Berlin National Bank v. Guay

81 A. 475, 76 N.H. 216, 1911 N.H. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 3, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 81 A. 475 (Berlin National Bank v. Guay) 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
Berlin National Bank v. Guay, 81 A. 475, 76 N.H. 216, 1911 N.H. LEXIS 190 (N.H. 1911).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

The most favorable view for the defendant is that he was surety upon the note in suit for Decker, the first signer. While this debt from Decker and the defendant was owing the bank, the bank discounted for Decker a note for $5,350 and received as collateral security certain notes payable to Decker, called the Burbank notes, amounting to $9,600. These notes were taken by the plaintiff, not only as security for the $5,350 note, but also as security for any other indebtedness of Decker’s to the bank, including that upon which the defendant was liable as surety. The consideration of the Burbank notes was the sale to the signer (E. A. Burbank) by Decker of the stock and business of the Cousens Hardware Company. When the plaintiff took the Burbank notes, an arrangement was made to have the stock purchased by Burbank *220 insured, payable to the plaintiff in case of loss, the funds, if any, realized therefrom to be applied by the bank to the payment of the Burbank notes and the payment of the indebtedness for which those notes were held as collateral. The note of $5,350 was dated May 31, 1907, and the agreement between the bank and Decker as to the disposition of the proceeds of the collateral appears not to have been reduced to writing. Subsequently, the cashier of the bank procured from Decker a written agreement which he delivered to the defendant, providing that after payment of the $5,350 note and the discharge of all his liability to the bank as indorser ■or otherwise, the proceeds of the Burbank notes should be applied to the payment of the debt for which the defendant was surety. This agreement accords with the terms under which the bank received the notes the May before, except that it contains no mention ■of insurance. Shortly after his purchase of the Cousens Hardware Company, Burbank organized the business into a corporation known as the Burbank Company and deposited the stock certificates with the plaintiff as additional security for the payment of his notes. The arrangement as to insurance was not effected. February 4, 1908, the property of the Burbank Company was destroyed by fire.

The defendant claims that the failure of the bank either to secure insurance itself or to cause the owner of the property to effect insurance payable to it discharged him from liability upon Decker’s ■debt. It will not be necessary to consider the questions whether the bank as a general creditor of the Burbank Company (against which, so far as appears, it had no claim), or as pledgee of the stock •of the Burbank Company, could have obtained insurance upon the property of that corporation; or whether, in case the Burbank Company had insured its property payable to the bank as its interest might appear, or had assigned its policies of insurance before loss to the bank, the legal title of the bank to the proceeds of the policies after the fire would have been so clear that none of the general creditors of the Burbank Company would have disputed it. The defendant’s position is merely that the.plaintiff by diligence might have secured additional security. Assuming that it ■could, the defendant is in no worse case than if the security were voluntarily offered and refused. Assume that Burbank or the Burbank Company before the fire offered the bank the insurance •security which it is found was arranged for when the loan of $5,350 was made, and the plaintiff refused to accept it: the refusal would *221 not have discharged the surety, because a creditor is under no obligation to accept collateral security when offered by the principal debtor.

“The creditor may, without prejudice to his rights against the surety, decline to accept additional security offered by the principal. Bank v. Young, 43 N. H. 457, 461. He is under no obligation to pursue any of the remedies which .the law gives him against the principal, though the surety requests him to do so. Davis v. Huggins, 3 N. H. 231; Mahurin v. Pearson, 8 N. H. 539. He need not prove the debt against him in bankruptcy, exhibit the note to the deceased principal’s executor, nor, if his estate is administered as insolvent, present it to the commissioner for allowance. Sibley v. McAllaster, 8 N. H. 389. [Stevens v. Hood, 70 N. H. 177.] In short, he is not required to take any active measures to obtain payment either directly from the principal, or out of property which he holds as security. Bank v. Rogers, 16 N. H. 9, 17, 18. As between creditor and surety, it is the surety’s business to see that the principal pays. Sibley v. McAllaster, 8 N. H. 389, 390. . . . The surety’s contract is that he will himself pay the note when it falls due, and not that he will pay it in case the payee or holder cannot by due diligence enforce payment by the principal.” Carpenter, J., in Morrison v. Bank, 65 N. H. 253, 280.

The remaining question is whether the action of the bank or its cashier, Miles, after the fire, has discharged the defendant. Immediately after the fire, Miles took from the Burbank Company to himself as trustee an assignment of insurance policies amounting to $10,500. In doing this he acted for the bank and to protect the interests of all parties arising out of the transactions between the bank and Decker. The terms of the asssignment are not disclosed; but as the only claim the bank had to any payment from the Burbank Company was founded upon the notes and stock it held as collateral, it is assumed that the proceeds of the policies were intended to be applied in the same way to the extinguishment of the liability of Decker to the bank, in the order agreed upon when the collateral was left with the bank. The defendant therefore was entitled to have the money realized upon the policies applied to the extinguishment of the debt upon which he was liable, after the satisfaction of the liabilities of Decker upon which the proceeds of the notes were made first applicable. Whether Decker could incur further indebtedness after the collateral was left, which would take precedence of the debt upon which Brooks and Guay were liable, *222 would depend upon the terms upon which the collateral was deposited. The court interpreted the agreement as permitting such increase of Decker’s indebtedness and approved the application of "the proceeds of the policies to an indebtedness of $360 subsequently incurred, making the total of the Decker indebtedness entitled to precedence in the application of the proceeds of the Burbank notes, $5,875.34. To this ruling the defendant took no exception and no •question is here raised thereby. Whatever the plaintiff realized •out of the assignment of the policies in addition to this sum was ^applicable to the remaining indebtedness of Decker, which consisted of the $2,000 note in suit and one of like amount on which •one Brooks was surety. There was therefore for application on the •defendant’s note one half of the sum realized over and above $5,875.34.

Immediately after the assignment to Miles, 'creditors of the Burbank Company brought suit against them, trusteeing the insurance ■companies. Miles appeared as claimant in these suits under the .assignment to him.

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Related

Stevens v. Hood
46 A. 29 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1899)
Morrison v. Citizens National Bank
20 A. 300 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 475, 76 N.H. 216, 1911 N.H. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berlin-national-bank-v-guay-nh-1911.