Triffin v. Cigna Insurance Company
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-4000-95T5
ROBERT J. TRIFFIN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
CIGNA INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Respondent,
and
JAMES MILLS, Defendant.
Argued: January 14, 1997
Supplemental briefs submitted: January
16, 1997 and January 17, 1997
Decided: February 4, 1997
Before Judges Dreier, D'Annunzio and Villanueva.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Special Civil Part, Burlington
County.
Appellant Robert J. Triffin argued pro se.
Christina M. McNally argued the cause for respondent (Bernadette A. Duncan, attorney; Ms.
McNally, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by DREIER, P.J.A.D.
Plaintiff, Robert J. Triffin, appeals from a Special Civil Part summary judgment dismissing
his complaint for payment of a draft of defendant Cigna Insurance Company transferred to
plaintiff by a holder in due course after Cigna had stopped payment on the instrument.
The facts appear to be uncontroverted. The defaulting defendant, James Mills, received a
draft in the amount of $484.12, dated July 7, 1993 from one of Cigna's constituent companies,
Atlantic Employers Insurance Company. The draft had been issued for workers' compensation
benefits. Mills falsely indicated to the issuer that he had not received the draft due to a
change in his address and requested that payment be stopped and a new draft issued by
defendant. The insurer complied and stopped payment on the initial draft. Mills nevertheless
negotiated the initial draft to plaintiff's assignor, Sun Corp. t/a Sun's Market, before the
stop payment notation was placed on the draft. All appear to agree that Sun Corp. was a
holder in due course. Sun Corp. presented the draft for payment through depositary and
collecting banks. The issuer's bank dishonored the draft in accordance with its customer's
direction, stamped it "Stop Payment," and returned the draft to Sun Corp. There is no
question that had Sun Corp. at that point pressed its claim against the insurer as the issuer
of the instrument, Sun Corp. would have been entitled to a judgment because of its status as
a holder in due course. See footnote 1
Thereafter, plaintiff, who apparently is in the business of purchasing dishonored
instruments, obtained an assignment of Sun Corp.'s interests in this instrument and proceeded
with this law suit. Plaintiff does not contend that he is a holder in due course of the
instrument by virtue of it being negotiated to him for value, in good faith, without notice
of dishonor, under the former holder in due course statute, N.J.S.A. 12A:3-302(1),
nor under the present statute, N.J.S.A. 12A:3-302a(2).
Such negotiation is, of course, only one way for a holder to claim the status of a holder in
due course. There exists a second method by which one may become a holder in due course. The
shelter provisions of former N.J.S.A. 12A:3-201(1), which was in effect when
plaintiff obtained his assignment of this instrument, state clearly that "[t]ransfer of an
instrument vests in the transferee such rights as the transferor has therein...." Official
Comment 3 to that section sets to rest any question of whether this section applies to the
transfer by assignment of the rights of a holder in due course. The Comment reads: "A holder
in due course may transfer his rights as such.... [The former Negotiable Instruments Law
section's] policy is to assure the holder in due course a free market for the paper, and that
policy is continued in this section." Example (a) following this comment could have been
drawn from this case, but is even stronger because it adds an element of fraud and posits a
gratuitous transfer rather than a purchase, as in our case:
(a) A [Mills] induces M [Cigna] by fraud to make an instrument payable to A. A negotiates it
to B [Sun Corp.], who takes as a holder in due course. After the instrument is overdue B
gives it to C [plaintiff], who has notice of the fraud. C succeeds to B's rights as a holder
in due course, cutting off the defense.
If the 1995 amendments are to be given retroactive effect, See footnote
2, the law governing the rights of an transferee who merely has accepted the transfer of
the instrument is now found in N.J.S.A.12A:3-203b. It restates the principle of the
former Official Comment 3, example (a), as substantive law. This section states:
Transfer of an instrument, whether or not the transfer is a negotiation, vests in the
transferee any right of the transferor to enforce the instrument, including any right as
a holder in due course....
[Emphasis added].
The Uniform Commercial Code Comment 2 to this section similarly states:
Under subsection (b) a holder in due course that transfers an instrument transfers those
rights as a holder in due course to the purchaser. The policy is to assure the holder in due
course a free market for the instrument.
Again, Uniform Commercial Code Comment 4, Case #1, tracks the case before us. See footnote 3
These sections could not be clearer. Plaintiff received by assignment the right of a holder
in due course to this instrument, which apparently had been presented and then dishonored
because of defendant's stop payment order. The draft itself remained the basis of a claim
upon which plaintiff or its assignor had three years to sue after the dishonor of the draft
or ten years after the date of the draft, whichever period expired first. N.J.S.A.
12A:3-118c. The former governing section, N.J.S.A. 12A:3-122(3), merely stated that
the cause of action on the draft accrued upon dishonor, whereupon the normal contract statute
of limitations would have started to run. Because the draft in this case was dishonored on or
about July 12, 1993, and this action commenced August 28, 1995 both the old and new statutes
were satisfied. Defendant's murky statement in its brief that "Sun Corp. held onto the
dishonored check for over two years ... before [plaintiff's] purchase" is therefore the
addition of a meaningless fact.
The summary judgment appealed from is reversed, and the matter is remanded with directions to
enter judgment in favor of plaintiff, with interest.
Footnote: 1
Contrary to defendant's claim in its supplemental brief, the issuer was not then, nor was it
thereafter, discharged on the instrument with respect to a holder in due course,
notwithstanding the instrument's dishonor. See N.J.S.A. 12A:3-601 and the
pre-amendment 12A:3-602.
Footnote: 2
There is some authority to suggest that the amendments should be given retroactive effect
where it appears that the changes are merely declarative of the law. See Carnegie Bank
v. Shalleck, 256 N.J. Super. 23, 35-42 (App. Div. 1992). We need not reach that
issue in this case, since both the old and new statutes have similar provisions.
Footnote: 3
Defendant in its supplemental brief refers to Case #4, which deals with a purchaser who has
notice of a defense before obtaining the payee's endorsement. Such a transferee could not be
a holder in due course, and therefore, could not transfer those rights to an assignee. In
this case, Sun Corp. took the instrument without notice of dishonor, and therefore Sun Corp.
could transfer its rights as a holder in due course to plaintiff.
Also, both the old and new sections have exceptions where the transferee participated in the
fraud or where the instrument is then reconveyed to the party who originally committed the
fraud. Neither exception applies to this case.
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