have had an honest and valid claim against the hotel company, for which the note was fairly and in good faith transferred to if. But the court left the matter to the jury, and they have settled it against the plaintiffs, and we think justly so. The transaction, so far as we can see, bears the impress of fair dealing. We find no badge of dishonesty, even placing the burden upon the intervenor to acquit itself of the charge of fraud and bad faith. Chief Justice Beasley said in Hamilton v. Vought, 34 N. J. L., 187, that under Lord Tenterdens rule every case possessed of unusual incidents would, of necessity, pass under the uncontrolled discretion of tlie jury — a mere incident of the transaction, from which any suspicion could arise, being sufficient to take the case out of the control of the court, and, therefore, there was left no judicial standard by which suspicious circumstances could be measured before committing them to the jury. It is precisely this want which the modern rule supplies. He then says: “When mala fides is the point of inquiry, suspicious circumstances must be of a substantial character, and if such circumstances do not appear, the court can arrest the inquiry. Under the former practice, circumstances of slight suspicion would take the case to the jury; under the present rule, the circumstances must be strong, so that bad faith can be reasonably inferred.” There certainly are no facts here which will stand the test of this mor© drastic rule. There are no strong circumstances of ■suspicion, but all we find are weak and inconclusive.
There is one more question requiring our notice. The amount secured by the deed of trust executed by R. A. Jacobs to the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company was originally $7,000. One of the $500 notes was paid by Jacobs, leaving $6,500 still secured. Of the remaining notes, thirteen in all, McMichael held four, Frank & Oo. four, or eight in all, leaving five, aggregating $2,500, still outstanding; but these notes, it appears, were never issued or put in circulation, as no one has presented or ■claimed them. It follows, therefore, that the only notes secured were those of McMichael and Frank & Oo. The trustee realized $4,500 from the sale of the property, and that amount is in his hands for distribution to the secured note-holders, after, we presume, first paying costs and expenses. At any rate, there are ample funds to pay McMichael and to leave a considerable balance.
*477Plaintiffs, wbo brought this suit to set aside and cancel the deed, notes, and deed of trust, and failed as to McMichael, and levied a writ of attachment on the property, now insist that, as the notes held by Frank & Co. were avoided for the fraud of which he had notice, they should be subrogated to the right he would have had in the distribution of the fund if he had succeeded in establishing and retaining his claim against their attack. They, therefore, assert the right to share pro rata with McMichael in the distribution of the assets; but this is far from being the law. PlainTiffs cite and rely on Hancock v. Wooten, 107 N. C., 9. That suit was treated as a judgment creditor’s bill, and the Court held that it was in the nature of an equitable fi. fa., having the force and effect of an equitable levy upon the assets of the debtor, by virtue of which the vigilant creditor acquires a priority as he would when he pursues the analogous remedy at law. The creditor is not, under our present system, required to obtain judgment before proceeding in equity, so. to speak (Bank v. Harris, 84 N. C., 206) ; but notwithstanding this change, the same principle governs which formerly prevailed in regard to the priority of his claim. Hancock v. Wooten, supra, and cases cited at p. 20. It is an eminently just rule, when clearly understood and confined to its proper limits, for it would seem unjust that the creditor who has incurred all the risk and expense of bringing his suit to a successful termination should, in the end, be obliged to divide the avails thereof with those who have slept upon their rights, or have intentionally kept back, that they might profit by his exertion. Edmeston v. Lyde, 1 Paige (N. Y.), 637; McDermitt v. String, 4 Johns. Ch., 691 (per Chancellor Kent). The rule is not applicable to a general creditor’s bill. Rut we have a very different case here. In Hancock v. Wooten the creditor who made common cause with the trustee in resisting the attack upon the deed of trust utterly failed to make good his defense, and was compelled to surrender, because the deed was found to be fraudulent and void as against creditors, and it was so adjudged. lie was not allowed “to blow hot and cold,” and was postponed until the attacking creditors were satisfied, as a just reward for their diligence and as a punishment to him for his false clamor and his wrongful resistance. But McMichael stands upon much higher ground than he did. He has succeeded in sustaining the deed of trust, so far as it secures him, against the attack of the plaintiffs. Why, then,' should he lose his prior lien upon the funds ? It is expressly given in the deed of trust, which provides that if the indebtedness of Jacobs, or any part thereof, is not paid, the trustee shall sell the property and apply the proceeds to the same, that is, to what is then due. There was no application of any particular part of the property to each of the notes, but each and every note was made a lien upon all of the property. If Jacobs had paid the other notes, would it not have inured to McMichael’s benefit and *478entitled him to full payment, although, he would have received less- if they had not been paid ? Surely, this would be the ease; and by retiring Frank & Co. from the distribution a like result must follow. But the question has been settled by authority. 20 Cyc., p. 827, says: “Creditors who attack a conveyance executed by a debtor to secure certain other creditors, and succeed in establishing the fictitious or fraudulent character of some of the claims so secured, are not thereby advanced to the place of the excluded claimants so as to take priority over the bona fide creditors named in such conveyance; but such bona fide creditors are entitled, not only to the pro rata share which would have gone to them respectively if all the claims had been valid, but to their shares of the whole of the property conveyed, up to the full amount of their respective claims.” The cases cited for this principle fully support the text. Woodson v. Carson, 135 Mo., 521 (s. c., 35 S. W., 1005, and 37 S. W., 197); Tefft v. Stern, 73 Fed. Rep., 591 (21 C. C. A., 67, decided by Judges Hammond, Severens, and Barr); Farmers National Bank v. Teeter, 31 Ohio St., 36. And, again, says 20 Cyc., at p. 822: “Where a conveyance is fraudulent as against creditors, and certain creditors attack and defeat it upon that ground,, another creditor is not by that fact required to treat it as void, but may still ratify it and enforce rights given him thereunder.” And to the same effect is German National Bank v. Leonard, 40 Neb., 676. In Hardcastle v. Fisher, 24 Mo., 75, Justice Leonard forcefully and tersely thus states the rule: “The attaching creditor, however, cannot be allowed to stand in the place of the excluded claimant, and take his share of the fund. There is no legal principle uj)on which we can allow this. The impeached claim is extinguished by the fraud, so far as any participation in the assigned effects is concerned; and the effect of this in reference to the other creditors is that the share that would otherwise have been appropriated to its payment sinks into the residue for the benefit of those who are entitled to it by the terms of the deed.” Another strong authority is Cohen v. Ward, 15 S. E. (W. Va.), 141. Many other cases might be cited which recognize and apply the same doctrine, but those we have mentioned would seem to suffice.
There is no merit in the objection as to the lost notes. They were produced at the former trial and afterwards lost by the clerk of the court, and it was competent to refer to them.
The case is a very important one, with respect to the amount as well as to the principle involved, and we have given it a most careful examination and have been unable to discover that any error was committed by the court below in this appeal.
No error.