Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co. v. Maggio
Decision Date | 23 September 1992 |
Docket Number | No. 92-1037,92-1037 |
Citation | 976 F.2d 320 |
Parties | 18 UCC Rep.Serv.2d 808 NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Anthony J. MAGGIO, Defendant-Appellant. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Seventh Circuit |
John A. Rothstein, Richard C. Ninneman (argued), Quarles & Brady, Milwaukee, Wis., for plaintiff-appellee.
David M. Kozak, Jerry L. Cochran (argued), Cheifetz, Pierce, Cochran, Kozak & Mathew, Phoenix, Ariz., for defendant-appellant.
Before POSNER and KANNE, Circuit Judges, and ESCHBACH, Senior Circuit Judge.
This diversity suit on a promissory note was brought by Northwestern National Insurance Company against the note's maker, Anthony Maggio. The district court, holding that Northwestern was a holder in due course and had therefore taken the note free of any defenses Maggio might have had to a suit by the promisee, gave judgment for Northwestern on the latter's motion for summary judgment.
In 1981 Maggio had purchased a limited partnership in a new venture created by a former astronaut to develop an optoelectronic scanner designed to provide perimeter security for sprawling properties such as airfields, oil fields, and pipelines. As consideration for his partnership interest Maggio gave the partnership a noninterest-bearing note for $55,000 maturing October 31, 1990. The partnership negotiated the note to a venture-capital company that in turn negotiated it to Goldman Sachs which in 1988 negotiated it to Northwestern, along with other notes of the limited partners, at a 50 percent discount. When the note matured on October 31, 1990, Northwestern demanded payment from Maggio of the full face amount. He refused.
Maggio claims that he was induced to purchase the limited partnership by fraud. If so he has of course a claim against the partnership itself and perhaps the general partner and others, but he has no claim against Northwestern if the latter is a holder in due course. It is not if (so far as relevant here) it either did not take the note "in good faith" or "purchas[ed] it as part of a bulk transaction not in the regular course of business of the transferor." UCC §§ 3-302(1)(b), (3)(c) (1987); Ariz.Rev.Stat. §§ 47-3302(A)(2), (C)(3). We take up these questions in reverse order, and ignore Maggio's frivolous argument of judicial estoppel. The note recites, and the parties agree, that disputes concerning it are to be resolved under the law of Arizona, where the partnership was formed.
The rarely litigated bulk-transfer exception identifies a narrow class of transactions where the purchaser of the (otherwise) negotiable instrument ought to be suspicious that the seller may be trying to thwart promisors' defenses and prefer one creditor over others, or committing outright fraud (the transferee might be a successor of the transferor), perhaps en route to bankruptcy. The existence of those defenses makes the promisors creditors; the wholesale transfer of their notes to a "holder in due course" would extinguish the promisors' claims; and the fact that the transfer is not in the ordinary course of business reinforces the inference that the transfer is an attempt to extinguish creditors' claims. P P Inc. v. McGuire, 509 F.Supp. 1079, 1084 (D.N.J.1981), and references cited there. There is no indication that the sale by Goldman Sachs of the limited partners' notes to Northwestern was of this character. Bulk transfer it was, but there is no evidence that Goldman Sachs, a large investment bank, was acting outside the ordinary course of its business in making such a transfer. Combine Int'l v. Berkley, 141 App.Div.2d 465, 467-68, 529 N.Y.S.2d 790, 793 (1988).
The more substantial issue is whether the 50 percent discount at which Northwestern bought the note should have made Northwestern inquire into the possible existence of defenses. Maggio does not argue that the discount itself established bad faith--only that it was a sufficiently suspicious circumstance to make Northwestern guilty of ostrich conduct, or more precisely to raise a jury issue and thus forestall summary judgment. Bad faith is a conscious state but it includes the deliberate avoidance of inquiry by one who fears what inquiry would bring to light. Bosco v. Serhant, 836 F.2d 271, 276 (7th Cir.1987); United States v. Ramsey, 785 F.2d 184, 189 (7th Cir.1986).
Northwestern reminds us that a noninterest-bearing note at fixed maturity must sell at a discount. Funding Consultants, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 187 Conn. 637, 644-46, 447 A.2d 1163, 1166-67 (1982). No one will pay $1,000 today for the right to receive $1,000 in two years, and Northwestern bought Maggio's note from Goldman Sachs two years before it was to mature. But a 50 percent discount on a note bought two years before maturity implies an interest rate of about 40 percent a year, and Maggio asks us to infer that no one would compensate the buyer of a note at such a rate unless the promisor had defenses (we do not know whether Goldman Sachs was a holder in due course). But this overlooks an obvious reason for the discount besides compensation for the time value of Northwestern's money--the risk that Maggio, even if he had no defenses to a suit for collection brought by the original promisee, would raise some anyway, as he has done, or wouldn't have the assets to pay the note when it matured. A bird in the hand is said to be...
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