Gano v. Farmers' Bank

45 S.W. 519, 103 Ky. 508, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 29, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 519 (Gano v. Farmers' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gano v. Farmers' Bank, 45 S.W. 519, 103 Ky. 508, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 88 (Ky. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Gano, and nine others executed a writing to the end that one P. T. Pullen might obtain the sum. of $10,000 with which to run a milling business in Georgetown, Ky.

The appellant bank on the strength of this writing furnished $5,000, which was used to pay off a debt then owing the bank by Pullen, and also $5,000 which was used in the business. After a time, Pullen being insolvent the bank called on the obligors in the writing for a discharge of their undertaking. All seemed to have paid their respective shares demanded by the writing except the appellant, who tendered certain issues of law and fact "in defense of the action which followed Ms refusal to pay Ms share.

The writing which forms the basis of action is as follows:

P. T. Pullen, of Georgetown, Ky., contemplating the leasing of the. Thompson Mills and carrying on the. milling business, and being in need of capital with which to buy stock and run the same as it should be run successfully, now, in order to aid him, we, W. E. Pullen, George Carley, George V. Payne, T. T. Hedger, J. M. Penn, James W. Craig, Buford Hall, Daniel Gano, S. B. Triplett and Warren C. Graves, whose names- are hereto signed agree [511]*511to become his surety to au amount not exceeding $10,()o0 in the aggregate. After this instrument of writing has been signed by all of us (ten in number) it may be used by the said P. T. Pullen in the nature of a collateral for a sum or sums not exceeding $10,000 in the aggregate, and we, the said signers, shall be bound jointly and severally as sureties upon any note or notes not exceeding in the aggregate said sum to which said Pullen shall sign his name and deposit this as collateral. In case the money is borrowed of more than one party the lenders can agree1 upon who shall hold this writing for the benefit of all. Said Pullen agrees to mortgage all property he now has to us in order to secure us by virtue of obligations assumed in this instrument, and renew said mortgage from time to time when required upon any and all property he may have. This instrument of writing to continue in force for three years from the first day of July, 1891, and no longer, and if at any time any one or more of the signers hereto should die or become insolvent, said Pullen is to either pay off his or their portion of the money that may be borrowed, or furnish other good and solvent surety or sureties in his or their stead. Said Pullen agrees to keep all grain and flour he may have on hand insured in some good insurance company for the benefit of the signers hereto, and his books are at all times to be open to the inspection of any one or all of the said signers, either in per- or by an expert of their selection. Givén under our hands this 15th day of July, 1891. (Signed) GEO. V. PAYNE "

And others named in the writing.

The paper, as we have already indicated, was taken by [512]*512Pullen to the appellee to whom Pullen was then indebted in the sum of $5,000 evidenced by Pullen’s note with his brother as surety. A new note was then executed to the bank for $5,000 and'this note was then discounted by the bank and the proceeds taken to pay off this pre-existing debt. It is therefore insisted for the appellant that the principle announced in Russell v. Ballard 16 B. M., 205, is applicable here and when applied the surety stands discharged. It was there said:

“If a note be purchased by a party, with notice that one of the obligors is surety merely, and that the sale and purchase will defeat the purpose for which it was executed by him, or will violate any understanding or agreements between him and his principal, then the purchaser will be affected by such notice and can not hold the surety liable on the note to compel him to pay it.” Here the bank has notice that Gano was surety merely on the writing taken as collateral by the bank to secure the new note. And it had notice that the sale and purchase of this new note and application of its proceeds to pay off the old debt would defeat the sole purpose for which the writing was executed by the surety, namely, “to raise the sum of $10,000, buy stock and run the same.”

This would seem sufficient to bring the case within the principle announced in the cited case. For it is manifest that if one-half the capital needed to carry on the milling business and “run the same successfully” was to be taken to pay off an old debt, the business must suffer and likely not be run successfully. But this is not all. The bank had [513]*513notice that the sureties looked to the property which this money — all of it — would buy as an indemnity by way of mortgage. And by whatever amount the actual cash furnished Pullen for his business was lessened, by that amount the value of their indemnity would be lessened. This is also in line with the general doctrine, so often announced by the text writer and 'by this court for the protection of sureties. We might assume without proof — but the evidence is conclusive on the point — that appellant would not have entered into this contract had it been disclosed to him that this “letter of credit,” as the writing may be termed, was to be used to pay off the large debt due the bank, and therefore it was incumbent on the bank to disclose to the surety all the facts material to the risk before it could divert the fund intended to be raised by the collateral to purposes of its own. The rule is thus stated by Mr. Story in his Equity Jurisprudence. “The contract of' suretyship imports entire good faith and confidence between the parties in regard to the whole transaction. Any concealment of material facts or any express or implied misrepresentation of facts or any undue advantage taken of the surety by his creditor, either by surprise or by withholding proper information, will undoubtedly permit sufficient grounds to invalidate the contract. (Section 324.) And further, “thus if a party taking a guaranty from a surety conceals from him facts which increase his risk and suffers him to enter into the contract under false impressions as to the real state of facts, such concealment will amount to a fraud, because the party is bound to make [514]*514the disclosure, and the omission to make it under such circumstances is equivalent to an affirmation that the facts do not exist.” (Sections 214 and 215.) (See Commonwealth v. Berry, 95 Kentucky, 443, and cases cited.)

Other obligors who lived in or about Georgetown, the scene of this transaction, seem either to have had knowledge of these material facts at the time or obtained it shortly afterwards, and having that knowledge, still paid off their shares; but the appellant was an old man, some eighty-ñve years of age, living quite a distance from the town and visiting there only a few times within a year. There is no doubt of his entire ignorance of the material facts indicated. He was not even apprised of the fact that the writing had been used by Pullen with the bank or any one else and money obtained thereby. It seems to be clear that he was entitled to this notice. He had merely offered his name with that of others as surety to whomever might accept the offer and loan of money. He was therefore entitled to notice of acceptance. In Steadman v.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 519, 103 Ky. 508, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gano-v-farmers-bank-kyctapp-1898.