Court Opinion

ID: 8175420
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:20:31.495298+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:55.873687
License: Public Domain

BraNNON, Judge:
I-Iazcltine, L. II. Keenan and Wilson together effected a sale to Patterson of some timber belonging to Caplinger, the price being $2.500, of which $2,000 was paid Caplinger by Patterson, and $500 was profit to Hazeltine, Keenan and Wilson, and for this balance Patterson made two promisary notes, one for $200, and one for $300, purporting to be negotiable, payable on their faces to “L. H. Keenan, attorney.” Before maturity of the notes L. H. Keenan transferred one of them to his father, by an endorsement reading, “Transferred the within note to Thomas G. Keenan, L. H. Keenan, Atty”; and the other he transferred to his brother by similar endorsement. Judgments were obtained on them in the names of indorsees against Patterson, and in two cases of Ward and Brown, trustees, v. Patterson, and Nalle v. Patterson, in Randolph, a joint decree was rendered subjecting property to the payment of Patterson’s debts. These judgments were decreed to be paid to said indorsees out of a fund in the hands of a trustee realized by a sale of Pattersons property under the decree. After this decree Hazeltine filed what is styled a petition in the case claiming that he was owner of one third of the debt represented by said notes, and that their transfer by L. H. Keenan to his father and brother was invalid and made to defraud said Hazeltine; that nothing was paid for such transfers, and at their date said endorsees well knew that the notes were not the property of L. H. Keenan, as their faces imported that they were the property of other parties and only executed to Keenan as attorney. The petition asked that Hazeltine be paid out of the fund in the nands of the trustee under the control of the court one third of said notes. A decree was made giving Hazeltine one third of the amount of said notes, and from it T. J. Keenan and T. G. Keenan appeal.
The right of Hazeltine to one third of the debt represented by the notes is clearly established by the evidence, as the circuit court found on the evidence. It is scarcely contested here. But appellants contended that they are bona fide holders for value of negotiable paper, and no matter if Hazeltine had an *602interest in tbc notes, it is not good against them.' The notes are payable to Keenan, as attorney, and so they were endorsed by him. Docs the word “attorney” detract from their negotiability? If it derogates from their currency or negotiability; if one buying them is by that word warned of rights of others, and is put on notice of their rights, and therefore cannot say he is a holder without notice of defect of right in the endorser, then the notes cannot be negotiable. In Third Nat. Bank v. Lange, 51 Md. 138, 34 Am. R. 304, a note payable to the order of one as “trustee” was held not negotiable. The Court said the. trustee restricted its free circulation. But whether negotiable or not, the authorities say that when the word “trustee”, “guardian” or any word suggesting rights in others is upon a note, it puts a purchaser on inquiry, and he purchases subject to the just rights of others, and docs not hold the place of an innocent purchaser. In the case just cited the court said: “In the case of the present note it cannot be read understandingly without seeing upon its face that it is-connected with a trust and is part of a trust fund. It was the duty of the bank before purchasing it to have made inquiry into the right of the trustee to dispose of it,” and quoted from Story’s Eq. section 400, “Whatever is sufficient to put a party on inquiry is in equity held to be good notice to bind him.” In Shaw v. Spencer, 100 Mass. 382, 1 Am. R. 115, a stock certificate was in the name of one as “trustee”. The court said: “The rules of law arc presumed to be known by all men; and they must govern themselves acordingly. The law holds that the insertion of the word Trustee’ after the name of stockholder does not indicate and give notice of a trust” “Express notice is not indispensable. There may be evidence of the infirmity of the paper apparent on its face, or such indications as put the purchaser on inquiry.” 1 Dan. Nego. Instm. section 795a. In section 271 that author says that the better opinion is that though a fiduciary may pass good title, if the transfer is in execution of the trust, yet if there is suffixed to the payees name “such words as Trustee’ etc. they put the indorsee upon inquiry as to the title, and if the transfer be in fraud of the trust, the indorsee must suffer the eonsequenses.”
The words, “Agt. Glass Buildings,” added to a signature to a check are enough to put one receiving it in payment on in*603quiry as to the signer’s authority to use the fund to pay his debt. Gerard v. McCormick, 14 L. R. A. 234. If the word “trustee” is on the face of the note, that compels the purchaser’s “ascertaining whether the trustee has power to .sell.” Bank v. Lowney, 99 Tenn. 278, 63 Am. St. R. 830. The word “trustee” is notice of a trust and calls for inquiry and examination. Marbury v. Ehlen, 72 Md. 206, 20 Am. St. R. 467, and note. An endorsement by “A, B, syndic” put the purchaser upon notice. Nicholson v. Chapman, 1 La. Ann. 222, cited in 2 Randolph, Commercial Paper, section 1010,1012, under the proposition that “where paper is held by a trustee or guardian, and this appears on its face, it will put the purchaser on inquiry as to the authority and title of such officer.” “The fact that the instrument on its face is made payable to a person in his fiduciary capacity is notice that the payee is acting in such capacity, and that he can only give title or deal with such instrument for the benefit of the person- whom he' represents.” Eat. & Gilb. on Commercial Paper, section 75 clause d, p 370. “Where a bill or note is endorsed by a person in an official capacity, as guardian, syndic, or trustee, the purchaser is put upon inquiry.” 