The plaintiff herein sues the defendant upon four promissory notes. The defendant sets up in his answer that the plaintiff is not a bona fide holder for value, and that the notes were originally delivered by him to a certain M. H. Mann as a secret preference under a composition agreement which the defendant made with his creditors. At the trial the plaintiff testified that he received the notes from an indorser before maturity, and that he paid the indorser adequate consideration for the notes. He also introduced in evidence the check by which he paid for the notes. Plaintiff was not cross-examined, and rested. The defendant, then attempted to introduce evidence to establish his claim that the notes were originally delivered as a secret preference. The trial justice refused to admit this testimony until such time as the defendant had introduced testimony to show that plaintiff was not an innocent holder for value. The defendant claimed that if he could show Mann’s title to the notes was defective, then the burden would be on the plaintiff to show that he was a bona fide holder for value. The trial justice recognized the correctness of this proposition as an abstract proposition of law, but held under the authority of Eisenberg v. Lefkowitz, 142 App. Div. 569, that where the plaintiff, instead of merely introducing the notes in evidence and resting on the presumption that he is a bona fide holder for value, successfully assumes the burden of proving affirmatively that he is a bona fide holder for value, then all evidence of affirmative defenses available as between prior parties becomes immaterial, and that it lies in the discretion of the trial judge to require that the order of proof shall be that testimony to meet the plaintiff’s proof that he is a holder for value shall be presented before testimony as to the affirmative defense is admitted.
The order of proof prescribed by the trial justice might be proper if the testimony of the plaintiff that he was a bona fide holder were so complete and conclusive that even if the defendant should prove that the title of a prior holder was defective, there could still be no question of fact left for the jury on the issue of whether plaintiff is a bona fide holder, but I find no such proof in this case. Upon that issue the plaintiff must show not only that he has taken the instrument before maturity, and for value, but also that he took it in good faith, and that he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it. Neg. Inst. Law, § 91. In this case the plaintiff has shown only that he took the instruments regular on their face, and before maturity, and for an adequate consideration, but in my opinion this evidence still leaves open the question whether he took it in good faith and without notice.
There is no doubt in my mind that the adequacy of the consideration is some evidence of the plaintiff’s good faith, yet it is .undoubtedly, true that that evidence is not conclusive on the issue of good faith. If that evidence were supplemented by evidence showing that the notes were taken in the ordinary course of business, and under circumstances that do not oper
There is no testimony that the plaintiff took the notes in the ordinary course of business; and no testimony as to his relations with the indorser, nor of the relations of the indorser to the original holder. No testimony even as to the defect was admitted, so that it is impossible to say that the plaintiff may not have taken the notes under circumstances which would at least raise a question of fact as to his bona fides.
Judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new. trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Whitaker, J., concurs