Dolph v. Stubblefield

This suit was brought under the Speedy Judgment Act applicable to the City of Baltimore by the appellee, the endorsee or holder, against the maker, of the following promissory notes:

"1,000. Baltimore, Md., November 24, 1916.

"Four months after date I promise to pay to the order of myself one thousand dollars at Baltimore, Md., with interest at 6 per cent. from date. Value received.

"Fred A. Dolph, "Calvert Building, "Baltimore, Md."

Endorsed: "Fred A. Dolph,

"For value received we hereby jointly and severally guarantee the payment of the within mentioned note; and also hereby jointly and severally waive demand, protest and notice of non-payment hereof.

"Wm. J. Murphy, "Anna C. Murphy, "Wm. Bevan, "Susie R. Bevan, "Herman A. Rehling, "Louisa Rehling, "H.T. Weber, "James F. Davis, "H.S. Robinson, "________________ "T.W. Stubblefield."

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"1,000. Baltimore, Md., November 24, 1916.

"Four months after date I promise to pay to the order of myself one thousand dollars at Baltimore, Md., with interest at 6 per cent. from date. Value received.

"Fred A. Dolph, "Calvert Building, "Baltimore, Md."

Endorsed: "Fred A. Dolph,

"For value received we hereby jointly and severally guarantee the payment of the within mentioned note; and also hereby jointly and severally waive demand, protest and notice of non-payment hereof.

"Wm. J. Murphy, "Anna C. Murphy, "Wm. Bevan, "Susie R. Bevan, "Herman A. Rehling, "Louisa Rehling, "H.T. Weber, "James F. Davis, "H.S. Robinson, "________________ "T.W. Stubblefield."

The declaration contained the common counts in assumpsit and a special count on each of the notes. The defendant filed the general issue plea, and in his affidavit thereto admitted that $1,344.00 of the claim was due and owing, and stated that $656.00 was disputed. Judgment was entered for the amount admitted to be due by the plea, and issue was joined as to the amount disputed. Thereafter the defendant by leave of Court filed the following additional plea, on which issue was joined:

"That on the 24th day of November, 1916, defendant sent to plaintiff two notes of one thousand dollars each, with the understanding that said notes were to be discounted by plaintiff; that plaintiff gave to defendant only thirteen hundred dollars, and refused to *Page 150 pay more; that defendant then tendered to plaintiff the entire sum advanced, with interest, and demanded the return of notes, which plaintiff refused; and that the amount disputed in this case is usurious interest demanded on said loan and retained by plaintiff from the amount of said notes."

The trial of the case resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $780.89, from which this appeal was taken.

The plaintiff, Thomas W. Stubblefield, testified that he was the holder of the two notes, and the notes were offered in evidence. Harry S. Robinson, a witness for the defendant, then testified that he endorsed the notes and disposed of them to the plaintiff under the following agreements:

"For and in consideration of the sum of eight hundred dollars ($800.00) I hereby agree to sell to Thomas W. Stubblefield one certain promissory note for $1,000 made at Baltimore, Maryland, dated November 24, 1916, signed by Fred A. Dolph (as myself), endorsed by said Fred A. Dolph and said note endorsed and guaranteed by the following parties: Wm. J. Murphy, Anna C. Murphy, Wm. Bevan, Susie R. Bevan, Herman A. Rehling, Louisa Rehling, H.T. Weber and James F. Davis. Out of said $800 the sum of $600 to be paid to me immediately upon the execution and delivery of this agreement, the remaining $200 is to be held by the said Thomas W. Stubblefield until the said note is paid in full. Should the said Thomas W. Stubblefield have to enter suit or have to pay attorneys' fees or other costs for the collection of said note in that event I waive all right in and to the said $200. If said note is paid in full at maturity the said $200 held by the said Stubblefield is to be paid to me. (This $200 has no reference to the $200 which I allow the said Stubblefield off of said $1,000 note.) I further certify that I am the owner and holder of said note and that same was given to me for salary indebtedness due to me by the parties to same.

"Witness my hand and seal this 13th day of December, A.D. 1916.

H.S. Robinson"

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"In the presence of: "G.A. Street.

"Agreed to: "T.W. Stubblefield, "Room 210 Colorado Building, "Washington, D.C."

"For and in consideration of the sum of eight hundred dollars ($800.00) I hereby agree to sell to Thomas W. Stubblefield one certain promissory note for $1,000 made at Baltimore, Maryland, dated November 24, 1916, signed by Fred A. Dolph (as myself), endorsed by said Fred A. Dolph, and said note endorsed and guaranteed by the following parties: Wm. J. Murphy, Anna C. Murphy, Wm. Bevan, Susie R. Bevan, Herman A. Rehling, Louise Rehling, H.T. Weber and James F. Davis. Out of said $800 the sum of $700 to be paid to me immediately upon the execution and delivery of this agreement, the remaining $100 is to be held by the said Thomas W. Stubblefield until the said note is paid in full. Should the said Thomas W. Stubblefield have to enter suit or have to pay attorneys' fees or other costs for the collection of said note, in that event I waive all right in and to the said $100. If said note is paid in full at maturity the said $100 held by the said Stubblefield is to be paid to me. (This $100 has no reference to the $200 which I allow the said Stubblefield off of said $1,000 note.) I further certify that I am the owner and holder of said note and that same was given to me for salary indebtedness due to me by the parties to same.

