First Nat. Bk., Wmsbg., for Use v. Smith

200 A. 215, 132 Pa. Super. 73, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1938
DocketAppeal, 2
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 200 A. 215 (First Nat. Bk., Wmsbg., for Use v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bk., Wmsbg., for Use v. Smith, 200 A. 215, 132 Pa. Super. 73, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

By virtue of a power of attorney contained in a note for $700, not under seal, signed by Ralph A. Smith (doing business as The Forest Service Company) on December 28, 1932, and payable three months after date to the order of the First National Bank of Williamsburg, Pa., a judgment was confessed against the maker by the payee at the June Term, 1937, of the court below, and an execution issued thereon.

On August 20, 1937, the defendant presented his petition for, and obtained, a rule to show cause why the execution should not be stayed, the judgment opened, and petitioner permitted to make a defense thereto. The plaintiff filed its answer and, after a hearing before the court below, the rule was discharged. This appeal is by the defendant from that order.

*75 The record as returned is not in satisfactory form; important documents referred to in the testimony were not offered in evidence; and neither side presented the material facts as fully as they should and could have been developed. No evidence was offered at the hearing by the appellee bank in support of the averments of its answer; the only testimony before the court was that of appellant and a witness called by him. Concededly, the note upon which the judgment was entered and the execution issued was a renewal note and bore a notation to that effect upon its face. It was the last of a series of notes for the same amount and of the same tenor, the original note having been given, as near as we can discover, sometime in 1930, and the note immediately preceding the one in question on February 11, 1932.

Appellant, in his petition to open, set up two defenses: (a) that he received no consideration of any kind for the original note, or any renewal thereof, and (b) that the note was to be canceled through the receipt by the bank of certain royalties from lumber operations, which it was anticipated would become due from appellant, but which royalties had not accrued when the execution issued. The appellee averred the note had been given “to take up worthless checks” of appellant which appellee had honored, but we find no evidence upon the record, either by proofs or admissions, relating to such checks with the exception of four small ones, aggregating |50.10 and dated subsequent to the date of the original note. As we understand the contention in behalf of appellee, it is that as the note in suit was a renewal note the facts testified to by appellant and his witness, even if accepted as verity, would not constitute a defense against its payment. Relying upon this proposition of law, counsel for appellee apparently deemed it unnecessary to adduce any evidence in support of its answer. The court *76 below seems to have adopted that position. We have not been given the benefit of an opinion by it, but the record shows this statement by its learned President Judge, Patterson, at the conclusion of the hearing: “I think the case cited (First National Bank of Pittsburgh v. Dowling, 286 Pa. 483, 133 A. 793) controls this case.”

We are led by our review of the record to the conclusion that the order appealed from was the result of inadvertently misapplying the law to the facts appearing from the testimony of appellant and his witness, which testimony, as we have said, was not controverted by appellee. More specifically, we think the court below failed to distinguish properly between the defenses of want or lack of consideration and total or partial failure of consideration. This case is between the original parties and the legal effect of the giving of the renewals is dependent upon the nature of the defense asserted against the original note. As will appear later, if that defense is want of consideration, appellant would not be estopped from making it by the fact that he renewed the note from time to time. When we turn to the record we find appellant testifying that the original note was given under these circumstances :

In December of 1929 appellant leased 1,255 acres of timber from one A. J. Detwiler. The lease (which was not offered in evidence but has been printed in a supplement to the record) was for a period of ten years and provided, inter alia, that appellant would pay Detwiler, as royalties, 20% of the gross sale price of all timber sold from the leased premises. At the date of the lease Detwiler was individually indebted to appellant in the approximate amount of $3,000, and it was agreed that as royalties became due to Detwiler under the lease appellant should apply them toward the reduc *77 tion of Detwiler’s indebtedness to him until the same should be paid.

On May 12, 1930, Detwiler, being also indebted to appellee in a large amount, assigned to it all his interest in the royalties accruing under the lease, to secure all indebtedness then due or to become due from him. Both appellant and Detwiler testified appellee knew of appellant’s prior rights in the royalties when it took the assignment from Detwiler.

Appellant’s testimony with relation to the execution of the original note reads: “Q. Mr. Smith, did you execute a $700 judgment note in favor of the Williams-burg Bank, the plaintiff in this action? A. I think so; yes. The First National Bank. The bank in which Mr. Shelley was. I just don’t remember the name of the bank. Q. At that time Avas Mr. Shelley president of the bank? A. Yes. Q. Will you state under Avhat circumstances you executed that note? ...... A. Mr. Shelley told me that he held some notes of Mr. A. J. Detwiler and that they Avere back in the interest or in bad shape, and that the bank examiner was coming and he wanted to know if I would give him a note for this amount and he would renew it from time to time until the operation Avould pay for it. Q. Did you at anytime receive that $700? A. No. I received no money from them. There was no money received. Q. Is there to the present time any money or monies due and owing the Williamsburg Bank by reason of their assignment of the interest of A. J. Detwiler under the royalties in that agreement? A. No, there is not. Q. Then you are not indebted to the Williamsburg bank in the amount of $700 by reason of this judgment note? A. No.’’

Appellee averred in its ansAver that appellant at the time execution issued owed $15,333 in royalties, but offered no proof in support of the averment.

Regardless of other defenses, appellant would have *78 a valid defense if he could show that the note in suit was payable only out of a specific fund, and that this fund had not come into existence: Second National Bank of Reading v. Yeager, 268 Pa. 167, 111 A. 159, and cases cited at page 169. But for present purposes this contention may be considered as a subsidiary matter as the facts with relation to it have not been sufficiently developed for a court to pass upon it.

The same may be said concerning the reference in appellant’s testimony to the coming of a bank examiner. If it should appear that a maker knowingly gave either an original or a renewal note for the purpose of deceiving bank examiners, he would, under our decisions, be estopped from asserting lack of consideration as a defense: First National Bank of Greencastle v. Baer, et al., 277 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 215, 132 Pa. Super. 73, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bk-wmsbg-for-use-v-smith-pasuperct-1938.