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. L., 2nd ed., 305. An- attorney, at law or in fact is but an agent. Pie cannot sell his client’s paper, especially, as did the party in this case, for his own private use. 3 Am. Eng. Ene. L. 369. The party might collect from the debtor, but not sell. An objection is made to the decree because the petition was filed after final decree, too late to file a petition or a bill of review'. Of course, it is not a bill of review, as it is not filed by a party, and does not seek a reversal for lavr error or on new evidence. No matter what it calls itself. Wo look to its matter. The fund was in court: Is it possible that one claiming an interest in it could not petition the court to give it to him according to his right ? How else could he get it ? The fact that the fund was in court justifies what is usually termed a petition, because, it is an application to the court. In so far as the interests of the defendants are concerned, they were made parties, given right to defend, and we may call it an original bill to overthrow or modify their rights under the decree. If it v'ore to rehear, on the same matters, a stranger can come in by petition and ask a rehearing. Heermans v. Montague, (Va). *60420 S. E. 899. But as it is on matter not in the record I regard it a bill to affect the decree, an original bill to impeach or change a decree, and not too late.
As to the point that the decree does not fix out of which note Hazeltine should be paid. What has he to do with that? Both notes made one solid debt as to him, in which he. had an undivided share. He had right to payment out of the fund regardless of rights of appellants as between themselves. He did not have to settle their equities. Moreover, the endorsements of the two notes seem'contemporaneous.
I will add, as pertinent to what is said, a few lines back, as to the contention that a petition does not lie in this ease because the decree is final, that the fund is in court subject to its control. The design of Hazeltine is not to complain of the matters involved in the suit and the decree on them, but merely to vary the decree as to the disposition of that fund, and he intervenes only to say that he -has a share though decreed in the name of Keenan, and begs the court to vary the decree as to the disposition of that fund. The Virginia case cited above is ample authority to justify the petition; but I will add that Story’s Eq. sections 429, 430, allows a bill not only to enforce a decree already rendered, but to modify or vary it.
Keenan claims that Hazeltine agreed that tne latter’s share in this Patterson deal, so called in the case; should be applied to pay fees to Keenan as attorney in litigation of a firm called Hazeltine & Hall and, perhaps, some litigation of Hazeltine individually. In the first place, whilst Keenan so swears, Ilazle-tine swears to just the opposite, and the circuit court has passed its verdict on conflicting evidence, and we cannot overrule that verdict. In the second place, and this is very important, Keenan’s claims for such fees are of the most general, indefinite character. He files no specification to say what cases they were in which such fees arose; what cases were those of Iiazr cltine & Hall, what cases were those of Hazeltine alone, nor what were his fees in such cases, respectively. How can the court see whether Iiazeltine’s share in this case equals, is less, or greater than those fees ? True, Keenan swears that Hazeltine agreed to apply his share on these fees, and that fees would be still left unpaid; but this is a geueral, indefinite statement. In the third place Keenan wants to charge Hazeltine individually with fees against *605a firm. They would not be chargeable, as a set-ofE, without express agreement. The burden of proof for this is heavy on Keenan, and the evidence of man against man defeats it. It has-been suggested that without evidence the law itself gives Keenan a lien for those -attorney fees upon the fund. This lien cannot be supported. It cannot be what is called a charging lien, because the notes constituting the fund were not recovered in a suit by Keenan, and for this reason he has no charging lien. Fowler v. Lewis, 36 W. Va. 113. But it is claimed that Keenan has another kind of lien as attorney, that is, a retaining lien, to secure all and any attorney’s fees in any cases. To this a definite answer is given by Jones on Liens, section 128: “This lien is lost by the attorneys voluntary surrender of the papers to his client; for possession is indespensable to the lien. The lien is lost when the attorney has parted with the possession of the papers by his own act, even though this was a mistake on his part.” This retaining lien is like the common law lien discussed in Burough v. Ely, 54 W. Va. 118, of a sawyer on lumber saweil by him. The very life of the lien depends on the continued retention of the article, because the lien is in terms and nature a thing fastening itself on the very thing itself. In this case Keenan, by his own voluntary act, transferred these notes and, gave up possession of them.
Therefore, we affirm the decree of the circuit court. .

Affirmed,.