Elgin National Bank v. Goecke

129 N.E. 149, 295 Ill. 403
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1920
DocketNo. 12828
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 149 (Elgin National Bank v. Goecke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elgin National Bank v. Goecke, 129 N.E. 149, 295 Ill. 403 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

On September 18, 1911, Frank A. Goecke was manager and Henry Schmidt was president of the Elgin National Brewing Company. Goecke borrowed $3000 from the Elgin National Bank and Schmidt guaranteed the note given by Goecke for the loan. The money was turned over-to Goecke. and by him placed in the First National Bank of Elgin and checked out to pay the indebtedness and operating expenses of the brewing company. This Goecke-Schmidt note has never been paid but has been renewed from time to time. The last renewal was made November 22, 1912, by the giving of a new note due in six months from that date. On September 30, 1912, the Elgin National Brewing Company executed two notes, payable on demand, to its own order,—one for $3000 and the other for $2500. The latter note, although executed at the same time as the former, was dated October 30, 1912. Both notes were indorsed in blank by the brewing company and by Frank A. Goecke, William Mair, Arthur T. Rogers, Franz Walther and A. C. Rathbun. Goecke was then acting as president of the brewing company and had the two notes executed, and the}r were tO' be used by the brewing company to pay sight drafts attached to bills of lading for two car-loads of supplies for the brewery. The notes were not used for the purpose for which they were executed but were left with the brewing company’s officers. They were accommodation paper, to be used by the brewing company for the purpose aforesaid, neither Mair nor Rogers having received anything for indorsing the notes. On December 10, 1912, Goecke instructed the book-keeper for the brewing company to deliver said two notes to the Elgin National Bank. The $3000 note was delivered to the bank and accepted by it as collateral security for the Goecke-Schmidt note for $3000. The $2500 note was delivered to the bank in payment of the following. notes executed by the brewing company, to-wit: Two notes aggregating $950 to Brammer Bros.; two notes aggregating $1050 to Frank A. Goecke; and one note to J. C. Eckerley for $380,—all of which had been purchased by the bank of the payees. These notes lacked about $30 of amounting to $'2500, and- the remainder was paid in cash to the book-keeper for the brewing company and all the notes so paid were then canceled by the bank. The bank officers knew at the time they accepted the said two notes that they were accommodation notes and were indorsed without consideration by Mair and Rogers but did not have knowledge that they were given for a restricted use or purpose, and there was nothing on the face of the notes to indicate any such restriction. Since the execution of said two notes the brewing company has failed and gone into the hands of a receiver. On presentment and demand to the brewing company for payment of the two notes the brewing company failed to pay the same and the notes were duly protested for non-payment. Defendant in error, the Elgin National Bank, brought suit in the circuit court of Kane county against all five of the indorsers of the- two notes. There was a default as to all the defendants except Mair and Rogers, who defended the suit on various issues formed by the pleadings. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury and judgment was entered in favor of the bank for the sum of $7157.65, being the amount of the notes with interest. On appeal to the Appellate Court for the Second District the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed. A writ of certiorari was granted, and the record has been brought to this court for review on errors assigned by Mair and Rogers.

One who has placed his signature upon a negotiable instrument otherwise than as maker, drawer or acceptor is deemed to be an indorser, unless he has clearly indicated -by appropriate words his intention to be bound in some other capacity. (Hurd’s Stat. 1917, chap..98, sec. 63, p. 2006.) Where such person indorses such an instrument in blank before delivery he is liable as an indorser, if he signs for the accommodation of the payee, to all parties subsequent to the payee. (Ibid. sec. 64.) Plaintiffs in error, as accommodation parties and indorsers of the notes in question, indorsed the same for the purpose of lending their names and credit to the brewing company. They are therefore liable to defendant in error on the notes, although the defendant in error at the time of taking the instruments knew plaintiffs in error to be only accommodation parties, if the defendant in error is a holder for value, as the notes were indorsed to it before maturity and without notice of their restricted use and purpose. (Ibid. sec. 29, p. 2003; Naef v. Potter, 226 Ill. 628.) The proof clearly establishes as to the $2500 note that defendant in error is a bom fide holder for value. The consideration paid by the bank for this note was the cancellation and surrender by it of the several other notes executed by the brewing company to other parties and indorsed to defendant in error and the payment in cash to the brewing company of the difference between the notes so canceled and the face value of the $2500 note. Defendant in error was entitled to judgment on this note under the evidence in the record.

The $3000 Goecke-Schmidt note had been extended for six months by the giving of a new note on November 22, 1912, as already stated. The brewery note for $3000 indorsed by plaintiffs in error was not delivered to defendant in error at its bank and accepted by it as security until December 10, 1912,—about eighteen days after the giving of the extension note to which it was collateral, security. There is no proof in the record that at the time the GoéckeSchmidt note was renewed the last time there was an agreement that the brewery note was to be put up as collateral and in part consideration for the extension of the GoeckeSchmidt note or debt. The proof simply shows that this brewery note for $3000 wa£ delivered to defendant in error as aforesaid and accepted by it as collateral to the GoeckeSchmidt note, which had already been extended or renewed eighteen days prior thereto and with no further agreement whatever. Upon this showing in the record it is argued by plaintiffs in error that the mere voluntary delivery by the brewery company of the brewery note as collateral security for the Goecke-Schmidt note and the acceptance of such note as collateral for the pre-existing debt, and without agreement for further extension of time or other agreement, does not- make the bank a bona fide holder for valué and that the defense of want of consideration should have been held by the court as established. It is the well established law in this jurisdiction that an indorsee of a negotiable note who has taken it, before its maturity, as collateral security for a pre-existing debt and without any express agreement is deemed a holder for a valuable consideration, and that he holds it free from latent defenses on the part of the maker. There are many other jurisdictions that hold the opposite view upon this question and some very strong and convincing reasons are given by those courts for their holdings. This question was thoroughly gone into by this court in the case of Manning v. McClure, 36 Ill. 490, and some of the cases holding the opposite view are therein cited and discussed. The rule as above announced was the result of due deliberation and consideration by this court, and it has been a rule now for more than fifty years and has been frequently re-affirmed in other cases. (Nix v. National Bank of Bloomington, 91 Ill. 20; Zollman v. Jackson Trust and Savings Bank, 238 id.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 149, 295 Ill. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elgin-national-bank-v-goecke-ill-1920.