"Witness my hand and seal this 16th day of December, A.D. 1916. "H.S. Robinson.

"In the presence of: "C.H. Neely.

"Agreed to: "T.W. Stubblefield, "Room 210 Colorado Building, "Washington, D.C."

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When asked by counsel for defendant if Mr. Bracey's name was mentioned in the transaction, the witness replied: "I remember now that it was because Mr. Bracey's name was mentioned because Howie Mining Company's name was mentioned and I further remember when I left Mr. Stubblefield I told him that the $300.00 that was left sort of in escrow he was to pay to Mr. Bracey and he said he didn't know Mr. Bracey in the transaction and I would have to give Mr. Bracey an order on him for the money. I remember that now. When I was testifying the other day I didn't recall that. It has been two years ago." He further stated: "That was to go to Mr. Bracey provided the notes were paid at maturity; and the $300.00 was to stand for the expenses of a suit. * * * I don't recall what was said about him (Mr. Bracey) further than that the money was to go to him — this $300.00 that was put up in escrow we will call it was to go to Mr. Bracey if the notes were paid at maturity. * * * I offered one of these notes first. In that note I was to take out what was coming to me and in two or three days I went back with the other note and asked Mr. Stubblefield if he would take that on the same basis, and he agreed to take that on the same basis, excepting he would only require $100.00 more for escrow we will call it, making $300.00 in all for the two notes, and I signed the second agreement. * * * That the purpose of drawing these agreements was to show where the $300.00 — $200.00 in one note and $100.00 in the other note — were to be paid and why that was held out. I felt as if I was the owner of the first note. The second note I was not the owner of all of it. In a sense I was not the owner of either one. * * * I said here I was the owner of the first and I considered I was the owner because there was $750.00 due me and after deducting the discount according to Mr. Stubblefield's requirement it left only $600.00. So I felt I was justified in claiming that I owned that note." When asked if he told the plaintiff that Mr. Bracey owned the note, he replied: "I don't think there was any question that he knew that Mr. *Page 153 Bracey was the owner of the notes, but the first note I claimed I had so much in it was practically my note. Mr. Stubblefield explained to me that he only bought notes in the District of Columbia as under the law he could not loan money and he could only purchase them." He was asked by counsel for the defendant what discussion between him and the plaintiff brought about the execution of the agreement, and whether when he went in the plaintiff's office the plaintiff "pulled the agreement on him the first time," and the witness replied: "No, these were written up in his office. * * * The purpose of these two agreements was the disposition of the escrow money. There was no question about that." He said he read the agreement himself, and when asked if he, witness, said anything about the sale of the paper when he read the agreement, he said: "No, that was all agreed to beforehand, everything was agreed to. I took it for granted that Mr. Stubblefield put that in there to meet the laws of Washington. If Mr. Stubblefield had asked me the question as to the first note whether that note belonged to me I would have said yes." When asked if a good deal was not said when he went to see Mr. Stubblefield about disposing of the notes he replied: "I don't know that there was much said. It was a business proposition, and he said what he would do after looking them up." This witness further testified as follows: "Q. Was any statement made as to the guarantors of the note being stockholders of the Bracey Company? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that therefore they were interested in it? A. Mr. Stubblefield asked why they had signed it. Q. What did you tell him? A. I told him that they signed it because they were stockholders of the Howie Mining Company. Q. Did you tell him where you got the note? A. Yes. Q. Did you tell him who gave you the note? A. Yes. Q. Who was it? A. Mr. Bracey. Q. And you told him of the connection Mr. Bracey had with the Howie Mining Company? A. I don't remember absolutely telling him that, but I feel sure that I did. Mr. Stubblefield knew Mr. Bracey's connection of course. Q. With what? A. The Howie Mining Company. Q. And with the *Page 154 guarantors? A. Yes. Q. And knew where you got the note? A. Yes. Q. And did you tell him what you got the note for? A. For my account. Q. You took your account out, and what were you to get the balance for? A. I don't know that we went into all that detail. I handed him over the note and he looked it over and asked me the questions, and finally said what he would do. * * * I told him after the second note the balance was to Mr. Bracey of course." On cross-examination he testified that he did not remember telling the plaintiff that he was not the owner of the note. When asked if he did not hold himself out as the owner of the note as stated in the paper signed December 13th, 1916, he replied: "That is my signature. I don't dispute my signature, and I read it over. Owing to the fact that so much of the note belonged to me I felt that if that had been Mr. Stubblefield's impression I didn't think it of importance enough to correct it." When asked: "You treated it as your note between you and Mr. Stubblefield?" He replied: "I didn't at that time. I wasn't under the impression that that point made a bit of difference whether the note was mine or wasn't mine. When that was put in the agreement that I was the owner and holder of the note I didn't weigh the actual importance of that at that time, and never thinking there would be any point made on that end of it I felt I was justified in not disputing or making any point on that, being all the proceeds of the note came to me outside of what Mr. Stubblefield took out of it. * * * He (Mr. Bracey) gave me the note being he owed me the money and I was anxious to get it and was going to make the best deal I could with it and he gave me the second note with the same authority and there was no question but what Mr. Bracey understood when he asked me to get the paper discounted for when I was in his employ that was partly my business to negotiate mortgages when he handed me the papers in the same way except that when I went to Mr. Stubblefield I felt that being as this note was more than mine, that is about $150.00 more due on it, that when Mr. Stubblefield brought the point out I didn't dispute it. I considered I was *Page 155 justified in that and that is as far as I can remember the facts." He further testified as follows: "Q. You had the same full authority to handle the second note that you had in the case of the first note, had you? A. Yes. Q. To make the best bargain or the best terms you could? A. Yes. Q. And to sell the notes for the best price you could obtain for them? A. That word sell was not brought up, Mr. Bracey just handed it over to me as he had lots of other papers when I was in his employ and said go ahead and he always told me to treat everything he gave me as though I was acting for myself," and in answer to a further question he said that he "went there (to plaintiff's office) for the purpose of getting as much money for the note as he could."

