Bank of Neelyville v. Lee

196 S.W. 43, 196 Mo. App. 496, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 117
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 43 (Bank of Neelyville v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Neelyville v. Lee, 196 S.W. 43, 196 Mo. App. 496, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 117 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

STURGIS, J.

This is a. suit on a promissory note for $363.05 executed’ to defendant Loury by the other defendants and by him endorsed to the plaintiff bank. It is a companion case to those of Bank v. Lee et al., 182 Mo. App. 185, 168 S. W. 796 and Bank v. Lee, 193 Mo. App. 537, 182 S. W. 1016, and grows out of much the same facts. Each of said suits, however, is on different notes.

It is conceded that these notes were given for the benefit of Lee, who was in fact borrowing the money from the plaintiff bank. There is no question as to Lee’s liability and here, as in the other eases, the other defendants seek to be released by reason of the conduct and representations 'made by the bank through its cashier, by which they were caused or induced not to take security for their own protection from the principal debtor, Lee. In the first of these cases this court held that, where a creditor gives a surety to understand that he will look to the principal debtor alone for payment, thereby causing the surety to forego taking security to protect himself resulting in his loss, the surety is .released. In so doing we applied the principle of estoppel and released part of the then defendants and held others. One of the parties then released, W. L. Biggs, is a defendant here. In ihe second case, a demurrer having been sustained to the answer, we ruled that the [498]*498doctrine and principles of estoppel would apply to release signers of a note whether they were, under the negotiable instruments law, accomodation makers - or endorsers.

In the present case of pleadings' are practically the same as in • the other two cases, in the latter of which the answer is set out in full and held to state a good defense. During the course of the present trial the defendant Riggs, who had signed the note in suit as an accommodation maker, testified that he had signed two other notes for Mr. Lee which were held by the bank; that he thought these other notes had been paid but learned different; that he then went to the bank to see about getting these notes “straightened up;” that he saw the cashier and told' him that he and the other sureties intendéd to get Lee to give a mortgage to secure him and the others against loss on these notes; that a little later he again talked with the cashier. Objection being made that the statements of the cashier would not be binding on the bank, the defendant then offered to prove by this witness “that on the date mentioned, between the 25th of January and the first of February, 1912, that in a conversation with Mr. Welker (cashier) in the bank of Neelyville, while George Stout was present, he stated to Welker that he (Riggs) and the other sureties of Albert Lee were intending to take such steps as might be necessary to secure themselves against loss; that Welker, the cashier, stated to him and Mr. Stout that it wasn’t necessary for them to do so, and to rest easy because he had taken a chattel mortgage on all Albert Lee’s property, in which chattel mortgage was property enough to secure them against loss on this note in suit and other notes, and that if Albert Lee didn’t pay this note in suit when it was due the bank intended to make payment out of the property in the chattel mortgage, and wouldn’t .look to these sureties; that these sureties, relying upon the representations of Welker then and there made, took no security at all to protect themselves against loss, and that in the meantime Albert Lee [499]*499became insolvent.” Offers to prove similar facts by other witnesses were also made. The court excluded this evidence on the objection that the cashier of a bank had no authority to make any such arrangement and that same was not binding on the bank, the court remarking: “I think these cases hold that the' authority — that the cashier must be shown to be given special authority, to make this evidence competent; any agreement by the cashier to release, or which would work a release by estoppel, would have to be made by special authority. ’ ’ The court afterwards . refused to submit any defense to the jury and left nothing for it to do except calculate the interest and render a verdict in plaintiff’s favor. A judgment being entered against all of the defendants they have taken proper steps to have the ease reviewed by this court.

The authorities submitted to the trial court and on which he based his ruling are, Daviess Co. Sav. Assoc. v. Sailer, et al., 63 Mo. 24 and Savings Bank v. Hughes, 62 Mo. App. 576. The question of the authority of the bank cashier to do and say the things which are alleged to be binding on it' and to release the endorsers and accommodation makers, whether by way of agreement or estoppel, was not presented on either of the former appeals. It was then assumed by all the parties that the statements and representations made by the cashier were binding on the bank by way of estoppel at least. It is claimed that the above authorities hold to the contrary, but we think not. We may readily agree that a cashier of the. bank has not the authority by mere contract or promise to release a party to a note held by the bank since his authority is to collect such notes and not to release them. But to hold that no estoppel arises against a bank by reason of the acts or representations of its cashier, made in the line of his customary duties and authority, which has misled and caused another to change his situation for the worse, as to forego or release some right which he otherwise would not have done, is contrary to the fundamental principles of estoppel. [32 Cyc. 214.] The [500]*500cashier of the hank was entrusted with the power and duty to collect its notes and was, at the time, looking after the collection of the’ Lee notes of which this is one. He is the chief executive officer of the bank. He had authority to take security for these notes and did so, though it appeared in another case that he took a mortgage on some $4000 worth of property to secure a single note for about $500. His representation that this mortgage was taken to secure and did amply secure all these notes was clearly made in the line of his duty and apparent authority. To whom else than the cashier would a surety go to ascertain the status of a note on which he was liable? To hold that the surety had no right to rely and act on what the cashier told him is ■contrary to reason and common experience. [Michie on Banks and Banking, p. 802, sec. 113; Barnes v. Saving Bank (Ia.), 144 N. W. 367, 379.]

That a bank may be and frequently is estopped by the acts and representations or even omissions of its cashier of other officer from asserting or enforcing claims which it otherwise would have, is held in many cases. In Bank v. Lillard, 55 Mo. App. 675, where the cashier of a bank had innocently taken a forged note as a renewal note and some time later, discovering the forgery, attempted to collect from a surety bn the genuine note, it being shown that when such genuine note became due the principal was solvent but later became insolvent, the court said: “If plaintiff’s act in surrendering the note to the principal debtor can-celled and marked paid, caused these surety defendants to forego or forbear securing or indemnifying themselves from the principal debtor, in consequence of which forbearance they have lost available recourse on him by reason of his insolvency, they are discharged, regardless of any negligence on the part of plaintiff. If the plaintiff has thus cáused them to forego taking security or indemnifying themselves when they otherwise would have done so, then in such case plaintiff’s utmost care and prudence would be no answer to the injury done the sureties. Both parties in such case are

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 43, 196 Mo. App. 496, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-neelyville-v-lee-moctapp-1917.