Cancelmo's Estate

13 Pa. D. & C. 732

This text of 13 Pa. D. & C. 732 (Cancelmo's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cancelmo's Estate, 13 Pa. D. & C. 732 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinions

Thompson, J.

— Decedent died Jan. 15, 1927, and the exceptions before us relate to the action of the Auditing Judge in rejecting the claim of Citizens Bank and Trust Company of Tampa, Florida, against the decedent for $35,000, with interest from June 15, 1927, made under the following written agreement:

“Know All Men by These Presents: That for and in consideration of the sum of One ($1.00) Dollar to each of us in hand paid by the Citizens Bank. [733]*733and Trust Company, of Tampa, Florida, a corporation, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and in further consideration that the loans and advances hereinafter referred to are being and are to be made at our request, we, the undersigned stockholders and officers of the Growers Sales Company, Inc., a corporation under the laws of the State of Florida, do, jointly and severally, hereby guarantee to the said Citizens Bank and Trust Company the payment at maturity of any and all sums which the said Citizens Bank and Trust Company may lend or advance to the said Growers Sales Company or which the Growers Sales Company [may in any way owe to the Citizens Bank and Trust Company] by reason of indorsements, acceptances, overdrafts, drafts, or in any other way whatever, up to and not exceeding the sum of Thirty-five Thousand ($35,000.00). It being understood that this Guarantee is a continuing Guarantee covering all sums bon-owed prior to May 31st, 19&7, and is to guarantee to the Citizens Bank and Trust Company the payment at maturity of any indebtedness which said Growers Sales Company may owe to said bank, but not to exceed at any time the said sum of Thirty-five Thousand ($35,000.00) Dollars.

:Tn Witness Whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals on this the — day of August, 1926.
“O. C. Stewart (Seal)
L. C. Edward (Seal)
L. M. Morrow (Seal)
L. J. Lippman (Seal)
J. & C. Lippman & Co., N. Y.
“C. M. Bly (Seal) A. Cancelmo, Phila.
T. J. Cancelmo (Seal) F. E. Nellis & Co.
F. E. Nellis (Seal) Chicago (Seal)”

We have underlined [italicized] the above as indicating an interlineation in the original agreement, which the uncontradicted testimony shows was inserted before signing.

The Growers Sales Company, a Florida corporation, was engaged in the business of buying and packing fruit, and desired to borrow some money from the claimant bank, who demanded as a condition precedent to any loans that the Growers Sales Company should give them collateral, or a guarantee that the notes would be paid, in response to which demand the above guarantee was given, the signers of the same being officers and stockholders of the Growers Sales Company. On Aug. 18, 1926, the claimant bank loaned the Growers Sales Company the sum of $35,000, taking one note for $25,000 and one note for $10,000, both dated Aug. 18, 1926, and maturing Nov. 16, 1926. These notes were not paid in cash at maturity, but were renewed by new notes given for the same amount maturing Feb. 15, 1927. These, in turn, were renewed by new notes maturing April 15, 1927. These, in turn, were renewed on April 15, 1927, by new notes maturing June 15, 1927, which were also not paid in cash, and are the notes upon which the claim is made.

The Auditing Judge held that the renewal of the notes in November, 1926, was such an extension of time granted the debtor as would relieve the sureties without their consent thereto. We are of the opinion that this ruling was error, as these are not the notes upon which claim is made. The adjudication and briefs discuss the legal proposition that the giving of time to the debtor without the consent of the surety discharges the surety. We do not dispute this proposition of law, but are of the opinion that the same has no application to the facts of this case. This is not a case of commercial paper, but one of suretyship: Quaker City National Bank v. O’Callahan, 95 Pa. Superior Ct. 69.

[734]*734We are of the opinion that the principle laid down in the case of Marquardt’s Estate, 251 Pa. 73, to wit, that the defendants were sureties and not endorsers, is applicable to the case under consideration. In that case subscribers to the stock of a corporation gave their notes for the amounts of their subscriptions, and the officers of the corporation took these notes to the bank for discount, which the bank refused to do unless the officers became personally responsible. Thereupon one of the directors drew a note to the order of another director, which was endorsed by each of the other fifteen directors. Upon the delivery of this note to the bank, the bank discounted the notes given for stock subscriptions, one of which was not paid. Fourteen months thereafter, without presentation or protest, a suit was started against the estate of one of the deceased endorsers, and the defense was that as an endorser they were entitled to have the notes presented for payment and notice of non-payment given, which not being done relieved the endorser. Mr. Justice Stewart, at page 76, said:

“If this collateral note were what on its face it purports to be, a negotiable paper made and accepted in due course, there could be no answer to the objection urged. But any such assumption goes wide of the mark when we consider the object and purpose of the note, and the relation of the parties whose names appear thereon to such object and purpose and to each other in connection therewith. The note represented no existing indebtedness as between the parties to it; the drawer owed nothing to the drawee; the latter received nothing from his endorsee, nor did any subsequent endorser from any prior endorser. All the parties to the note were directors of a corporation which could realize upon the securities it held only as the directors would lend their individual credit collaterally. This the directors agreed to do, and the note in question was joined in by them to accomplish this one end. To apply the law merchant to such a note, given under such circumstances, would effect results not only never contemplated but unjust and inequitable in the extreme.”

The principle above announced was applied under a different state of facts in Friedman v. Maltinsky, 260 Pa. 312, in which Marquardt’s Estate, supra, was cited with approval.

When the above guarantee was signed, no money had been loaned by the claimant bank to the Growers Sales Company, and, therefore, there was no particular maturity date for any indebtedness when the sureties signed the above agreement. The question of the time of repayment of whatever sums the bank might loan to the sales company was left entirely within their judgment and discretion, and they could have made the maturity date June 15, 1927, if they so desired. The sureties were not to be consulted, nor were they concerned. All that the sureties were concerned about was that the amount loaned by the bank to the sales company should not exceed $35,000, and should be loaned before May 31,1927, and if, when the first loan was made in August, 1926, maturing in November, the bank and the sales company agreed that the maturity in November should be changed to February, and so on, it was within the letter and spirit of the agreement, and was not any concern of the sureties.

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Related

Quaker City National Bank v. O'Callaghan
95 Pa. Super. 69 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Marquardt's Estate
95 A. 917 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)
Friedman v. Maltinsky
103 A. 731 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Pa. D. & C. 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cancelmos-estate-paorphctphilad-1930.