Foster v. Security Bank & Trust Co.

288 S.W. 438
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1926
DocketNo. 461-3989
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 438 (Foster v. Security Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Security Bank & Trust Co., 288 S.W. 438 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

SPEER, J.

S. A. Foster, C. P. Austin, James Edgar, W. H. Graham, B. S. Jackson, and J. A. Leahy brought this suit against the Security Bank & Trust Company to cancel a note executed by them and D. L. Hill reading as follows:

“El Paso, Tex., Feb. 14, 1921.
“For value received on demand after date I or we promise to pay to the order of Security Bank & Trust Company, at its office in El Paso, Texas, forty three thousand nine hundred thirty-one and 9%oo dollars, with interest at the rate of 8 per centum per annum from date until paid; interest payable annually, and defaulting interest to draw the same rate of interest as principal. Having deposited with the Security Bank & Trust Company as collateral security for the payment of this note or any renewal thereof and any other liability or liabilities of the undersigned to the said Security Bank & Trust Company, either as maker(s), or indorser(s), or guarantor(s), due or to become due, or which- may hereafter be created, the securities or property below mentioned, the said Security Bank & Trust Company or any holder hereof is invested with a full authority to at any time use, transfer, hypothecate, and in the event of the nonpayment of this note or any other liability of the undersigned to the said Security Bank & Trust Company at maturity, sell and convey at public or private sale the securities or property hereby hypothecated or any accounts or property substituted therefor, or any part thereof, or cause the same to be done with or without notice or demand of any sort, at such time or place and upon such terms as the holder hereof may deem best, and the holder hereof is authorized to purchase said securities or property when so sold; proceeds of such sale shall be applied toward the payment of this note and to such other liabilities of the undersigned, to the said Security Bank & Trust Company whether as maker(s), indorser(s), or guarantor(s) due or to become due, together with all protests, damages, interest,- cost, and charges due upon this note (or) and any other such liabilities aforesaid or in the execution of this power, together with cost of collection, including attorney’s fees, and the balance, if any, to the undersigned. It is understood and agreed that should there be any depreciation in the value of the securities or property hereby hypothecated or should the holder hereof at any time before or after maturity for good or imaginary cause deem itself insecure, the said Security Bank'& Trust Company is hereby authorized to immediately apply, as a credit hereon, any balance with it, standing at the credit of the maker hereof, (or) and such amount of additional security shall be furnished by the undersigned as will be satisfactory to the holder hereof, and should such ad[439]*439ditional security not be furnished within twenty-four hours after written or verbal demand so to do, then this note, at the option of the holder, shall become immediately due and payable as though the whole time for which it was given had elapsed, and the holder hereof, its agents or assigns, is authorized to sell the said securities or property below mentioned or any securities or property substituted therefor or added thereto as above provided. It is also agreed that should default occur in the payment of this note or any other obligation to the said Security Bank & Trust Company upon which the undersigned is liable, as further security, the said Security Bank & Trust Company is her_eby authorized to hold all other securities, money or property deposited with it, owned by or in which the undersigned is interested, and apply the same, or the proceeds thereof, to the payment of the obligations of the undersigned to the said Security Bank & Trust Company. Should other collateral or property be substituted in whole or in part for that mentioned below or should additional collateral or property be furnished, then such substitute (or) and added collateral or property shall be subject to the same terms and conditions of this note as if originally deposited and mentioned herein,, The maker(s), indorser(s), (or) and guarantor (s) hereon hereby waive demand, notice, protest, diligence, or suit, and the Security Bank & Trust Company or other holder hereof is hereby released from any and all liability of •every kind pertaining to the collection, or failure to collect, the above-mentioned collateral, and all other collateral which the said Security Bank & Trust Company may, at any time, hold to secure this and all other obligations of the maker hereof to said Security Bank & Trust ■Company.
“B. S. Jackson. J. A. Leahy.
“D. L. Hill. James Edgar.
“W. H. Graham. C. P. Austin.
“S. A. Poster.
“Secured by notes as per list attached aggregating $43,931.90.
“No. 15620.
“Address: Lordsburg, N. M.”

Then follows indorsements on the back of -the note npt necessary to copy here.

The trial court rendered judgment canceling the note as to Poster, Austin, Edgar, Jackson, and Graham, but decreeing a recovery in favor of the bank against Hill and Leahy for $38,108.90, principal and iriterest • on the note, and for $4,781.89 as attorney’s fees. The bank appealed, but Hill and Leahy •did not. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court, and, after .allowing a credit for certain notes, renewal •of which were accepted by appellant without .authority, rendered judgment in appellant’s favor against Poster, Austin, Edgar, Graham, Jackson,. Hill, and Leahy for the sum of $18,635.58, and for the further sum of $2,888.-.55 as Attorney’s fees and also rendered judgment against Hill and Leahy for the further ■sum of $19,383.32, and for the additional sum ■of $1,893.34 as attorney’s fees, the’ principal sums in each instance to bear interest-at the rate provided in the note. See 249 S. W. 227.

The plaintiffs in error contend that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding: First, that the note was a negotiable instrument; second, that the bank, having taken the note, as the original payee named therein, was nevertheless a holder in due course; th$rd, that plaintiffs in error were estopped to deny personal liability upon the note; fourth,'that the bank paid a valuable consideration for the note; fifth, that D. L. Hill did not act as the agent of the defendant in error in obtaining the signature of the plaintiffs in error to the note. Most of these ques-tións are settled by our conclusions upon the second point of complaint.

Whether or not the payee in a promissory note may become the holder thereof in due course has never been expressly decided, we believe, in this state, but the question has been often before other courts, and the authorities are most respectable and numerous both ways upon the question. .Amongst those holding the affirmative, may be cited Ex parte Goldberg, 191 Ala. 356, 67 So. 839, L. R. A. 1915F, 1157; Liberty Trust Co. v. Tilton, 217 Mass. 462, 105 N. E. 605, L. R. A. 1915B, 144; Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Smith, 59 Mont. 280, 196 P. 523, 15 A. L. R. 430; Johnston v. Knipe, 260 Pa. 504, 105 A. 705, L. R. A. 1918E, 1042; Trust Co. v. Manhattan Trust Co., 97 Misc. Rep. 694, 162 N. Y. S. 629. Whilst to the contrary are the following: Long v. Shafer, 185 Mo. App. 641, 171 S. W. 690; St. Charles, etc., Bank v. Edwards, 243 Mo. 553, 147 S. W. 978; Bank of Gresham v. Walch, 76 Or. 272, 147 P. 524; Builders’ Co. v. Weimer, 170 Iowa, 444, 151 N. W. 100, Ann. Cas.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-security-bank-trust-co-texcommnapp-1926.