First State Bank of Laramie v. Rock Creek Producers Oil Co.

244 P. 372, 34 Wyo. 405, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 51
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1926
Docket1243
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 P. 372 (First State Bank of Laramie v. Rock Creek Producers Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank of Laramie v. Rock Creek Producers Oil Co., 244 P. 372, 34 Wyo. 405, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 51 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

Blume, Justice.

This is an action brought by the First State Bank of Laramie, a banking corporation, 'against the Bock Creek Producers Oil Company, a corporation, Oscar Waechter, John Hefferon and J. R. Sullivan, defendants, to recover $8504.46, upon two promissory notes. The case was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, for the amount claimed, against the Rock Creek Producers Oil Company, but relief was denied as to the other defendants. From this judgment of the court, so refusing to enter judgment against Waechter, Hefferon and Sullivan, the plaintiff has appealed. The parties will hereinafter be referred to in the same manner as in the court below.

*409 The suit was brought upon two promissory notes, one for $1,000, dated May 24, 1920, due three months after date, and the other for $6,359.69, dated July 17, 1920, payable on demand. Both notes were given to the First State Bank of Laramie, were payable at its banking house and were signed on behalf of the Rock Creek Producers Oil Company by Oscar 'Waechter, president, and John Hefferon, treasurer.' Both notes were endorsed on the back thereof by the defendants, Oscar Waechter, John Hefferon and J. R. Sullivan. The last named note was given in payment of checks issued on April 14, 1920, June 5, 1920 and June 8, 1920. The defendant Waechter was president and the defendant Hefferon secretary and treasurer of the Rock Creek Producers Oil Company. It is conceded that no notice of dishonor of the notes was given to the endorsers aforesaid, as required by section 4022, W. C. S. 1920, and the ease was dismissed against them for that reason.

1. The question is raised as to whether or not the defendants Waechter, Hefferon and Sullivan were endorsers. Section 3997, W. O. S. 1920, provides that:

“A person placing his signature upon an instrument, otherwise than as maker, drawer or acceptor, is deemed to be an endorser, unless he clearly indicates by appropriate words his intention to be bound in some other capacity.”

The parties just mentioned placed their signature upon the back of the notes, without any special indication as to the capacity in which they would be bound. We have, accordingly, no doubt that they were endorsers and as such entitled to notice of dishonor, as provided by section 4022, supra.

2. Counsel for plaintiff call our attention to section 4048, W. C. S. 1920, which provides, among other things, that notice of dishonor is not required to be given to an endorser “where the instrument was made or accepted *410 for his accommodation,'’ and the claim is made that the notes in question were made for the accommodation of the endorsers in the case at bar. The testimony, however, shows that the notes were made by and for the benefit of the Rock Creek Producers Oil Company, and that the endorsers received no benefit from the note, except only as other stockholders of the company were benefitted. All of the money represented by the notes was used by the oil company. It is clear that, under these circumstances, the notes in the case at bar cannot be said to have been made for the accommodation of the endorsers. First National Bank v. Bach, 98 Ore. 332, 193 Pac. 1041; Louisville First Nat. Bank v. Bickel, 143 Ky. 754, 137 S. W. 790; Case v. McKinnis, 107 Ore. 223, 213 Pac. 422, and many cases there cited. Counsel for plaintiff call our attention to the case of Luckenbach v. McDonald, 164 Fed. 296. That ease, however, was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the third circuit, as appears in 170 Fed. 434.

3. It is further claimed that notice of dishonor was unnecessary because 'Waechter was the president and Hef-feron the secretary and treasurer of the oil company. The claim is based on the provision of section 4048, supra, which states that notice of dishonor is not required to be given an endorser “where the endorser is the person to whom the instrument is presented for payment.” The defendant Sullivan was not shown to be in any way connected with the oil company and hence no reason has, in any event, been shown to excuse want of notice to him. Further, it is the general rule that an officer or a stockholder of a corporation, who endorses a negotiable instrument of the corporation, as in the case at bar, cannot be held liable thereon in the absence of notice to him of dishonor. Maltass v. Siddle, 6 C. B. N. S. 494, 95 E. C. L. 494, 141 Eng. Rep. 549; Phipps v. Harding, 70 Fed. 468, 30 L. R. A. 513; McDonald v. Luckenbach, 170 Fed. 434; *411 Grandison v. Robertson, 231 Fed. 785; Winter v. Coxe, 41 Ala. 207; Louisville First Nat. Bank v. Bickel, 154 Ky. 11, 156 S. W. 856; Field v. Newspaper Co., 21 La. Ann. 24, 99 Am. Dec. 699; Keiser v. Dredge & Co., 48 Cal. App. 38, 191 Pac. 552; Houser v. Fayssoux, 168 N. C. 1, 83 S. E. 692, Ann. Cas. 1917B 835; Verser v. Sterling Oil & Refining Co., 89 Okla. 114, 213 Pac. 863; J. B. Wilson Co. v. Finley Farms Co., (Tex. Civ. App.) 275 S. W. 222; Farmers and Mechanics Nat. Bank v. Head, (Tex. Civ. App.) 268 S. W. 992. The provision of section 4048 above quoted seems, at first glance, to excuse notice of dishonor to an endorser in such case only when the instrument is presented for payment to the corporation by actually presenting it to a person on behalf of the corporation, who is also sought to be held as an endorser. In the case at bar no actual presentment for payment was made. The notes were payable at the payee bank and, in accordance with section 4006, W. C. S. 1920, they were doubtless sufficiently presented for payment; but the presentment, in any event, was but in the nature of a constructive presentment. Some courts, however, seem to have construed the words “is presented” of section 4048, supra, to mean “ivould have been presented.” Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Hodge, 181 Mo. App. 232, 167 S. W. 1186; Whitney v. Chadsey, 216 Mich. 604, 185 N. W. 826; Waterproof Paper and Board Co. v. Van Buren, 182 Wisc. 640, 197 N. W. 338; In re Swift, 106 Fed. 65; Chemical Co. v. Root, 152 N. Y. N. 368. These cases, or most of them, hold that an officer of a corporation, who also endorses a negotiable instrument made by the corporation, is liable thereon though no notice of dishonor is given him, where he is the only proper person to whom presentment for payment could have been made, or the only person authorized to pay such note upon presentation, or where he was in active charge of the corporation’s affairs and knew that the corporation had nothing with which to pay the note *412 when’it matured, and could not and would not pay it. We have examined these eases, but without deciding whether the rule therein announced is correct, we do not think the case at bar falls within that rule. The burden of proof to show the facts to bring the case at bar within the rule was, in any event, upon the plaintiff. The oil company, it is true, had no money, with which to pay the note, in the plaintiff bank, but it is not shown that it had no funds in other places. Nor does it appear that Waeehter and Hefferon were the only parties by whom payment of the notes in question could have been made. Merely because they were president and secretary of the oil company, would not require such conclusion. Nor does it appear that these parties had a particularly dominating position in the oil company.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 372, 34 Wyo. 405, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-laramie-v-rock-creek-producers-oil-co-wyo-1926.