Creditors Claim & Adjustment Co. v. Northwest Loan & Trust Co.

142 P. 670, 81 Wash. 247, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1404
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1914
DocketNo. 11998½
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 142 P. 670 (Creditors Claim & Adjustment Co. v. Northwest Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creditors Claim & Adjustment Co. v. Northwest Loan & Trust Co., 142 P. 670, 81 Wash. 247, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1404 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Morris, J.

“Spokane, Wash., 7-3-09.
“Crown Elec. Mfg. Co. We guarantee A. C. Rice bill two thousand dollars for Spokane Post-Office Elec, equipments.
“Northwestern Loan & Trust Co.”

Upon receipt of this telegram, the Crown Electrical Manufacturing Company wrote a letter to the respondent, part of which is as follows :

“We have your telegram stating you will guarantee A. C. Rice bill for two thousand dollars for the Spokane Post Office equipment. We would like you to confirm this, and also state that you are in a position where you can guarantee this so that it will be binding, as our understanding is that an ordinary bank guarantee is not good under the law, and of course, we wish this to be what it represents, a guarantee in fact. We have had trouble in Washington with the Oregon Trust & Savings Bank, under the same kind of a guarantee, in which the receiver has refused to pay when they [252]*252went into bankruptcy, and which we are now suing and consequently do not wish to get tied up in another deal of the same kind.”

In response to this letter, the respondent wrote to the Crown Electrical Manufacturing Company partly as follows :

“Replying to your letter of July 6th, we beg leave to say that we do now confirm our telegram, and inasmuch as we have taken their note secured to cover any payments we might make up to $2,000, we surely are in a position to guarantee the matter. Our ordinary telegraphic guarantee in the usual order of business is accepted by our New York correspondents and other banks, and we think your statement that an ordinary bank guarantee is not good under the law is perhaps too full a statement on your part. The wire or telegram that we sent you is a guarantee in fact.”

About the same time, Rice wrote a letter to the Crown Electrical Manufacturing Company, part of which is as follows :

“In regards to bank guarantee will say that bank guaranteeing payment to you is controlled by the Gallands, who are wealthy brewers and property owners of this city. If you take time to look up Dun’s reports you can readily satisfy yourself .on this score. The bank here are themselves protected by a note of two thousand dollars, signed by N. E. Rice and F. E. Empey and myself. Mr. Empey, my brother-in-law, and N. E. Rice, my father, are worth in the neighborhood of $100,000. So the bank is amply protected.”

On July 2, F. E. Empey, N. E. Rice, and A. C. Rice executed and delivered to the respondent a note in the ordinary form for the sum of $2,000. This is the note referred to in the letters of Rice and respondent, and the record shows that, as stated in the letters, it was given for the purpose of protecting the respondent against any loss that might come to it by reason of this guaranty. The account not having been paid, it passed into the hands of the appellant through due assignment, and this action was brought to recover the amount due, after the institution of suit against Rice and [253]*253the obtaining of a judgment against him for $1,724.10, and the return of execution unsatisfied. The court below dismissed this action, holding that the act of respondent in entei'ing into the contract of guaranty was ultra vires.

The defense of ultra vires is one with which the courts have had much trouble in attempting to compel some corporations to live up to their contracts, and much has been said that is hard to reconcile. Many cases, among which may be classed those from this state, have refused to recognize this defense, where the contract has been fully executed and where in its performance one party has received and retained a benefit or the other has suffered a detriment and cannot be placed in statu quo. Tootle v. First Nat. Bank, 6 Wash. 181, 33 Pac. 345; Allen v. Olympia Light & Power Co., 13 Wash. 307, 43 Pac. 55; Wheeler, Osgood & Co. v. Everett Land Co., 14 Wash. 630, 45 Pac. 316; Spokane v. Amsterdamsch Trustees Kantoor, 22 Wash. 172, 60 Pac. 141.

In the last case, Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U. S. 71, and Parish v. Wheeler, 22 N. Y. 494, were cited to the effect that executed dealings of corporations must be allowed to stand for and against both parties when the plainest rules of good faith require it. The statutes of this state, under which the respondent was organized and from which it derives its powers, give us no aid in determining the power of this corporation to enter into contracts of this character. They contain neither a grant of such power nor a prohibition against its exercise. At the time of the transaction here involved, Rice was a customer of respondent bank, and had been since the preceding October. Such fact was held, in Farmers’ & Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Illinois Nat. Bank, 146 Ill. App. 136, to sustain a liability against the bank upon the ground that, in promising to honor the draft which was there sought to be enforced against it, the bank did so to secure business for one of its customers, in whose business it in turn had an interest and from which it hoped to derive [254]*254gain; and that, in extending and encouraging its customers’ business, the bank, from a business standpoint, was promoting its own interest, and for that reason could not plead ultra vires as a defense. This holding is in line with those cases like Tootle v. First Nat. Bank, supra, which take the position that the receiving and retention óf a benefit or the suffering of a detriment is sufficient to take away the defense of ultra vires.

Morse on Banks and Banking, § 740 (4), states as the rule that, where the excess of power is not a violation of the statute but of the common law, a bank will be liable on its ultra vires contract,

“. . . provided that either of the following combinations of facts exist: first, that the bank has received benefit from the transaction which it cannot or does not restore, . . . or, second, that the opposing party against whom the plea of ultra vires is hurled can show both that he had no notice actual or constructive that the contract was ultra vires, . . . and that he is a holder for value, or has parted with value or changed his condition disadvantageously by reason of the transaction.”

In Hagerstown Bank v. London Savings Fund Society, 3

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 670, 81 Wash. 247, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creditors-claim-adjustment-co-v-northwest-loan-trust-co-wash-1914.