Mr. Bracey testified that the notes belonged to him, and that he gave them to Mr. Robinson to get them discounted.

During the trial the defendant reserved two exceptions to the evidence. The plaintiff having testified that he was the holder of the notes, and the notes having been offered in evidence, the defendant asked him on cross-examination how much he paid Mr. Robinson for the notes, and the first exception was to the refusal of the Court below to permit the question to be asked and answered. The precise question presented by this exception was disposed of in Murphy v. Stubblefield, 133 Md. 23, where we held that the cross-examination of a witness should be confined to matters brought out in the direct examination.

The second exception is to the refusal of the Court to permit the defendant to ask his witness Robinson for whom he was "borrowing" from the plaintiff. The important question in the case was whether the transaction between the witness and the plaintiff was a loan of money on the notes in suit or a sale of the notes, and the question was clearly objectionable on the ground that it was leading. But both Mr. Robinson and Mr. Bracey testified that the notes were given to Mr. Robinson to have them discounted, and if the question had been free from objection, the refusal of the Court to permit it to be asked could not have amounted to a reversible error. *Page 156

The only other exception in the case is to the ruling of the Court on the prayers. The Court granted the plaintiff's second and sixth prayers, as follows:

"The plaintiff prays the Court to instruct the jury that there is no evidence in the case legally sufficient to support the defendant's plea of usury, and that if the jury shall find that the plaintiff acquired the notes from H.S. Robinson before the maturity thereof, in good faith and for value and without notice:

(a) Of any agreement between the maker of said notes or any of the endorsers or guarantors thereof or any holder of said notes and said Robinson affecting the validity of said notes, or the negotiation thereof; or

(b) Of any infirmity in said notes or defect in title either of said Robinson or of any prior holder of said notes, then their verdict must be for the plaintiff."

Sixth Prayer — "The plaintiff prays the Court to instruct the jury that if they find for the plaintiff, then their verdict shall be for the sum of $700, with interest thereon from November 24th, 1916."

There was no error in either of these instructions. The agreement under which the notes were disposed of expressly states that they were sold to the plaintiff upon the terms stated, and there is not the slightest evidence in the case to show that this contract was resorted to as a means and for the purpose of concealing an usurious loan. We said in Murphy v.Stubblefield, supra, that the burden was on the defendant to sustain the plea of usury; and where the defendant fails to meet that burden and there is no evidence legally sufficient to support the plea, the Court should not submit the question of usury to the jury. Williams v. Reynolds, 10 Md. 57. If the plaintiff purchased the notes before maturity in good faith and for value, without notice of any infirmity in the notes or defect in the title of H.S. Robinson, he was entitled to recover the $700.00, with interest from the date of the note, judgment having been previously entered for the balance of the principal and interest. Code, Art. 13, § 71; *Page 157 Williams v. Huntington, 68 Md. 590. The appellant contends that the plaintiff could not be the holder of the notes in due course because to be such a holder "there must be two transactions, one between the maker and payee and the other between the payee and the plaintiff." The obvious answer to this contention is that the notes in question were made by Fred A. Dolph, payable to his order, and were endorsed by him, and the Negotiable Instruments Act (Code, Art. 13, § 27) expressly provides that a note may be made payable to the order of the maker.

The first, fourth and fifth prayers of the defendant submitted to the jury the question whether the transaction between H.S. Robinson and the plaintiff was a loan on the notes or a sale of the notes, and were properly refused because, as we have said in regard to the plaintiff's prayer, there was no evidence legally sufficient to show that the transaction was a loan by the plaintiff to Robinson, either as the owner or as the agent of the owner of the notes.

The defendant's second prayer asked the Court to instruct the jury that "where usury is charged * * * the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to prove the bona fides of the transaction." No authority is cited in support of such a rule, and we have said that the burden was on the defendant to sustain his plea of usury.

Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 158