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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Renwick v. Stamford, Spalding, and Boston Banking Co., Ltd [1891] ScotLR 29_144 (24 November 1891)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1891/29SLR0144.html
Cite as: [1891] SLR 29_144, [1891] ScotLR 29_144

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 144

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Tuesday, November 24. 1891.

[ Lord Low, Ordinary.

29 SLR 144

Renwick

v.

Stamford, Spalding, and Boston Banking Company, Limited.

Subject_1Bill
Subject_2Diligence
Subject_3Suspension of Charge
Subject_4Caution.
Facts:

In a suspension of a charge upon a bill, the complainer, who was the acceptor, averred that he had been induced to part with the bill by false and fraudulent statements, and had received no value for it; that the bill had been negotiated fraudulently and in violation of an order of the Court of Chancery; and that the chargers had acquired it when overdue and without value given, and after they had received notice of the fraud and of the order pronounced by the Court of Chancery.

The chargers, who were a banking company, averred that they had acquired the bill during its currency for value from one of their customers, and without notice of the Chancery Order or of any defect in the title of the prior holders.

Held that the complainer must find caution as a condition of being allowed to proceed with the suspension.

Headnote:

This was a suspension brought by John Renwick, builder in Glasgow, of a charge upon a bill of which he was acceptor, the chargers and respondents being the Stamford, Spalding, and Boston Banking Company.

The substance of the complainer's averments was as follows:—Requiring some accommodation in his business he was induced by a person named Charles Engelhard to entrust him with four acceptances blank in the drawer's name, and, inter alia, the one upon which the charge complained of was given, being a bill dated 2nd April 1891, for £248 18s. at three months. The inducement was the false and fraudulent assurance that they would be discounted at certain fixed charges, and the proceeds remitted in due course, and that the bills would not be parted with except upon such discount

Page: 145

and remittance, the real intent being to use the acceptances as a means of extorting money from the complainer. On 21st April Engelhard wrote saying that he had got the bills drawn by his friends Robert Bertram & Company, and promising a remittance of the proceeds in a few days. In spite of letters from the complainer neither the bills nor the proceeds were sent, and on 2nd May the complainer obtained an interim injunction from the Court of Chancery against Engelhard and the alleged drawers parting with or negotiating the said bills until 8th May. This injunction was subsequently repeated until further order, and on 25th May Engelhard and the alleged drawers were ordered to deposit the bills in Court within seven days. On 7th May Engelhard still had the four bills in his possession, and the complainer ultimately recovered three of them, but the fourth was fraudulently retained and negotiated It was indorsed and received by the indorsees without value being given, after notice of the pending Chancery proceedings, and with intent to evade the orders of that Court. On 7th July, the bill being then overdue, was in the hands of a firm called Boehmer & Hertz of London, who professed to be indorsees of Deldmant & Woolf of London, who were pretended indorsees of the alleged drawers. The complainer was on 7th July called on to pay the amount of the bill to Boehmer & Hertz, as the last pretended indorsees. The chargers and respondents now asserted themselves to be holders of said bill, but if they were holders in their own right, they acquired it without value after it was overdue, and with notice that it had been obtained, issued, and negotiated by fraud. They were believed not to be holders in their own right, but to be merely giving their name as collecting agents for Boehmer & Hertz. On the chargers' first demand for payment in July, the complainer wrote them denying liability and explaining the fraud which had been perpetrated upon him.

The respondents denied that they had received the bill after notice of the Chancery proceedings, or after notice of any defect in the title of the prior holders, or that they were parties to or had knowledge of any fraud in connection with the granting or negotiating of the bill. They averred that they were holders of the bill in their own right, and that they had received it for value on 25th May from Boehmer, who was a customer of theirs, and had thus acquired it during its currency in the ordinary course of business.

The Lord Ordinary (Low) on 31st October passed the note.

