Frazer v. State Bank

141 S.W. 941, 101 Ark. 135, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 27, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 941 (Frazer v. State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazer v. State Bank, 141 S.W. 941, 101 Ark. 135, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 439 (Ark. 1911).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The plaintiff, State Bank of Decatur (a domestic corporation engaged in the banking business), instituted this action in the circuit court of Benton County against the Sanders Fruit & Manufacturing Company (another domestic corporation) and certain of its directors, to recover the amount of two promissory notes, each for $1,000, with interest, executed by said defendants to plaintiff, which said notes are alleged to have been surrendered to defendants by plaintiff through mistake. It appears from the record that separate actions were first instituted, but during the pendency of . the cases the pleadings were lost, and a complaint was substituted covering both actions and treating them as consolidated. No question, however, is made upon this point. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff against the defendants who were found to have signed the notes, and the latter have appealed to this court.

It appears from the evidence that in September, 1907, defendant Sanders Fruit & Manufacturing Company borrowed the sum of $1,000 from plaintiff bank and executed its note therefor. Payments have been made from time to time, which reduced the amount due on the note to the sum of $400. On November 25, 1907, the Sanders Company borrowed from the bank $1,000, and executed its note therefor with certain of its directors, who are defendants in this action, as joint makers or indorsers, and on January 8, 1908, the Sanders Company borrowed the further sum of $1,000 from the bank and executed its note with defendant Frazier, who was one of the directors, as joint maker or indorser. About June 1, 1910, after these notes became due and were unpaid negotiations began between the parties for a renewal thereof, and the evidence tends to show that the cashier of the bank proposed to the defendants, by written correspondence and verbally, that a renewal would be accepted in the form of a new note signed by the Sanders Company and indorsed by the directors, or some of them, for the full amount of the three notes, the accrued interest to be paid at the time of the renewal. The cashier of the bank sent to the defendants by mail a form of note to be executed reading, “We, or either of us, promise to pay,” etc. The directors of the Sanders Company, pursuant to the negotiations, held a meetingand, after erasing the words, “or either of us,” and inserting in lieu thereof, “as directors, ” executed the note for the Saunders Company and signed it in their official capacities as directors so as to make only the corporation liable on the note. One of these directors, the defendant Frazier, carried the note to the bank, together with a check for the accrued interest, and delivered the same to the cashier, saying, as the testimony tends to show, “Here is the note,” and asked for the old notes, which were then surrendered to him by the cashier. The cashier testified that the transaction was very hurriedly done on account of Frazier having to leave in a few minutes to catch a train, and that he (witness) did not take time to examine the note carefully, but glanced at it, and saw that the names of the directors' were signed, and, believing that the names were signed so as to bind them as indorsers or joint makers, he accepted the new note, and surrendered the old ones, and did not discover the mistake until some time thereafter. This occurred on June 17, 1910, and the alleged mistake was discovered by the cashier on July 8, 1910, when he wrote to the Sanders Company and each of the directors calling their attention to the fact that the renewal note as signed did not make them liable, and that a new note must be executed. The evidence adduced on the part of the defendant tended to show that they did not, in signing any of the notes, really intend to make themselves liable individually, but there is no testimony tending to show that their intention was ever communicated to the bank. The court, over the objection of the defendants, gave the following instruction:

“No. 3. The court charges you that if you find from the evidence that plaintiff held the notes sued on and offered to defendants to surrender the same for a new note to be signed by the defendant company and its directors, or some of them, and sent the defendants a note filled out to be executed and returned, and that defendants so changed the note and executed in form so that it was only the note of the defendant company, and presented the same to the plaintiff, without calling plaintiff’s attention to the changes, and that plaintiff, without observing or knowing that the note was signed only as the note of the company, surrendered the old notes, then such surrender of the old notes and acceptance of the new would not bind the plaintiff, and the title in the old notes and the right to recover thereon would remain in the plaintiff, and the new note would be void. If you find the foregoing facts by a preponderance of the evidence, you will find for the plaintiff. ”

The point of the objection to this instruction is that it declares as a matter of law that Frazier’s omission when he presented the note to call the attention of the cashier to the changes in the note, and the different method of signing it from what had been called for, constituted a fraudulent misrepresentation which would avoid- the acceptance of it by the bank; and that it permitted the jury to find for the plaintiff, even though the cashier was guilty of negligence in failing to examine the paper before he accepted it.

While the question is not free from doubt, we are of the opinion that neither of these objections is well taken, for, if the facts recited in the instruction were found by the jury to exist with reference to the acceptance of the note, then the bank was not bound by its acceptance, and had a right to rescind the contract and reclaim the surrendered notes. In other words, if the acceptance of the new note was made under circumstances recited in the instruction, the acceptance was made upon such a mistake of fact as would justify a rescission of the contract of renewal.

The following statement of the law taken from a decision of the Massachusetts court seems to be the one which should control in this case:

“ It is a general rule that where parties assume to contract and there is a mistake as to the existence or identity of the subject-matter, there is no contract, because of the want of mutual assent necessary to create one; for in the case of a contract for the sale of personal property, if there is such a mistake and the thing delivered is-not the thing sold, the purchaser may refuse to receive it or, if he receives it, may, upon discovery of the mistake, return it and recover back the price which he has paid.” Hecht v. Batchelor, 147 Mass. 335. To the same effect see, Bridgewater Iron Co. v. Enterprise Ins. Co., 134 Mass. 433; Gardner v. Lane, 12 Allen (Mass.) 39; Sherwood v. Walker, 66 Mich. 568; McKinnon v. Vollmar, 75 Wis. 82, 6 L. R. A 121; 1 Page on Contracts § 74; Mechem on Sales, § § 272 and 842.

The principle is announced by the above authorities in cases of sale of chattels, but we perceive no reason why it should not be controlling in a case like this, where there is a delivery of a written instrument intended as a renewal of a former contract, and where it is accepted under a mistake as to its identity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 941, 101 Ark. 135, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazer-v-state-bank-ark-1911.