Farmers' National Bank v. Jones

28 S.W.2d 787, 234 Ky. 591, 70 A.L.R. 335, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 30, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 787 (Farmers' National Bank v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' National Bank v. Jones, 28 S.W.2d 787, 234 Ky. 591, 70 A.L.R. 335, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 231 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

The Farmers’ National Bank sought a judgment, against H. H. Jones and thirteen others for $982.59,. with interest from January 18, 1921, that being the balance then due upon a $1,300 note. It obtained a judgment, by default, against Jones, but its petition as to the other thirteen was dismissed, and it has appealed. This was a suit upon a promissory note as follows:

“Scottsville, Ky. March 14, 1919. $1300.00
“Six months after date we promise to pay The Allen County National Bank or order Thirteen *592 "Hundred Dollars, value received. Negotiable and payable at the Allen County National Bank, to bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from date until paid. Presentation, notice and protest are hereby waived by all who may become parties to this note as makers, endorsers or otherwise.
“R. C. Huntsman.
“J. L. Henninger.
“W. D. Gilliam.
“J. H. Gilliam.
“E. F. Welch.
“A. F. Crowe.
“H. H. Jones.
Ed. L. Hilburn.
W. D. House.
N. F. Harper. Chas. Troutt.
G. H. Newman.
Thos. W. Crowe.
“H. P. Gardner, Surety.”

While this appears to have been the joint obligation, of H. H. Jones and all the "other defendants, with H. P. Gardner, only, as surety, yet in fact Jones alone was the principal debtor and all the other were sureties, though, as to the twelve other than H. P. Gardner, theirs was a concealed suretyship (32 Cyc. 31), as there was nothing in the note to indicate that was their relation to it.

All the proceeds of this note were placed to the credit of H. H. Jones and checked out by him, and none of the other signers received any benefit from it.

When the note matured in September 1919, there is no evidence Jones had one cent on deposit there, but he paid $339 thereon, which discharged the interest due and reduced the principal to $1,000. Thereafter he paid $58.50 on June 14, 1920, and $39 on January 18, 1921, leaving a balance due on this note at the latter date of $982.59. Some time in March, 1921, this note was transferred by the Allen County National Bank to the First National Bank of Scottsville, Ky., and on the 13th day of November, 1923, it was transferred to the Farmers’ National Bank of Scottsville, and the latter bank sued thereon September 3, 1924. H. P. Gardner was never brought before the court. H. H. Jones did not answer, and a judgment was taken against him by default.

On January 22,1925, all the other defendants except H. P. Gardner and H. H. Jones filed an answer making various defenses which we will notice later, and by agreement this cause was transferred to equity.

*593 The issues were made, and on final hearing resulted in a judgment as stated, and the Farmers’ National Bank now insists the court erred in refusing to give it a judgment against the defendants other than Jones. The court properly refused the judgment against H. P. Gardner because he was not before the court, and to that extent the judgment is affirmed. The real controversy here concerns the right of the bank to a judgment against the twelve defendants other than Jones and H. P. Gardner, whom we shall refer to as Huntsman et al., and the determination of that controversy depends upon the sufficiency of the defenses made by them.

For their first defense they plead a novation, and allege that, when the $339 payment was made in September 1919, the Allen County National Bank, which then held the paper, accepted the individual note of H. H. Jones for $1,000 in full payment and satisfaction of the balance due on this $1,300 note. Huntsman et al. are supported in this contention by the evidence of Jones, who testifies that the bank did do this. His testimony that the bank accepted his individual note in payment of the balance due on the original note is only his conclusion from what was said and done, but he testifies what was said and done, and we will look to that to see whether or not it supports that conclusion.

Jones testified that the cashier then said to him: “I am having trouble with this note because it is past due and I will have to ask you to go and ask them to sign again.” Jones did not want to ask these men to again sign his paper, and said, “I never hated to do anything as bad in my life.” Thereupon the cashier said to him, “You sign this note and we will take care of it.”

The cashier to whom he was talking was H. P. Gardner, one of the sureties on his paper. When he said, “We will take care of it,” he may have been speaking as cashier of the bank, and may have had reference as to what the bank would do, or he may have been speaking as one of these sureties and have had reference to what he and his fellow sureties would do. So far we are left in doubt as to what he meant, and we must determine that by what was done. He did not surrender the original note, and, when Jones made subsequent payments, Gardner, the cashier, and also a surety gave credit for these payments, not upon the $1,000 note tendered by Jones, but upon the original note that had been executed by Jones and these sureties. Thus it is clearly indicated that the *594 bank did not accept Jones’ individual note in payment of the original note, and we therefore hold there was not a novation of the contract.

These are some of the things that have led us to this conclusion. It would have been a dishonest act on the part of Gardner for him to have surrendered the note upon which he and others were surety and to have accepted in lieu thereof a note without surety, and the legal presumption is that men act honestly.

Another reason we have so concluded is the books of this bank had to be kept in balance, the bank was subject to frequent examinations, and, if these books had not been so kept, that would certainly have been discovered.

Then, too, when Jones made the payments of $58.50 on June 14,1920, and $39 on January 18, 1921, credit had to be given for these payments somewhere, or the books would not balance, and the credit had to be made on the note the bank was carrying in its bills receivable, or the books would go out of balance, and-these credits, as we have said, were placed on the original note.

If necessary, we might find other reasons to support our conclusion.

Where the new note is not the obligation of all the parties liable upon the old one, there is no presumption that it was given and accepted in payment of the old one. Baldwin v. Porter, 217 Mass. 15, 104 N. E. 492; Melledge v. Boston Iron Co., 5 Cush. (Mass.) 158, 51 Am. Dec. 59; Hoeflinger v. Wells, 47 Wis. 628, 3 N. W. 589.

What we have just said derives added force from the fact that the old note was not surrendered.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 787, 234 Ky. 591, 70 A.L.R. 335, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-national-bank-v-jones-kyctapphigh-1930.