Our statute on negotiable instruments, Eevisal, ch. 54/ sec. 2205, makes provision as follows: “To constitute *349notice of an infirmity in tbe instrument or defect in tbe title of tbe person negotiating tbe same, tbe person to whom it is negotiated must have bad actual knowledge of tbe infirmity or defect or knowledge of sucb facts that bis action in taking tbe instrument amounted to bad faith.”
A perusal of tbe record will disclose that tbe court below, on tbe third and fourth issues, at first charged tbe jury in substantial accord with tbe statute. Tbe only criticism suggested is that, having been given in tbe exact language of one of defendant’s prayers for instructions, it is couched in terms too persuasive, in view of tbe conflict of evidence on tbe subject; but sucb an objection is not open to tbe appellant, for tbe error here, if one existed, is in defendant’s favor. In a later portion of tbe charge, However, and more than once bis Honor, on these issues, stated, in effect, tbe correct rule to be that, if tbe jury should find that there was fraud in tbe execution of the notes and that these creditors “had notice of tbe fraud, or bad notice of any facts or circumstances which ought to have put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, and if they bad made sucb inquiry they could have discovered tbe fraud or tbe facts or circumstances constituting tbe same, and they failed to make such inquiry and discovery, it would be tbe duty of tbe jury to answer tbe issue ‘Tes.’ ”
This position, in our opinion, is in direct conflict with tbe statutory provision, as expressed in tbe first portion of bis Honor’s charge, and must be held for reversible error. Anderson v. Meadows, 159 N. C., 404. Tbe question as to what is tbe character of notice required to affect tbe status of one claiming to be tbe bolder in due course of a negotiable instrument has been subject to some fluctuation in tbe courts and has given rise to much contrariety of decision. As shown in tbe learned and suggestive argument and brief with which we were favored by counsel for appellant, tbe doctrine for a time prevailed in England as it is laid down by bis Honor in tbe latter portion of his charge; that is, that tbe bolder was put upon inquiry by facts or circumstances which would induce a cautious and prudent man'to make one, and was affected by notice or knowledge of conditions which sucb inquiry would *350disclose. This seems not to - have been the rule as it first obtained in tbe English courts, and later they returned to the original position, and it has been long firmly established there that, in this respect, the title of the holder can only be impugned by showing direct knowledge of the infirmity or notice of such facts as would make the acquisition of the instrument amount to bad faith. 2 Randolph on Commercial Paper (2d Ed.), sec. 996 et séq.; Norton on Bills and Notes (3d Ed.), 319; Huffcut on Negotiable Instruments,' pp. 29 and 100-117.
In Huffcut, p. 29, a succinct account of the varying phases of the doctrine is given in a citation from Chalmers Bills of Exchange Act, as follows: “The test of bona fides as regards bill transactions has varied greatly. Previous to 1820 the law was much as it now is under the act. But under the influence of Lord Tenterden due care and caution was made the test (Gill v. Cubitt, 5 D. and R., 324), and this principle seems to be adopted by section 9 of the Indian Act. In 1834 the Court of King’s Bench held that nothing short of gross negligence could defeat the title of a holder for value. (Cook v. Jadis, 5 B. and Ad., 909.) Two years later Lord Denman states it as setttled law that bad faith alone could prevent a holder for value from recovering. Gross, negligence might be evidence of bad faith, hilt was not conclusive of it. (Goodman v. Harvey, 4 A. and E., at p. 876; Uther v. Rich, 10 A. and E., 784.) This principle has never since been shaken in England, and it seems now firmly established in the United States. (Murray v. Lardner, 2 Wallace, at p. 121; Chapman v. Rose, 56 N. Y., at p. 140),” and, in Norton, supra, p. 319, the author, after laying down the rule as it temporarily prevailed in England, says: “But this.doctrine the law merchant rejects, and it is now the rule of the law merchant that mere knowledge of any facts sufficient to put a reasonably prudent man on inquiry is not sufficient, but that, to defeat his claim to be a bona fide holder in due course, he must be guilty of bad faith.” There has been conflict of decision in this country, but we think the position requiring that bad faith be shown or notice or knowledge of facts from which bad faith' in taking over the instrument could be reasonably inferred, has been long recognized *351here by tbe great weight of authority. Hotchkiss v. National Banks, 21 Wallace, 354; Goodman v. Simonds, 20 Howard, 343; Bank v. Weston, 161 N. Y., 521; Bank v. Savery et al., 127 Mass., 75; Bradwell v. Prior, 221 Ill., 602; Bank v. Morgan, 195 Pa. St., 199; Richards v. Monroe, 85 Iowa, 359; De-Voss v. Richmond, 18 Grattan, 338, etc.; Tescher v. Mercer, 118 Ind., 586; Hamilton v. Vought, 34 N. J. L., 187. Speaking to the rule, in this last case, and the reason for it, Chief Justice Beasley has well said: “Prom this brief review of the cases, I think it may be safely said .that the doctrine introduced by Lord Tenterden stands at the present moment marked with the disapproval of the highest judicial authority. Nor does such disapproval rest upon merely speculative grounds. That doctrine was put in practice for a course of years, and it was thus, from experience, found to be inconsistent with true commercial policy. Its defect — a great defect, as I think — was that it provided nothing like a criterion bn which a verdict was to be based. The rule was, that to defeat the note, circumstances must be shown of so suspicious a character that they would put a man of ordinary prudence on inquiry; and by force of such a rule it is obvious every case possessed of unusual incidents would, of necessity, pass under the uncontrolled •discretion of a jury. An incident of the transaction from which any suspicion could arise was sufficient to take the case out of the control of the court. There was -no judicial standard by which suspicious circumstances could- be measured before committing them to the jury. And it is precisely this want which the modern rule supplies. When mala fides is the point of inquiry, suspicious circumstances must be of a substantial character, and if such circumstances do not appear, the court can arrest the inquiry. Under the former practice, circumstances of slight suspicion would take the ease to the jury; under the present rule, the circumstances must be strong, so that bad faith can be reasonably inferred.”
Our own Court has not escaped the perplexities which seem to have attended the subject, as indicated by the case of Farthing v. Dark, 109 N. C., 291, reviewed on appeal and disapproved in case, same title, 111 N. C., 243; and these and other *352cases with us, as in Hulbert v. Douglas, 94 N. C., 122, give countenance to the position of “putting a prudent man upon inquiry.” But whatever may be the correct estimate of our former decisions, we regard the matter as put at rest by the express language of the statute: “That to constitute notice of infirmity, etc., the holder must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith,” and are of opinion that the law, by correct interpretation, was designed and intended to establish on this subject and in this jurisdiction the rule as it has been long recognized in England and sustained in this country as stated by the great weight of authority. As a legal proposition, the same statute justifies defendants in making.the claims that they are purchasers for value. Section 2113, providing that: .“Value is any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. An antecedent or preexisting debt constitutes value and is deemed such whether the instrument is payable on demand or at a future time” (McMichael’s case), and section 2175: “Where the holder has a lien on the instrument arising either from contract or by implication of law, he is deemed a holder for value to the extent of his lien” (Frank & Co.’s case), and on the facts as they now appear of record, the determination of the third and fourth issues were very properly made to depend on whether these creditors held without knowledge or such notice of the alleged infirmity as the law requires to affect their title. Randolph Commercial Paper, sec. 1892; Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U. S., 271; Canon v. McDaniel, 46 Texas, 300; Logan v. Smith, 62 Mo., 455; Updegraft v. Edwards, 45 Iowa, 513.
For the error indicated, there must be a new trial of the cause upon all of the issues, and it is so ordered.
New trial.