First National Bank v. Lovell H. Turnbull Co.
First National Bank v. Lovell H. Turnbull Co.
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, a corporation dealing in produce at Detroit,, dip. considerable busines^’in buying produce in.California in 1926. The recordestab *296 lishes, as found by the trial judge in a trial without a jury, that its purchasing agent in California was one G. E. Mathews. On December 13,1926, Mathews bought for defendant of Esposito and Durnil, dealers at Los Angeles, two cars of lettuce at $595 each. On that day, at Los Angeles, Esposito and Durnil drew two sight drafts for $595 each upon defendant at Detroit, payable to plaintiff, the First National Bank of Los Angeles. Across the face of each draft Mathews wrote “Accepted by G. E. Mathews.”
The drawers deposited the drafts so accepted with plaintiff bank and received credit on account, which they promptly withdrew by check to the full amount of the account and more.
The drafts were presented, refused, and protested. Upon previous purchases from Esposito and Durnil by Mathews for defendant, some 10 or 12 drafts had been drawn in the same manner by and between same parties payable to plaintiff, and had been accepted by Mathews, as in this case, and all of such drafts had been deposited in plaintiff bank and credit given, as here, and they had been duly honored and paid by defendant; this is established by the record. In this suit on the drafts, plaintiff had judgment. Defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff holds for value. By its conduct and course of dealing, above related, defendant is estopped to say that it did not accept the drafts in suit, estopped to urge insufficiency in respect of acceptance. 1 Joyce, Defenses to Commercial Paper (2d Ed.), § 158; 2 C. J. p. 463; Pettinger v. Alpena Cedar Co., 175 Mich. 162; Armstrong v. American Exchange Nat’l Bank, 133 U. S. 433 (10 Sup. Ct. 450).
Plaintiff, payee in the drafts, took, not as promisee (Sweet v. Swift, 65 Mich. 90), but as purchaser, *297 and, therefore, as against objection urged, is a holder in due course. 8 C. J. p. 469; Note 29 Michigan Law Review, p. 625; Note 36 Yale Law Journal, p. 608; Bronson v. Stetson, 252 Mich. 6.
No other question calls for discussion.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- First National Bank of Los Angeles v. Lovell H. Turnbull Co.
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