Baldwin v. Haskell National Bank

133 S.W. 1178, 104 Tex. 122, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 129
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 1911
DocketNo. 2120.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 1178 (Baldwin v. Haskell National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Haskell National Bank, 133 S.W. 1178, 104 Tex. 122, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 129 (Tex. 1911).

Opinions

For some years before January 28, 1907, J.L. Baldwin had been a customer of The Haskell National Bank. On or before that date he owed the bank several thousand dollars. We gather from the record that the relations between the parties had become mutually unsatisfactory. Baldwin seems to have thought that the bank was charging him both usurious and excessive interest, while the bank had concluded that his indebtedness to it was excessive and that for other reasons he was not a desirable customer. After considerable negotiation it was finally agreed that Baldwin should pay his indebtedness to the bank down to the sum of two thousand and fifty dollars and that the bank should take his note for this amount due in one year. Accordingly the amount agreed to be paid to the bank was in fact duly paid and thereupon the following note was executed, on one of the blank notes used by the bank: *Page 124

"$2050.00 Haskell, Texas, Jan. 28, 1907.

"On or before one year after date for value received, I, we or either of us promise to pay to the order of the Haskell National Bank, two thousand and fifty and no-100 dollars at their banking house in Haskell, Texas, with ten percent interest per annum from maturity . . . until paid. And in the event default is made in the payment of this note at maturity; and it is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, or suit is brought on the same, then an additional amount of ten percent on the principal and interest of this shall be added to the same as attorney's fees. The makers and endorsers, severally, waive presentment for payment protest and notice of protest, and the bringing of suit at the first term of court upon nonpayment of this note after maturity, and also consent that time of payment may be extended without notice thereof, whether same is done with or without consideration.

"J.L. Baldwin."

It was shown that Baldwin had executed many notes to the bank and that in every case by their terms they bore interest from maturity and that this was the custom of the bank generally. It appears from the evidence that almost immediately after the execution of the note Baldwin called attention of the cashier of the bank to the fact that the note drew interest from maturity, which was not admitted by the cashier until he had examined the note, which confirmed Baldwin's position, whereupon the cashier claimed that there was a mistake, and that conformably to their agreement the note should have drawn interest from date. It also appears from the evidence of the cashier, Couch, that he said to Baldwin that one Ballard, who had been active in the negotiations, knew that the note was to bear interest from date, who replied, in effect, that he would abide by whatever Ballard said. This statement, however, is not admitted by Baldwin. Soon thereafter Couch saw Ballard who said to him, as they both testify, that the agreement was express and unequivocal that the note should bear interest from date. That some little time after this, left rather indefinite in the evidence, Couch wrote, in pencil, in the blank space in the note, after the word maturity, the word, "date." Touching the circumstances, purposes and reasons for his so doing he says: "I put the memoranda there after the talk I had with Ballard (one of the bank directors) in which he said it would be all right, for the purpose of a memorandum to Mr. Baldwin as well as the bank for the future, as I did not know but what I might die, or might not be there possibly at the settlement of this note, and I wanted a little notation on there to show what the contract was." There is evidence in the record tending to show that Baldwin from the first protested against any change in the note, and also denied the facts which would have authorized a court even to have decreed a change.

It is well settled that "it is a material alteration of an instrument to change the time from which interest is to begin to run, either by the insertion, alteration or erasure of words, whether the time is thereby accelerated or delayed." 3 Enc. L. P., 419. That a material alteration in an instrument, without the consent of the maker, *Page 125 will avoid all recovery on same is no longer an open question in this State. Otto v. Halff Bro., 89 Tex. 384 (59 Am. St., 56).

Was the alteration material? The Court of Civil Appeals held not. This holding seems to have been based on the theory that there was no "difference between the expression `maturity' and maturity date." If, determined in the light of all the facts, and having reference to the contentions of the several parties, it should be held that the inserted word "date" was intended not to supersede the printed word maturity, and to express a different intention from that evidenced by the language as it stood, but was to be read in harmony with such printed word and as meaning the same thing, the addition of the word "date" would be but idle surplusage and there would be some fair warrant for the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals. But it seems to us clear that this was not the intention of the cashier, nor do we believe that there is any testimony in the record which presents this view. Nor do we think in the light of the situation presented by the contention of the respective parties can this intention be gathered from the instrument. It is a rule of almost universal application that "where, as in the use of printed forms, a contract is partly printed and partly written, and there is a conflict between the printing and the writing, the writing will prevail." 9 Cyc., 584. Again while as used there may be no irreconcilable repugnancy in the use of the words together, "maturity date," it must strike any one as, under any circumstances quite unusual and as applied to the controversy here involved it is utterly unreasonable to conclude that no change was wrought or intended to be wrought in the instrument sued on, by the insertion of the word "date." If the note had been originally drawn so as to bear interest from date, and if thereafter without the consent of the bank, plaintiff in error had inscribed in a blank space left in the note, the word maturity, so as to make same read, if both words are to be considered as parts thereof, "date maturity," could such a change be upheld on the ground that it meant the same thing as originally written? We can not think so. In any event it can not be denied that the insertion of the word "date" left ambiguous and uncertain what was, when the note was signed, left beyond doubt clear and explicit.

Nor do we think that the legal effect of the evident alteration can be defeated on the ground that it was a mere memorandum. As we view the matter it is quite a different alteration from a mere marginal memorandum, which is sometimes treated as no part of the note proper but simply as a memorandum for information or convenience.

2. The bank prayed in the court below, in the petition on which the case was tried, that if the note should be held to be invalid that it might recover on the original indebtedness which it was the purpose of the note to evidence, setting same out fully and in detail, and asks in this court that if we should adjudge that no recovery can be had on its favor for the amount of the indebtedness shown by the undisputed evidence. The amount of this indebtedness as claimed by the bank and for which judgment is sought under this count of the petition is the sum of two thousand four hundred and eleven and five one-hundredths dollars. An examination of the evidence tends strongly to show that if computed with reference to Baldwin's notes then held by the bank, *Page 126

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 1178, 104 Tex. 122, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-haskell-national-bank-tex-1911.