Brink v. Stratton

64 A.D. 331, 72 N.Y.S. 87

This text of 64 A.D. 331 (Brink v. Stratton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brink v. Stratton, 64 A.D. 331, 72 N.Y.S. 87 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

This action was; brought to recover upon a. promissory note in words and figures as follows :■

“ $850.00. Middletown, N. Y., July 1st, 1893.
On demand we or either of us promise to pay to the order of Leander Brink, Eight hundred and fifty Dollars at his office. Value received. With interest from date.
“ W. D. STRATTON,
“ E. A. BROWN,
“ COREY & CO.”

The defendants Stratton and Brown, who alone answered, admitted the making and issuing of the note, but set up that the said defendants Stratton and Brown signed said note ¡as surety for the defendant Horace W. Corey, or Corey & Co¡, and, upon information and belief, that on or about the first day of August, 1893, the plaintiff demanded payment of said note from the sai8 Corey & Company, or the defendant Horace W. Corey, and that at the time of said demand, or thereabouts, and many times thereafter, the time was extended by the plaintiff for the payment of said note, without the consent or knowledge of the defendants Stratton and Brown* or either of them, and that the said note was never protested and no notice of protest was ever given the said defendants Stratton and Brown, or either of them ; ” and still upon information and belief, “ that the said note was paid and satisfied by the defendant Horace W. Corey, or the said Corey & Company, the time of said payment being unknown to the said defendants Stratton and Brown, or either of them.” The issues thus presented were tried before a' jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff. From the judgment entered upon such verdict and from an order denying a motion for a new trial upon the minutes, defendants Stratton and Brown appealed to this court.

The note upon which this action is based, and which is set out in full above, certainly bears none' of the evidences of having been made by Corey & Co. with Stratton and Brown as sureties. It is, upon its face, a. joint and several note of the parties, and if it was intended that W. D. Stratton and E. A. Brown were to stand merely as sureties, the parties were singularly unfortunate in the choice of terms h> express the contract, as well as in the form of [333]*333the instrument, for it is hardly to be expected that persons who are understood to occupy the position of sureties will, under ordinary circumstances, take precedence in the matter of signing an obligation involving $850. It is not the method ordinarily adopted by prudent business men in a transaction of this importance, and with the making and delivery of the note admitted, the defendants assumed the burden of proof of the facts constituting a defense. The jury found the facts in favor of the plaintiff, and, as they were not obliged to believe any of the witnesses as against the evidence of the note itself, which is conceded to be genuine, and which is not shown to have been paid, it is not very apparent how the defendants can hope to succeed upon this appeal, especially as there is a conflict of evidence upon the material issues outside of the note, which the jury have resolved in favor of the plaintiff.

The first point urged by the appellants is that “ The extension of the time of payment of the original note by the plaintiff, without the knowledge of the defendants Stratton and Brown, relieved them from liability as sureties upon the note.” This point assumes two facts, neither of which appeal's to have been established to the satisfaction of the jury; one is that the plaintiff extended the time of payment of the original note, and the other is that the defendants Stratton and Brown were sureties instead of joint and several makers of the note in suit. We fail to find any evidence in the case that the-plaintifif accepted this note upon any other terms and conditions than those exjiressed in the note, in which the defendants agreed that On demand we or either of us promise to pay to the order of Leander Brink, Eight hundred and fifty Dollars at his office. Value received. With interest from date.” While it may be that as between the parties who signed the note there was an understanding, expressed or implied, that Corey & Company were the makers of this note and that Stratton and Brown were indorsers or sureties, no notice of this condition was brought home to the plaintiff, and the consideration upon which he appears to have parted with his money (for it is conceded that the plaintiff loaned the defendants this amount of cash) was the receipt of the joint and several note of the defendants without any other limitations than those expressed in the contract. This view of the matter is fully supported by the evidence of the plaintiff and is consistent with the whole transaction.

[334]*334The circumstances out of which this controversy arose appear to-be as follows: The defendant Corey was a real estate dealer and speculator, and in 1893 negotiated for the purchase of certain real estate in the county of Sullivan, with the intention of organizing a corporation and developing a water power for the production of an electric current to be used commercially. Associated with him in this enterprise were Messrs. Stratton and Brown, and when the time - came for the payment of the purchase price of the property none-of the parties had1 the ready money. In.this situation Corey went-to the plaintiff and asked him to loan the parties the sum of $2,550, this being the amount of the purchase. The plaintiff did not have the full amount needed, but he was in business, the defendants were customers of his, and for the purpose of accommodating them he made arrangements to secure the sum required and took it to the office of Corey, where, in the presence of Stratton and Brown the lump sum was delivered, the plaintiff taking two notes, one for $1,700, the other for $850, the latter being the note now in suit. Both notes were alike in form, were signed by the same parties, and were in all respects duplicates, except as to the amount. The $1,700 note was paid some time subsequently, but the $850 note was never demanded or-paid so far-as the evidence discloses. Some time after this transaction Corey had a conversation with the plaintiff, in which Corey proposed to pay this amount by getting the plaintiff to indorse a note at one of the banks, using the proceeds for this purpose. This proposition the plaintiff declined,'but, as the latter was in -need of money to take the place of that which he had borrowed to accommodate' the plaintiff, it was agreed between the plaintiff and Corey that the plaintiff would indorse Corey’s note, payable to the order of John E. Corwin, and that Corey should secure the discount of. this note, turning over the funds to the plaintiff, who was to make use of the money to meet his own obligations, and upon a payment of this note the plaintiff agreed to apply the sum upon the: payment- of the original note. The plaintiff testified to these facts, and says that he - distinctly stated to Corey that he would not relinquish any of his rights under the joint note. It is because of this note, given for three months, and from time to time renewed, that the defendants Stratton and Brown claim that they have been relieved as sureties upon the original note. Assuming, for the purposes of the discus[335]

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.D. 331, 72 N.Y.S. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brink-v-stratton-nyappdiv-1901.