Clare County Savings Bank v. Featherly

139 N.W. 61, 173 Mich. 292, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 1013
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
DocketDocket No. 116
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 61 (Clare County Savings Bank v. Featherly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clare County Savings Bank v. Featherly, 139 N.W. 61, 173 Mich. 292, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 1013 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Stone, J.

The plaintiff sued the defendants to recover the balance due upon a promissory note bearing date December 20, 1909, wherein the defendants promised to pay to the plaintiff, or order, six months after date, the sum of $700, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. The note was signed by the three defendants. There had been indorsed as paid upon the note the sum of $469.40 on May 17, 1911. Default after personal service was regularly entered as to the defendants Gerald L. Featherly and Blanche Featherly. The defendant Frank Coleman pleaded the general issue and gave notice that he would prove thereunder that he signed the note as surety only, for the other defendants, with the knowledge of the plaintiff, and that he only did so because the other defendants had given a chattel mortgage to the plaintiff on a stock of merchandise and fixtures at Clare, Mich., to secure the payment of said note, and that the other defendants and the plaintiff had the stock of merchandise and fixtures insured against loss or damage by fire and payable to plaintiff, as its interest might appear, and, at the time this defendant Coleman executed and delivered said note as surety, the plaintiff agreed with him that it would keep its mortgage and insurance as aforesaid on said property in force and effect and in its possession and control for the protection of the plaintiff, as well as of this defendant, until the payment of said note; that the [294]*294amount of said chattel mortgage was #700, and the amount' of said insurance was above the amount of the note sued upon in this case. Yet the plaintiff, well knowing the premises, did not keep said insurance against loss and damage by fire and lightning on said stock of merchandise and fixtures in force and effect, but expressly permitted said stock of merchandise and fixtures to be removed to other premises not covered by said policy of insurance, although it had said policy of insurance in its possession and control at all times, and agreed to keep the same in force and effect, and neglected to have said insurance transferred to the new location where said stock of merchandise and fixtures had been transferred, whereby said insurance became void and of no effect; and that thereafter, and while said insurance policy was in the custody and control of the plaintiff, the plaintiff had not caused the same to be transferred so as to cover such stock of merchandise and fixtures at such new location; that said stock of merchandise and fixtures was totally destroyed by fire under such circumstances that the amount of said insurance would hav'fe become available to the plaintiff, and would have been applied in full payment of the note herein sued on, had plaintiff caused such insurance to be transferred to such new location before such fire; and that, because said policy of insurance had not been transferred so as to cover said property in such new location, the insurance company which issued said policy denied liability, and only paid a small portion of the amount of said loss, and that because of the neglect, as aforesaid, of the plaintiff, this defendant has been damaged to a large amount, to wit, the amount sued upon in this cause, and plaintiff should therefore not recover.

The case came on for trial before a jury, and the plaintiff offered in evidence the promissory note and gave evidence as to the amount due thereon; and it being admitted that the defendants Gerald L. Featherly and Blanche Featherly received the money from the plaintiff for which [295]*295said note was given, and that the defendant Frank Coleman signed said note for the purpose of securing the payment thereof to the plaintiff, it rested its case.

The defendant Coleman, to maintain and prove the issue on his part, produced the following evidence in substance: Gerald L. Featherly was sworn. He testified that the defendant Frank Coleman was his father-in-law, and that the witness was in the retail grocery business in Clare, Mich.; that the defendants Featherly got the $700 represented by the note, and that the negotiations occurred in the office of the plaintiff, and that Mr. Sutherland, the cashier, and Mr. Coleman were present at the time. The following occurred:

Q. What was said by Mr. Coleman about signing the note with you ?”

This was objected to by the plaintiff as immaterial for the reason that what was said was merged in the signing of the note. The objection being overruled, and an exception taken, the witness testified as follows:

A. Mr. Coleman — Mr. Sutherland and myself were present — made an agreement, as I understood them, that he would sign the note provided the bank would look after the interest of the stock of groceries and so forth, or Featherly & Co., rather, and specifying at that time that he would not sign the note under any other condition or consideration, and Sutherland stated that he would accept the terms and conditions, and that he would, look after this business, being as it was directly across the street. Mr. Sutherland stated that, in case anything should not be working as it should be at any time, he would notify Mr. Coleman immediately. Mr. Coleman stated that he would not sign the note or the papers unless Mr. Sutherland looked after the insurance papers along with the other interests of the business. There was an insurance on the stock at the time. The insurance was in favor of William Ryan, the man from whom I purchased the goods. * * * I did not see the policy, but knew the bank had an insurance policy on the stock. The value of the stock was between $1,100 and $1,200. I made proofs of loss.”

[296]*296On cross-examination he testified as follows:

“There was an insurance policy on the stock at the time I bought it which run three or four months longer, and when that run out I took out a new policy and paid the premium. I arranged it with Mr. Maynard, the insurance agent.”

The witness testified that he had been notified that a settlement had been made of the insurance at $469.40. The defendants Featherly had given the president of the Clare County Savings Bank full power to settle the loss caused by the fire on December 22, 1910. He further testified that Mr. Coleman was at Clare at the time of the fire, and had been there three or four days; that he came there to see about the business, and was in the store where the goods were, and knew they had been moved from their former location; that Mr. Coleman was in Clare at the time the stock was bought and at the time just before the fire only. He made no objection to the goods being moved. On redirect examination the witness said:

“ I talked with Mr. Sutherland about moving the stock up the street. I asked him his opinion of moving the stock from the present location to the other building, and he said he thought it would be a better location and advised me to move, and gave me a verbal permit to do so. He was in the store a couple of times after the removal. The place we moved from was diagonally across the street corner from the bank. I had no talk with Mr. Sutherland after the removal about the stock or the moving. I asked him at the time I got the permit whether or not he would look after the other interests that were there to be looked after, and he said he would. The same morning of the fire, or the following morning, Mr. Sutherland said to me, ‘You didn’t have your insurance papers transferred,’ and I said, ‘I thought you were looking after those papers and business,’ and he said that he did not know that he had the insurance policy at all.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 61, 173 Mich. 292, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clare-county-savings-bank-v-featherly-mich-1912.