Coal River Collieries v. Eureka Coal & Wood Co.

132 S.E. 337, 144 Va. 263, 46 A.L.R. 485, 1926 Va. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 337 (Coal River Collieries v. Eureka Coal & Wood Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coal River Collieries v. Eureka Coal & Wood Co., 132 S.E. 337, 144 Va. 263, 46 A.L.R. 485, 1926 Va. LEXIS 247 (Va. 1926).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by the payee against the makers of the following note:

“$552.60 Norfolk, Virginia, July 19, 1924.
......;.....................Sixty................................after date we promise to pay Coal River Collieries Co. or order, without offset............................................five hundred fifty-two dollars......................................60/100 dollars.Negotiable and payable at Merchants and Planters Bank of Berkley. Value received. The drawer and endorser of this note hereby waive the benefit of............ homestead exemption as to this debt.
“No.- A39791. Due 9-17-24.
“EUREKA COAL AND WOOD CO., INC.
“J. Liebman, Treasurer, N. Orleans.”

The coal company made no defense. Orleans defended on the ground that he signed the note as president of the company and was not personally bound thereon, and further that there was no consideration for his signature thereto. There was a judgment against the coal company and in favor of Orleans. The latter judgment is assailed here because the trial court admitted parol evidence on behalf of Orleans to show that he intended only to sign officially, and was not bound personally.

The facts of the case are as follows: The Eureka [267]*267Coal and Wood Company was incorporated in November, 1923, and had but three stockholders, all of whom were officers of the company, and their names as such appeared on the letterheads of the company used in its business correspondence. This letterhead showed Orleans as president, a Mr. Foy as vice-president, and Liebman as secretary-treasurer. Sometime thereafter it purchased coal of the plaintiff, and after the account had been standing some time, the plaintiff, wrote to the Eurkea Company, on July 17, 1924, a courteous letter requesting it “to make some arrangement to take care of this balance not later than the 28th of this month,” or as Orleans testified, “they have asked us to send them some money,” and Liebman testified that the note in suit “was sent in response to a-request for money.” The letter enclosing the note, after expressing appreciation for the indulgence shown and speaking of the company’s bright prospects in the near future, says: “Enclosed please find note for $552.60, to be paid in sixty days.” The letter enclosing the note was not acknowledged and there was no other communication between the parties until after the note fell due and payment was refused. Orleans, when examined as a witness in his own behalf and in response to a question by his own counsel, testified as follows:

“Q. Now, when you received this letter which asked that you send a check for that past due account, what did you do?
“A. Well, I replied to the letter and I sent him my note because we didn’t have no money at that time.”

At the trial, and while Orleans was testifying in his own behalf, he was asked by his counsel this question: “When you signed that note N. Orleans, did you sign it to become bound individually, or as president of the corporation?” To which he replied: “I just signed [268]*268because I was president of the corporation. That is the way I signed it.” Exception was duly taken to this and all other similar questions, but the court overruled the exceptions; being of opinion that the note “is signed by the company and the circumstances of the signature would be sufficient to let in parol evidence.” This presents the main question we are called upon to decide.

A number of text books and cases have been cited on both sides, and we have given them the consideration which the importance of the question demands, and some of those most relied on are hereinafter considered, but in none of them, so far as we have discovered, has such evidence been admitted unless there was something on the face of the instrument, or in the manner of the signature, to create an ambiguity, or an uncertainty as to the liability of the party signing.

In Germania Nat. Bank v. Mariner, 129 Wis. 544, 109 N. W. 574, so much relied on by the defendant in error, the note sued on was as follows:

“Milwaukee, Jan. 6, 1905.
“Four months after date The Northwestern Straw Works promises to pay to the order of F. G. Biglow ($20,000.00) twenty thousand dollars at the First National Bank Milwaukee. Value received.
“Northwestern Straw Works,
“E. R. Stillman, Treas.,
“John W. Mariner.”

It was held that Mariner was not personally liable because the note was ambiguous on its face, thereby admitting parol evidence to explain the ambiguity, and that the parol evidence clearly showed that he was not personally liable. It was said that “the [269]*269general rule is well supported that when it clearly appears, either in the body of the note or by appropriate words added to the signatures themselves, that a corporation is the party making the promise, there is no liability on the part of the signers.” Again: “Granting that the section (referring to section 20, negotiable instruments act) does not apply as to the signature of Mr. Mariner, we think it would be conceded that upon its face it is ambiguous so far as Mr. Mariner is concerned. The instrument says that the ‘Northwestern Straw Works’ promises to pay. The signature of Mariner is the bare signature of an individual. This certainly is not usual, and should arrest the attention of any one dealing with it at once. People do not ordinarily sign contracts purporting on their face to be contracts of others. If they do, the fact itself suggests at once a doubt as to what they mean by it. In other words, the instrument becomes, as to the signatures, ambiguous.” After deciding that there was nothing in the negotiable instruments act which applied to the case, and that it must be decided on principles of the common law, the court concludes its opinion as follows:

“It is elementary that, in ease a written contract is ambiguous in its terms, parol proof of the facts and circumstances under which it was executed may be introduced to aid in its construction. This rule applies to commercial papér, even in the hands of a third person, because where the ambiguity is apparent to a reasonably prudent man on the face of the paper, he is necessarily put upon enquiry. Mechem on Agency, sec. 443; Hood v. Hallenbeck, 7 Hun. [N. Y.] 362; 10 Cyc. p. 1051; 4 Thompson on Corp., sec. 5141. The parol evidence in the present ease showed without dispute that Mr. Mariner’s signature was attached [270]*270simply in Ms representative capacity and' as agent of the corporation. There being a plain ambiguity in this respect, appearing on the face of the note, the evidence was properly received, and the judgment against Mariner individually was erroneously rendered.”

The case is rested wholly on the ambiguity appearing on the face of the instrument, and is not applicable to the instant case where no such ambigmty appears. I In American Trust Co. v. Canevin, 107 C. C. A. 543, 184 Fed. 657, the note sued on was as follows:

^_‘$15,000.
“New Salem, Pa., Feb. 26, 1908.

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132 S.E. 337, 144 Va. 263, 46 A.L.R. 485, 1926 Va. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coal-river-collieries-v-eureka-coal-wood-co-va-1926.