Bank Commissioners v. Security Trust Co.

49 A. 113, 70 N.H. 536
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 49 A. 113 (Bank Commissioners v. Security Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank Commissioners v. Security Trust Co., 49 A. 113, 70 N.H. 536 (N.H. 1900).

Opinion

*538 Chase, J.

1. The commissioner allowed interest on claims to September 1, 1897. The allowance should be to October 9, 1896,. the date of the appointment of the assignee. Bank Comm’rs v. Trust Co., 69 N. H. 621.

2. -The defendants sold notes, some of which were secured by mortgages of real estate, and guaranteed the payment of the interest coupons attached to the notes at maturity and of the principal within two years after maturity, and reserved the right to repurchase the notes at any time at their face value with accrued interest added; or they simply guaranteed the payment of the principal and interest. The holders of the notes have presented claims upon the guaranty, reserving their rights against the makers of the notes- and their rights under the mortgages.

If there has been a failure of the principal debtor to pay principal, or interest, or both, as set forth in the contract of guaranty,, no reason has been suggested or is perceived why the defendants are not liable to the full extent of their promise. The consideration paid by the purchaser to the defendants fox the note included consideration for the defendants’ promise, and rendered it binding upon them. The guaranty was an absolute promise to pay the debt, if the principal debtor failed to make payment. at maturity or within the time specified. Being unconditional, no demand upon the principal debtor or notice to the defendants of his default was necessary to create liability. Beebe v. Dudley, 26 N. H. 249, 253; Simons v. Steele, 36 N. H. 73; Bank of Newbury v. Sinclairr 60 N. H. 100; McDonald v. Fernald, 68 N. H. 171. Nor was the holder of the note obliged to bring and prosecute an action against the maker before attempting to assert his claim upon the guaranty. Brown v. Curtiss, 2 N. Y. 225; Bishop v. Eaton, 161 Mass. 496; Morrison v. Bank, 65 N. H. 253, 280. He was at liberty to institute proceedings against the maker, or against the defendants, or against both concurrently, as he saw fit. The maker’s promise and the defendants’ were, in this respect, independent of each other. If the holder obtained payment from the maker, it would discharge the liability of the defendants. If he obtained payment from the defendants, it would entitle them to be subrogated to his rights against the maker, including the right to any collaterals held as security for the fulfillment of the maker’s promise. In re Babcock,, 3 Sto. 393. The holders of the defendants’ guaranties, in presenting claims upon them to the commissioner for allowance, were therefore not called upon to elect whether they would ultimately attempt to hold the makers of the notes, and their reservation of the right to do so was immaterial. If they receive a dividend from the defendants and also recover payment in full of the makers, they will hold so much of the excess as will re-imburse the defend *539 ants for their payments, less proper allowances for costs and expenses, in trust for them or the assignee of their property.

3. In case the claimant, besides the defendants’ guaranty, held a mortgage or other collateral security given by the maker to secure payment of the note, should the value of the collateral be deducted from the sum due upon the guaranty and the balance only be allowed against the defendants, or should the entire sum due upon the guaranty be allowed? A similar question, also raised in the case, is: Should the value of collaterals given to claimants by the defendants to secure the payment of certificates .of deposit issued by them be deducted from the amounts due upon the certificates in the allowance of the claims ? The two questions have so many features in common that they may conveniently be considered together.

The law on this subject was particularly reviewed in the opinions of the court in Merrill v. Bank, 173 U. S. 131. There appear to be two lines of decisions, one establishing what is known as the bankruptcy rule, by which secured creditors are allowed to prove only the balance of their claims above the value of their securities; and the other establishing what is known as the chancery rule, by which such creditors are allowed to prove their claims in full without regard to their securities. In the case cited, the supreme court of the United States, by a bare majority of the justices,— four dissenting,— adopted the latter rule for the allowance of claims against an insolvent national bank preparatory to a distribution of its assets. The majority opinion rests on the ground that this rule is supported by sounder reasoning than is the other, and by a preponderance in the weight of authorities; and, since the national banking; act did not specially adopt the bankruptcy rule, the chancery rule was the one intended. The minority opinions vigorously controvert each of these positions. In consequence of the division in the court, the value of the case as an authority consists in the ability and exhaustiveness of the discussion rather than in the conclusion reached.

.From 1820 to the present time, the supreme court of Massachusetts has followed the bankruptcy rule in the allowance of claims against the estates of deceased persons settled as insolvent. Amory v. Francis, 16 Mass. 308; Hale v. Leatherbee, 175 Mass. 547, 549. The question was first considered in this state in 1822, in the case of Moses v. Ranlet, 2 N. H. 488, and the decision was in favor of the chancery rule. The case was an appeal from the decision of commissioners allowing the claim of a mortgagee of real estate against the estate of a deceased person in full, without regard to the mortgage. It was said in the opinion that “the death of the debtor cannot in itself change the principles of jus *540 tice or the terms of the contract; and the statute does not profess to make any change, except to introduce an equal dividend .among the creditors, of such estate as belonged to the insolvent at his death and further, in substance, that the bankruptcy rule changes the law in respect to pledges and mortgages, and that the making of such a change “ belongs to the legislative rather than the judiciary department.” Of Amory v. Francis, it was said that it seemed to be opposed to the weight of authority. Upon the revision of the statute law of the state in 1842, the change .suggested was made by the legislature. It was then enacted, in substance, that if any creditor holds collateral security of less value than his debt, the commissioner shall estimate the value of the security and allow the difference between it and the debt; and that if the creditor, being dissatisfied with the estimate, relinquishes his interest in the security and delivers it to the administrator, it shall be sold by him under the direction of the judge, and the proceeds shall be paid to the creditor, and the difference between the sum so paid and the amount of the claim shall be in.serted upon the list of claims. R. S., c. 162, ss. 10, 11. These provisions are still in force. P.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A. 113, 70 N.H. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-commissioners-v-security-trust-co-nh-1900.