Farmers & Mechanics Bank v. Whitehead
Farmers & Mechanics Bank v. Whitehead
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
'The plaintiff sued the defendants upon a note for $1,000 which the defendants had executed to Bauhard Bros., of Indiana, and which the plaintiff claimed to be the purchasers bona fide■ in due course of business; before maturity and for value. ' The defendant's alleged that the plaintiff did not buy the note in good faith, in due course, before maturity and for válúe; tha't the plaintiff did not have légal title' to thé note; that the'plaintiff took the note with'notice of defenses to it; that the note was made to the payees upon representa *103 tions which proved to be false; that one of the makers, Daniel by name, had a secret agreement with the payees, but for which he would not have signed, and that such agreement was concealed from the other makers, and they were thereby induced to sign. One witness was sworn for each side, and the Court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, but limited the interest to 6 per cent, from the date of the note to the date of the recovery, and left it to the jury to say how much the attorney’s fees should be. On these last two directions the plaintiff has appealed, while from the general directions for the plaintiff the defendants have appealed.
The defendants have made 19 exceptions. They occupy more space than the testimony; they are verbose and tautological to a hurtful degree. We shall not consider the exceptions by name, or in order, but we shall compass the real issues made by the appeal. '
Each of the counsel for the appellants has argued but three questions, and they are the same questions. They are these: (1) Was the bank bound to prove the genuineness of the payee’s signature on the back of the note; (2) were the defendants entitled to prove fraud in the inception of the note, and would the proof of fraud invalidate the note in the hands of a bona fide purchaser; (3) if Ragsdale, president of the bank, had notice of a defect in the note, is such notice chargeable to the bank ? ■
*105 2. The defendants alleged fraud in the inception of the paper, and stated to the Court they were prepared to offer proof of it. The Court said:
“It is useless to offer any testimony as to fraud as to that note. The- only thing you can offer testimony at this time is that it was not acquired bona fide before maturity by the holder.”
“The only thing you (the defendants) can offer testimony (on) at this time is that it was not acquired bona fide before maturity by the holder.”
The defendants were bound to indicate to the Court what facts and circumstances rendered uncertain the bona fides of the plaintiff.
3. The defendants’ third ground for a reversal is unsound. The authorities they quote sustain the Circuit Court in holding that when the president of the bank, acting for himself, discounted the note at his bank, if the bank acted in good faith, then Ragsdale’s knowledge of a defect in the paper was not imputable to the bank. More than this, there was no testimony that Ragsdale, had any notice of a defect in the note.
*107 “You will note that the note bears annual interest at 6 per cent, from maturity. Just allow 6 per cent, annual 'interest. It is neither compound nor simple interest. It bears 6 per cent, from maturity until today. I don’t think counsel is right in his interpretation of the note when he wanted 7 per cent, after the first year. You will allow interest at'6 per cent, after the note matures.”
The note is dated January 21, 1908; was made payable January 21, 1911, “with 6 per cent, per annum payable annually.” The interest became payable January 21, 1909, 1910, and 1911; the principal became payable January 21, 1911; the entire debt was then due and payable on that day. Thereafter there was no contract rate for interest, and the law prescribed the rate at 7 per cent. We think no other conclusion can be reached from a plain reading of the words, of the paper. No authority needs to be cited when a proposition i's plain.
Our judgment is that the judgment below is affirmed, save in the matter of interest last indicated, as to that it is modified.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Farmers and Mechanics Bank of Florence v. Whitehead Et Al.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Bills and Notes — Actions — Presumption — Execution — Indorsement. — Where negotiable paper is taken by a bank before maturity in the usual course of business, it is warranted in assuming that the payee’s and indorsers’ signatures are genuine. 2. Bills and Notes —Bona Fide Purchaser — Defenses — Forgery— Who May Raise. — A defendant maker cannot object that the payee’s indorsement to plaintiff holder was forged, where the payee does not raise the point. 3. Principal and Agent — Actions — Presumptions — Authority.— Where a third party had possession of a note the day it was made, and received a part payment upon it, he presumably had authority from the payee to indorse it. 4. Bills and Notes — Actions — Admissibility op Evidence — Fraud.— Where plaintiff had proved himself to be a holder in good faith of the note sued upon, there was no error in excluding testimony of fraud in its inception. 5. Appeal and Error- — -Reserving Grounds for Review- — -Necessity op Presenting Question Below.- — Questions not raised below are not subject to review. 6. Appeal and Error — Exceptions—Necessity.—Questions not embodied in the exceptions are not subject to review. 7. Trial — Offer of Evidence. — Where the Court excluded testimony of fraud in the note’s inception until evidence was offered that plaintiff was not a bona ¡Me holder, held that defendant should hav.e then indicated what circumstances rendered plaintiff’s good faith uncertain. 8. Bills and Notes — Validity—Attorney’s Fees. — A stipulation in a note for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees is not conclusive as to the amount due for such services. 9. Bills and Notes- — -Actions — Jury Question — Reasonable Attorney’s Fee. — In an action at law upon a note, the amount of a reasonable attorney’s fee is a jury question. 10. Interest — Rate After Maturity. — A note bearing six per cent, interest, payable annually, bears the legal rate of 7 per cent, after maturity.