Ex Parte Rice

159 S.E. 492, 161 S.C. 77, 79 A.L.R. 123, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 3, 1931
Docket13194
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 159 S.E. 492 (Ex Parte Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Rice, 159 S.E. 492, 161 S.C. 77, 79 A.L.R. 123, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 120 (S.C. 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice Oscar E. Hodges.

The Bamberg Banking Company was declared insolvent, and the South Carolina Savings Bank appointed receiver on February 7, 1931, to liquidate its affairs.

At some time prior to the closing of the bank, A. H. Rice executed and delivered to said bank, two promissory notes in the total sum of $2,072.41, payable January 15, 1931. Both notes were indorsed by A. Rice and contained the following provision: “I promise to pay to the order of Bamberg Banking Company, Bamberg, South Carolina, without off-set.” The indorser had on deposit in said bank a checking account in excess of the amount due on these notes and he personally was not indebted to the bank in any amount. It was admitted that the maker of the notes was insolvent, or at least that he was unable to pay the notes, and that the bank or the receiver would have to look to the indorser, A. Rice, or his estate for the payment. Some time after the bank closed, A. Rice died and his administratrix *79 and the maker of the notes, A. H. Rice, asked the receiver to allow a set-off. The receiver declined their request on the ground that the parties had agreed to pay the notes without offset, whereupon a petition was. filed in the main cause praying for an order directing the receiver to allow the offset. The receiver'filed a return to the petition admitting the material facts of the.petition, but denied that the petitioners were entitled to the offset.

The matter came on for a hearing before Honorable Thos. M. Boulware, Special Presiding Judge at chambers, and he filed an order dated April 14, 1931, sustaining the receiver’s position, and this appeal challenges the correctness of that order.

The appellant has very concisely stated the question involved as follows: “Do the words ‘without off-set’ used in a negotiable note prevent the maker or endorser from setting off their deposits against the amount due on the note when the original payee bank is the owner and holder of the note and is insolvent.”

It is now well established in this State that where a bank is insolvent and a depositor is indebted to the insolvent bank he is entitled to offset his deposit against his indebtedness. It is unnecessary to cite authorities to sustain this proposition. It appears well established in other jurisdictions that this right of setoff extends to the indorser or surety, where the maker is insolvent or is unable to pay the debt himself. Counsel on both sides in this case very properly concede this to be the general rule, but counsel for the respondent contends that “this right of a depositor, however, may be contracted away, or the depositor may waive the right to the off-set,” and that the maker and the indorser, by inserting the words “without off-set” in the notes in question, have waived the right of offset.

The question presented has apparently not been adjudicated by our own' Courts. At any rate, no case deciding the question has been cited, or called to our *80 attention, and as far as our investigation has gone there appears to be an absence of any direct adjudication of the matter. Consequently, we shall have to resort to text-writers and Courts of other jurisdictions for light on the subject.

The words in notes “without off-set” and “without defalcation” appear to have been used in certain states at some time in the past for the purpose of making them negotiable “in the sense of cutting off defenses between the original parties, as against a holder in due course.” Brannan’s Negotiable Instrument Law (4th Ed.), pp. 65, 66.

In Bigelow on Bills, Notes and Checks (3d Ed. Lile), a recognized authority on the law of negotiable instruments, in discussing this interesting question, Section 551-a says: “The precise meaning of the phrases ‘without off-set’ or ‘without defalcation,’ frequently used in negotiable notes, either separately or in combination, is not entirely clear. By the better view they are not to be construed literally as waiving defenses between the parties, or binding the maker to pay at all events even to holders with notice or without value; but rather as an antiquated method of emphasizing the intention of the maker that the instrument shall be negotiable. They appear to have been introduced originally to meet certain statutory provisions in several of the States with reference to the negotiability of promissory notes. The history of the phrases warrants the conclusion that standing alone, and in the present state of the law of negotiable paper, they are of no special legal significance.”

“The words ‘without defalcation’ in a negotiable bill or note are now mere surplusage and without meaning under the Negotiable Instrument Law, and hence do not constitute a waiver of rights of set-off or counter-claim.” Brannan, N. I. L., page 55. The case of First National Bank of Rocky Ford v. Lewis, 57 Colo., 125, 139 P., 1102, 1103, is cited to sustain the text.

The Court,'in the case of First National Bank of Rocky Ford v. Lewis, supra, which was a case where the words *81 “without defalcation” were inserted in the note, in discussing the effect of those words says: “The plaintiff’s remaining contention, that because of the presence in the note of the expression ‘without defalcation’ all rights of set-off are waived, cannot be upheld, as these words are nothing more than a relic of pronounced antiquity in the law, a mere remnant of common law forms, and wholly without meaning in the light of modern usage, under the practically uniform provisions of the negotiable instrument law now in force in this and many other states. A negotiable promissory note is defined by that law to be an unconditional promise or order in writing and signed by the maker or drawer, to pay a certain sum of money to order or bearer on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time. While the words ‘without defalcation’ may have had a use and meaning in the negotiation of written instruments in some distant past, they are now no more than mere surplusage. Our negotiable instrument act stamps an instrument negotiable or non-negotiable according as it conforms or fails to conform to the requirements of that act. It must be a written instrument which provides for the unconditional payment of a fixed sum on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time. The words ‘without' defalcation’ add nothing whatever to the force and effect of such an instrument, either before or after maturity.”

Again in the case of Harmanson v. Bain, 1 Hughes, 391, 11 Fed. Cas., 539, No. 6,073, which was a Federal District Court opinion, the Court held that the words “without offset” in a note had no force and effect as between the maker and the payee, and this case appears to be clearly in point here.' The Court, discussing the question, among other things says: “But it could not have been legally intended by either of the two parties, that in the event of a liquidation in Court of the affairs of the society the defendant should not have the right to set off, against the note he owed payable in greenbacks, his own claim against the *82 society at its just valuation.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E. 492, 161 S.C. 77, 79 A.L.R. 123, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-rice-sc-1931.