The respondents reclaimed, and argued—The complaimer should be ordained to find caution as a condition of being allowed to proceed with his suspension. The Bills of Exchange Act 1882 had made no change in the law as to caution— Simpson v. Brown, June 9, 1888, 15 R. 716. Caution was dispensed with in very few cases, and only where there was a strong presumption in the complainer's favour, e.g., when the bill sought to be suspended appeared comparatione litterarum to be a forgery, or was vitiated by erasures—Mackay's Practice, ii. 192; Hamilton v. Kinnear & Sons, June 17, 1825, 4 S. 102; Simpson v. Brown, November 4, 1874, 2 R. 75. Here there was nothing to throw doubt upon the respondent's averment that they were honest holders in due course, or to implicate them in the alleged fraud of Engelhard. Indeed, it was doubtful whether a relevant case of fraud had been averred at all. Mere averments of fraud, without explanation of the manner in which it was committed, were not sufficient.

The complainer argued—The complainer could not find caution, and therefore to ordain him to do so would be to make it impossible for him to obtain redress. If a prima facie case of fraud were made out by the complainer, that would be enough to deprive the bank of the presumption in favour of a holder in due course—Bills of Exchange Act 1882, secs. 29 and 30. Such a case was made out by the correspondence, from which it appeared that the bank must have acquired the bill after it was overdue, because on 7th July the complainer had been called on to pay to Boehmer & Hertz.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—On this record the complainer certainly makes strong and, up to a certain point, plausible averments as to the circumstances under which Englehard came into possession of the bill in question, and his subsequent use of it. If the present question had arisen between the complainers and him very different considerations would have come into play.

But we must concentrate our attention upon the position of the holders of the bill, who are the present reclaimers. The question is, whether the complainer is to be allowed to go into a litigation with the reclaimers—a bank who came into possession of the bill in the ordinary course of business—without first finding caution. We are not entitled to assume anything against the bank beyond the admitted statements on record, or such other statements as can be instantly verified. There is nothing I think upon record to derogate from the claim of the bank to be considered holders of this bill in due course. The 30th sec tion of the Bills of Exchange Act does not in terms apply, because in the present case it is neither “admitted nor proved that the acceptance, issue, or subsequent negotiation of the bill is affected with fraud” The bank makes no admission which at all touches that question, and I do not think that the section can be cited as in terms applicable to the present question, or as furnishing more than instructive suggestion upon the question of discretion which we have to decide at a stage antecedent to proof.

Upon the whole, I think we should be founding a dangerous precedent if we were to allow the complainer to proceed further in the litigation unless he first finds caution.

Page: 146

Lord Adam concurred

Lord M'Laren—It appears to me that there is one and only one circumstance which induces hesitation as to altering the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, and that is, that the banking company have not clearly explained why they have commenced proceedings against the parties whose names are on the bill by an action against the acceptor after he had explained to them the circumstances in which he came to put his name to the bill. One would like to hear that the banking company had endeavoured first to recover payment from those who are directly liable to them on the bill. But in considering the question of security, which depends entirely on presumption or on the prima facie case made by the parties, we expect always the utmost candour from a complainer who asks to have diligence suspended without finding caution, and especially that he should confine himself to the real point of his case, and not make averments difficult of proof, and improbable on the face of them. If the complainer in this case had come here averring merely that the bank was using diligence against him oppressively, and asking that they should not be allowed to proceed, I should have been more inclined to accept the Lord Ordinary's view. But here the complainer in his averments seeks to identify the banking company with the fraud which he says was committed by other parties to the bill, making statements which are apparently not founded on information, and of which there is no corroboration. I think accordingly that we must follow the ordinary rule, and that the complainer can only be allowed to proceed on finding caution.

The Court recalled the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, and remitted to him to ordain the complainer to find caution in common form.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Complainer— Vary Campbell. Agent— Keith R. Maitland, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondents— Lees— Orr. Agents— Winchester & Nicolson, W.S.

1891


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1891/29SLR0144.html