Buck v. First National Bank

260 N.W. 834, 63 S.D. 507, 99 A.L.R. 23, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 45
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1935
DocketFile No. 7673.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 N.W. 834 (Buck v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buck v. First National Bank, 260 N.W. 834, 63 S.D. 507, 99 A.L.R. 23, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 45 (S.D. 1935).

Opinion

*508 CAMPBELL, J.

Plaintiff Buck was indebted to the First National Bank of Bristol upon two demand promissory notes aggregating $86.25. These notes were secured by a chattel mortgage on a horse, which in the summer or fall of 1929 the plaintiff sold without the bank’s consent. The bank thereupon requested some other security for the debt, and plaintiff delivered to the bank in pledge as collateral security for the payment of his notes a promissory note payable to plaintiff executed by his brother-in-law, Otto Stoll, bearing date in 1926, due March 1, 1930, for the principal sum of $955, on which there had been paid the sum of $55 on the principal and interest up to the year 1928. On March 17, 1931, the bank sold the two Buck notes aggregating $86.25 to Stoll, the maker of the collateral note, receiving therefor the sum of $36.25 in cash and a note for $50, which was presently paid. At the time of selling the Buck notes to Stoll and as a part of said transaction, the bank likewise transferred1 and delivered to Stoll his own note which the bank had previously held as collateral to the Buck notes. The Stoll note was not itself sold to Stoll or transferred to him absolutely or in his own right, but passed to him as collateral security appurtenant to the Buck notes which he had purchased, as evidenced by the written receipt given by Stoll to the bank at the time, which was in the following language :

“Mar. 17, 1930.

“Received of Citizens Nat’l Bank, Bristol, S. D. One note on Walter Buck, dated 12-6-29 due on demand for $23.25 and one note on Walter Buck for $63.00 dated 12-6-29 due on demand1, also one note given by Otto Stoll to1 Walter Buck for $955.00. Bal due on same $900.00. This note is collateral security for two above mentioned notes on Walter Buck, being purchased by me.”

When Buck learned of this situation, he took the position that the transfer of the Stoll note to Stoll by the bank constituted: a conversion thereof and instituted this action for damages, naming as defendants the bank and Lundeen, its principal managing officer who had personally handled the transaction above described. Issue was joined and the case came on for trial. The learned trial judge took the view that the transfer of the Stoll note to Stoll amounted to a conversion thereof, even though the same was transferred to Stoll as a part of and in connection with the sale to Stoll of the Buck notes to which it was collateral, and he instructed the jury *509 as follows: “You are instructed as a matter of law, that while the owner of a note may ordinarily sell such note together with its collateral security, such owner may not lawfully sell the same to the person who is indebted on the collateral security if the collateral security amounts to more than the debt which it secures. Therefore, in this case, you are instructed that the sale of the Buck notes for $86.25 and the delivery of the Otto Stoll note for $900 and interest by defendants to said Stoll was a wrongful conversion and misappropriation of said $900 Stoll note on the part of the defendants; and if such action by the defendants resulted in injury to the plaintiff, he is entitled to recover judgment therefor. The questions for you to determine in this case are, first, — was the plaintiff injured or damaged by the action of the defendants in surrendering or assigning said $900.00 Otto Stoll note to- the said Stoll; and, if so, in what amount he was damaged.”

The jury returned a general verdict in favor of plaintiff assessing his damages at $450. From judgment thereon and from denial of their application for new trial, defendants have appealed.

Implicit in the verdict of the jury under the -court’s instruction there is, of course, a finding that the Stoll note at the time of the claimed conversion was worth $450 in excess of the amount due on respondent’s notes. Appellants urge that the evidence is entirely insufficient to support the finding that the Stoll note at said time was worth $450 or indeed, any substantial sum whatsoever. We think there is much force in this contention, but we believe we need not -decide the point in this case.

It is apparent that respondent in instituting this action and the learned trial judge in instructing the jury much relied upon the language of this -court set forth in the case of Aulwes v. Farmers’ Bank of Humboldt (1921) 44 S. D. 92, 182 N. W. 528, 529, wherein it is said:

“Appellant cites numerous authorities in support of its -contention that the holder of collateral security for the payment of a debt may sell such -debt and transfer the collateral security to the purchaser. This is a general rule of law, but it does not authorize a pledgee to surrender a negotiable instrument to the maker. By subdivision 5 of section 1822, Rev. Code:

“ ‘A negotiable instrument is discharged: * * * When the *510 principal debtor becomes the holder of the instrument at or after maturity in his own right.’

“The collateral note and check were both overdue when they were transferred to Meyer by the defendant; therefore both became discharged when they came into Meyer’s hands and his obligation thereon was extingushed. This left plaintiff without redress for the difference between what was due him from. Meyer on the note and check and what plaintiff owed the defendant, except to proceed against defendant as for conversion.”

In its holding on this particular point the Aulwes Case, so' far as we have been able to discover, stands alone and we think it is not good law. See criticism thereof in Brannan, Negotiable Instruments Law (5th Ed.) p. 899.

The purpose of pledging collateral is to secure the payment of the principal debt and it is fundamental that a pledge, like any other security, follows the debt. In the absence of agreement otherwise, and unless prohibited from so doing by contract or statute, the pledgee may sell the principal debt and as ancillary to said sale transfer the collateral to the purchaser, so long as he refrains from doing anything to deprive the pledgor of his right to redeem the pledge on paying the amount due on the principal debt. The defect in the holding of the Aulwes Case above quoted lies in the assumption that a man who receives his own note as collateral to other notes which he has purchased becomes the owner andi holder of his own note “in his own right” within the meaning of the Negotiable Instruments Law (subdivision 5, § 119, Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law; subdivision 5, § 1822, Rev. Code 1919). We think this assumption unwarranted and erroneous. Stoll did not acquire his own note absolutely or without restrictions. He admitted by the receipt he signed that he acquired it and was entitled to hold it solely as collateral to the Buck notes which he purchased. He held it, and was obligated as a matter of law to hold it, subject to the same terms, conditions and limitations as any other holder of collateral; and it seems very plain that when Stoll received his own note in this fashion, his liability thereon was not discharged. The Alabama court has treated the situation very clearly in the case of Owings Lumber Co. et al. v. Marlowe (1917) 200 Ala. 568, 76 So. 926, 927, L. R. A. 1918E, 155, in the following language:

*511 “It has been held in this state, in line with the general current of authority, that:

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 834, 63 S.D. 507, 99 A.L.R. 23, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-first-national-bank-sd-1935.