Hawkes v. Bowles
Hawkes v. Bowles
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Hawkes answered tbe bill and admitted tbat she signed tbe note of $600 held by tbe plaintiff; tbat it was payable to her own order one year after date at the Cburcb Hill Bank, Richmond, Virginia; tbat it was secured by a deed of trust to Howard Simpson, trustee; and she then alleges tbat tbe note was obtained from ber by the fraud of one D. D. Steele, from whom tbe complainant claims to have gotten it; tbat in 1911 respondent desired to have a bouse completed upon her property in Henrico county, and about tbat time she met Steele, who was an ex-convict, but tbat fact was unknown to respondent; tbat be represented to her tbat be was a carpenter and contractor and stated tbat be could do tbe work she desired done for
Upon the issues thus made evidence was taken, and the case coming on to be heard before the circuit court, a decree was rendered in favor of Bowles for the sum of $600, with interest, and directing that unless the note was paid by the defendant within sixty days from the date of the decree, the land should be sold by W. E. Sullivan and M. J. Fulton, trustees appointed for that purpose. To this decree an appeal was allowed.
To maintain the issue upon his part J. R. Bowles was sworn as a witness, whereupon counsel for the defendant objected to any testimony given by him, upon the ground that D. D. Steele, from whom Bowles obtained the note, is a convict in the penitentiary, and therefore Bowles was not a competent witness. This exception was overruled by the circuit court and constitutes the first assignment of error.
Section 3346 of the Code provides, among other things, that “Where one of the original parties to the contract or other transaction, which is the subject of the investigation, is incapable of testifying by reason of death, insanity, infancy, or other legal cause, the other party to such contract or transaction shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor or in favor of any other person whose interest is adverse to that of the party so incapable of testifying, unless he be first called to testify in behalf of such last mentioned party; or unless some person, having an interest in or under such contract or transaction, derived from the party so incapable of testifying, has testified in behalf of ■the latter or of himself as to such contract or transac
The original parties to the contract or other transaction, in this case, were Mrs. Hawkes and D. D. Steele. D. D. Steele is a convict in the penitentiary, and Mrs. Hawkes, the other party to the transaction, was permitted to testify without objection as to her competency, and her deposition appears in the record in this case.
An authority in point is the case of Grigsby v. Simpson, Assignee, 28 Gratt. (69 Va.) 348. In that case Grigsby and several others executed a bond to Alfred Moss. Moss assigned the bond to Simpson and died. Simpson brought suit and the obligors' undertook to prove that the bond was given for an usurious consideration. Their evidence was objected to and excluded. The court said: “The two witnesses offered in this case were two of the obligors: Moss, the obligee, was dead. The contract which was the subject of investigation in this case, was the bond executed by these two witnesses with three other obligors, payable to Moss, the obligee. Moss was one of the original parties to the contract and he was dead. Certainly the case comes within the precise terms of the statute, and upon its literal interpretation these witnesses must be excluded, because one of the original parties to the contract made by and with them (Moss, the obligee) is now dead.”
Moss occupied the same relation to that case that Steele does to this. One was disqualified by death and the other by confinement in the penitentiary, with the result that the obligors, standing in a position similar to that of Mrs. Hawkes, were disqualified as wit
Coming to the evidence as to the execution of the note, we find that Mrs. Hawkes contracted with Steele, a colored carpenter, to furnish certain material and do certain work toward the completion of a dwelling house upon an acre of land attached thereto, in the county of Henrico, for which she agreed to pay Steele the sum of $600. Not having the ready money to pay for the material and work, on April 4, 1911, she drew and signed her negotiable note for $600, making the same payable to her own order at the Church Hill Bank in Richmond, Virginia, and then as payee endorsed her name on the back of the note. At the same time she executed a deed of trust upon the three-story building and acre of land to secure the payment of the note, and then delivered the note and deed of trust to Steele for the purpose of raising the money with which to buy the building material and pay for the carpenter’s work. James C. Page, an attorney, testifies, among, other things, that in March, 1911, Steele came to his office and stated that Mrs. Hawkes wanted him to complete the house she was building, and he wanted Page to see Mrs. Hawkes with reference to preparing the deed of trust and note; that Page went with Steele and saw the incomplete house and the lot on which she wished to give the deed of trust; that Mrs. Hawkes was not at home at that time, but a few days afterward she came with Steele to his office and requested him to prepare the deed of trust and note, and to write a contract setting out the specifications and the material to be used in completing the building, which he did, and she signed the deed and note in his presence. Page further testifies that the note was delivered by Mrs. Hawkes to
It seems that Steele inquired of Page if he knew where the note could be negotiated, and Page suggested that Bowles might take it as it was well secured; that Steele took the note to Bowles, who examined it and the deed of trust, and Bowles learning from Steele that Page had written the note and deed of trust in his office for Mrs. Hawkes, before buying the note called up Page and asked him if the note and deed of trust were all right, and Page assured him that they were.
The evidence shows that Bowles bought the note of Steele and paid for it as follows: A cheek of April 15 for $150, another of the same date for $100, and one of April 19 for $50, making a total of $300. The other $300 was paid by Bowles to Steele by selling and conveying to Steele in April, 1911, a farm in Caroline county for $1,200 and crediting $300 of the purchase price of the note on the $1,200, taking a deed of trust on the farm to secure the payment of the balance due Bowles for the farm. Other transactions are referred to in the evidence which do not seem to have any material bearing upon the question of how Bowles acquired title to the $600 note. _
The note in question in. this case seems to conform to all the requirements of the negotiable instruments act. It was duly delivered, and appelle, Bowles, stands as a holder in due course. Everything with respect to the execution and negotiation of the note is perfectly regular, and whatever fraud, if any, was perpetrated upon Mrs. Hawkes occurred after the nego
We have been unable to discover such evidence in the record, and upon the whole case we are of opinion that the decree of the circuit court/must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- 1. Witnesses—Competency—Holder of Negotiable Note—Incompetency of Party Under Section 3846 of Code.—In an action against the maker of a negotiable note by a holder in due course, who was not a party to the note or the transaction which furnished the consideration therefor, such holder is not incompetent to testify as a witness under section 3346 of the Code, because of the incompetency of one or more of the parties to such note. 2. Bills and Notes—Holder in Due Course—-Bight of Recovery—Case at Bar.—The plaintiff, in the case at bar, is a holder in due course of the negotiable note sued on, which is in all respects regular, and there is no sufficient evidence of knowledge brought home to him, of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same to affect his right' of recovery thereon. Whatever fraud, if any, was perpetrated on the maker of the note, was perpetrated after it was negotiated to the plaintiff.