First National Bank v. Scott

31 S.E. 819, 123 N.C. 538, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 S.E. 819 (First National Bank v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Scott, 31 S.E. 819, 123 N.C. 538, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 100 (N.C. 1898).

Opinion

Douglas, J.:

This is an action to recover from the defendant the balance due on two notes for $1,000 each, executed on the 14th day of March, 1895, to the plaintiff by the Jones Manufacturing Company, and endorsed by the defendant together with.G. B. and T. W. Jones, who are not parties to this action.

The Jones Manufacturing Company executed to G. B. and T. W. Jones, on December 20, 1894, its note for' $8,000 secured by mortgage. On the 23rd day of April, *541 1895, the said company executed and delivered to the plain tiff the following paper :

$5,000. Elizabeth City, N. C., April 23, 1895.

Four months after date we promise to pay to the First Natiokal Bank, Elizabeth City, N. C., or order, negotiable and payable without offset at said Bank, Five Thousand Dollars in gold coin, for value received, having deposited with said Bank, as collateral security for the payment of this note, a note of the Jones Manufacturing Co., for $8,000, dated Dec. 20th, 8 months from date, indorsed by G. B. and T. W. Jones; insurance policies for $5,000; loss if any payable to this bank, with such additional collaterals we hereby promise to give at any time on demand. If these additional collaterals be not so given when so demanded, then this .note to be due; and rebate of interest taken shall be allowed on payment prior to maturity. And we hereby give to said Bank, its President or Cashier, full power and authority to sell and assign and deliver the whole or any part of said collaterals or any substitutes therefor, or any additions hereto, at public or private sale, at the option of said Bank, or its President or Cashier, or of either of them, on the non-performance of the above promises, or any of them, or at any time thereafter., and without advertising or giving to us any notice or making any demand of payment.

It is also agreed that said collaterals may from time to time, by mutual consent, be exchanged for others which shall also be held by said Bank on the terms above set forth; and that if we shall come under any other liability, or enter into any other engagement with said Bank while it is the holder of this obligation, the net proceeds of the sale of the above securities may be *542 applied either on this note or any other note of our liabilities or engagements held by said Bank, as its President or Cashier may elect; and we the maker or makers hereby waive the benefit of our homestead exemptions as to this debt and contract.

The Jones MVs Co.,

G. B. Jones, Secy. & Treas.,

T. W. Jones, President.

And the following endorsements on the back :

“T. W. Jones,

G. B. Jones.”

March 27th, 1897. Received on within note $4,704.50, being bal. of $7,000.00 rec’d from G. M. Scott, Receiver of the Jones Manufacturing Co., which was credited upon the $8,000.00 note.

September 18th, 1897. Rec’d on within note $792:30, bal. of principal and interest due to date, being part of amount received from G. M. Scott, Receiver, from the $8,000.00 note.

The said G. B. and T. W. Jones endorsed this note, and also endorsed and deposited with the plaintiff, as security therefor, their note upon the company for $8,000. .

The issues and judgment, which recite nearly all the material facts, are as folíows:

“1. Was it agreed between G. B. Jones acting for himself and the Jones Manufacturing Co., at the time of the defendant’s endorsement of the notes of said company sued on in this action that said defendant should be secured and indemnified' as tó his said endorsement to the plaintiff Bank by the security of the said $8,000 *543 note and trust deposited as collateral with plaintiff, subject to the prior lien of the $5,000 loaned thereon by the Bank ? :

Answer — Yes.

2. Did the plaintiff Bank, while-holding said $8,000 note and trust, have notice of said agreement prior to April 23, 1895, after which date the $2,295 notes were purchased ? .

' Answer — No.

JUDGMENT.

This cause came on to be heard before the Court and jury.

The issues hereto'annexed were submitted to the jury without objection. No other issues being tendered.

The jury having answered first issue Yes and second issue No, both the plaintiff and defendant move for judgment. It is admitted that the sum unpaid on the notes sued is $1,248. 71 dollars, and that if the plaintiff is entitled to'judgment at all, the defendant admits that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment for only two-thirds of said sum. The plaintiff moves’ for judgment for the. entire sum. The defendant moves for judgment that he go without day and that defendant recover costs. It is admitted that the plaintiff received and collected the whole of the $8,000 note and interest, referred to in the evidence and pleadings, to-wit: $8,818 and that plaintiff applied $5,496.80 of the said sum to the $5,600 note and interest referred to in the evidence, and that plaintiff then applied $2,295 to certain notes dated on and after April 23, 1895, issued by Jones Manufacturing Co. for logs, &c., to certain other individuals and purchased and discounted by the plaintiff after April 23, 1895, and that neither T. W. Jones, *544 G. B. Jones nor Geo. M. Scott were sureties, or endorsers, or in any way liable for said $2,295 notes.

It is admitted that the plaintiff applied what was left, to-wit: $1,026.27 to notes sued on in this action leaving the balance of $1,248.71 and- that if the bank shall apply said excess after paying the $5,000 note to notes sued on, in preference to the $2,295 notes it is more than sufficient to pay the notes sued ou in full.

-It is admitted that the notes sued on are renewals and that the originals were dated and executed November 9th, 1894, and January 26, 1895, and the originals and renewals were executed to plaintiff by Jones M’f’g. Co., a corporation, and endorsed as sureties by T. W. Jones, G. B. Jones, Geo. M. Scott.

It is not denied that the agreement found by jury on 1st issue was made prior to the purchase by the Bank of the $2,295 notes. That is admitted.

It is admitted that on April 20, 1896, the plaintiff brought an action against Gordon B. Jones, one of the endorsers upon the notes sued on in this action to re-cove! on his said endorsement, in the Circuit Court of Accomack Co., Virginia, which Court had jurisdiction of the parties and of. the cause of action, the defendant Jones being duly before said court, and that the jury therein found for said defendant G. B. Jones and that the court adjudged that the plaintiff take' nothing against said Jones. The record in said action is evidence on this trial and is made a part of this finding.

The court is of opinion. That according to the terms, in writing, upon which T. W. & G. B. Jones, assigned the $8,000 note to plaintiff, it had ho authority to apply the excess after paying the $5,000 note to the $2,295 notes, in preference to the notes sued on for which the said T. W. & G. B.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 819, 123 N.C. 538, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-scott-nc-1898.