Graham v. Co, WHITE-PHILLIPS
Decision Date | 11 November 1935 |
Docket Number | WHITE-PHILLIPS,No. 29,29 |
Citation | 102 A.L.R. 24,80 L.Ed. 20,56 S.Ct. 21,296 U.S. 27 |
Parties | GRAHAM v. CO., Inc |
Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
Messrs. James J. Barbour, of Chicago, Ill., and W. Edgar Sampson, of Springfield, Ill., for petitioner.
Messrs. Wm. L. Patton, of Springfield, Ill., and Harold A. Smith, of Chicago, Ill., for respondent.
By an appropriate proceeding, the Treasurer of Illinois sought an adjudication determining the ownership of eight $1,000 negotiable coupon bonds issued by the state. They were stolen from their lawful owner, petitioner Graham, August 30, 1930, and on September 22, 1930, were purchased for a fair price in the ordinary course of its business by respondent's Chicago office from Connolly, listed dealer at St. Paul, Minn. No circumstance suggests conscious wrongdoing by the purchaser.
Three days after the theft, petitioner caused the Foreman corporation to send printed notices of it, with adequate descriptions of the bonds, to dealers throughout the country.
Accepting the record upon the view most favorable to the petitioner, we may assume, as the Circuit Court of Appeals did, that the notice was received by respondent's main office in Davenport, also at the Chicago branch, prior to the purchase; there was absence of ordinary care upon the part of the Chicago branch in not making more elaborate provision for dissemination of the knowledge given by the notice; that respondent paid full value; at the time of the purchase it had no actual knowledge of the theft; it made no investigation to ascertain whether the bonds were stolen, other than to inquire concerning the status of the party offering them; the information given by the notice had been forgotten.
The District Court declared, as conclusion of law: 'The respondent, The White-Phillips Company, Inc., by reason of having actually received, prior to its purchase of the securities here involved, a notice that the same had been stolen as hereinabove set forth, did not, by the purchase of said bonds, become a holder thereof in due course, but that at such time the said respondent had knowledge of such facts that its action in taking such securities amounted to bad faith.'
Decree went for petitioner here, which upon appeal, after a painstaking review of the authorities, was reversed. The cause was remanded for further proceedings.
The Illinois Negotiable Instrument Act, §§ 52, 56 (Smith-Hurd Ann. St. Ill. c. 98, §§ 72, 76), provides:
The court below rightly concluded that the narrow question is this: 'Did appellant have actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that its action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith?' It ruled that, as a purchaser of negotiable instruments in good faith, before maturity and for a valuable consideration, respondent should be protected against a charge of bad faith which has no fact support other than the receipt of a notice circulated generally among dealers which stated that certain bonds of a large issue had been stolen.
Petitioner insists that under the authoritative construction placed upon the Illinois Negotiable Instrument Law by her Supreme Court, since respondent had received information of the defective title, there was bad faith as matter of law, and no title passed. He strongly relies upon Northwestern National Bank v. Madison & Kedzie State Bank, 242 Ill.App. 22, and the denial of certiorari therein.
Under Burns Mortgage Co. v. Fried, 292 U.S. 487, 54 S.Ct. 813, 78 L.Ed. 1380, 92 A.L.R. 1193, a definite construction of the Negotiable Instrument Law by the State Supreme Court, binding upon the local tribunals, must be accepted by the federal courts. But we cannot think that the ruling and action in the Northwestern Bank Case amount to such a construction. That cause, decided by the Appellate Court, First District, October, 1926, involved title to stolen bonds held by one claiming as a bona fide purchaser, after receipt of notice of the theft. The court there said: 'The notice having been received by the proper agent of the bank to receive, open and acknowledge its mail in the line of his duties, we think the bank is estopped from claiming that it did not have actual knowledge of the defect in the title to the bonds it subsequently received.' The State Supreme Court denied an application for certiorari without more. The argument is that this amounted to approval of the construction placed upon the statute by the Appellate Court. The point is not well taken.
National Bank v. Uptown State Bank (1934) 273 Ill.App. 401, construed the statute differently, and made no reference to the earlier case. We cannot know upon what ground certiorari was denied. The ...
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