Girard National Bank v. Brody

122 Misc. 790
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 790 (Girard National Bank v. Brody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girard National Bank v. Brody, 122 Misc. 790 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Gavegan, J.

A question of interest and importance to bankers and business men arises on this application. Plaintiff bank moves for summary judgment against an accommodation indorser of a negotiable promissory note. He is the sole defendant, recourse having been previously had against other parties and plaintiff having received part payment. His defense is that when he indorsed it he informed plaintiff that there was to be no consideration for his signature and that he was an accommodation endorser.” “ That thereupon said plaintiff requested the defendant to sign the said note for the purpose of putting the same in bankable form and it was agreed between the plaintiff and defendant that the defendant would assume no responsibility and that no responsibility would attach to him and that the defendant would not be held personally liable for said endorsement.”

[791]*791This note was made at Philadelphia by one corporation to another, one a subsidiary of the other. The instrument was inspired by a desire to have it given and it was given in renewal of seven other notes, all indorsed by defendant, one of the companies being the primary debtor and having obtained loans represented by the prior notes. According to a bill of particulars which he was required to serve, the arrangement for immunity from liability as an indorser was verbally agreed to between defendant and plaintiff’s vice-president. Defendant was employed by and became president, but only nominally as he says, of one of the corporate parties to the instrument. The prior notes'had not been paid and had been protested for non-payment. After this one had been indorsed by the payee, one of said corporations, and by other persons, including defendant, it was delivered to plaintiff, apparently at Philadelphia.

It was not a mere escrow. It was not delivered on an understanding that it was to be without effect until the happening of a condition precedent. Defendant would establish not a conditional delivery but a negation of the obligation implied by the indorsement.

There is no indication that he was induced by fraud to sign the instrument.

Several cases in this state, especially in the fourth department, might be taken to indicate that such a defense may be proved. There are, among others: Whitestown National Bank v. Lewis, 205 App. Div. 553; Bank of LeRoy v. Purdy, 100 id. 64; Persons v. Hawkins, 41 id. 171, and Twelfth Ward Bank v. Rogers, 29 Misc. Rep. 602. In many of the cases referred to as supporting such a proposition of law, thus advanced by defendant, no such decision was made. In others it was held that the instrument was not delivered for a consideration (Higgins v. Ridgway, 153 N. Y. 130, as explained in Grannis v. Stevens, 216 id. 583, 589) or was not delivered at all because of the failure of a condition precedent. In still others reference is had to the purchase or discount of negotiable paper previously existing; but these are without bearing here. We are not concerned with a binding promise not to sue given by a person purchasing a negotiable instrument or holding one previously made and delivered. A promise supported by adequate consideration that there shall be no claim made, against one who has already assumed the obligation of an indorser, is not at all what we are considering.

To cases not in point those cited for defendant ultimately go back for their authority. But they lead to no authority for any such rule as they are asserted to support. We have leading cases in our Court of Appeals which to my mind leave no opening for [792]*792holding that this accommodation indorser may be allowed to show that simultaneously with making his indorsement he had plaintiff’s verbal agreement not to hold him on it. See Jamestown Business College Assn. v. Allen, 172 N. Y. 291, and Grannis v. Stevens, 216 id. 583.

In Pennsylvania we can refer to First National Bank of Greencastle v. Baer, 277 Penn. St. 184. In that case it is pointed out that a defense such as this could not be proved. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania there took occasion to state that certain cases, in that jurisdiction, mean nothing more than that an accommodation indorser can show that a plaintiff suing him on the instrument is the primary debtor, the person who was accommodated. Another case in that court which shows that in Pennsylvania a contemporaneous verbal agreement may not be proved to destroy the obligation implied from an indorsement is Second National Bank of Reading v. Yeager, 268 Penn. St. 167. It was held that an affidavit of defense was insufficient which set up such an oral agreement. It was pointed out that in Pennsylvania it may be shown that there was an oral, contemporaneous agreement providing for the exhaustion of a certain source of payment before having recourse on the instrument, and a number of cases to that effect were cited. But it was held that said affidavit was insufficient because it did not indicate that the primary funds existed, or that the person concerned had control of -the means whereby the funds might be raised;” that “Under the affidavit, defendant was not to be bound, under any circumstances, for payment of the note, * * *; ” that the agreement does more than vary the written instrument; it destroys it, and that “ The affidavit is not sufficient to bar the summary judgment.” See, also, Clarke v. Allen, 132 Penn. St. 40.

In Blair v. McQuary, 189 Pac. Rep. 948, the Supreme Court of Kansas said, in 1920: Centuries of experimenting with human frailty have caused the law merchant to decree that the execution or indorsement of a promissory note shall bear facial assurance that it means what it says, and that its effect is not to be overturned or subverted by proof of prior or contemporaneous verbal declarations. Otherwise, business could hardly be carried on. A note, like any other written contract, bars consideration of all mere talk which marked or led up to the signing, and yet this seems to be one of the hardest lessons to learn which the law presents to those who assume to have ability to transact business.”

On the other hand, in 3 Ruling Case Law (976, § 185) it is said that the contract of a blank indorsement is not expressed in writing, but rests in legal implication, and this prima facie presump[793]*793tion of law may be overthrown, as between the original parties to such an indorsement, by the admission of competent parol evidence establishing the real terms of the agreement,” and that “ as against all except bona fide holders for value, the true terms of the contract may be shown by evidence resting in parol.”

But it is nob the law of this state that the legal effect of a written instrument, left to implication of law and not expressed, can “ be contradicted, explained or controlled by parol or extrinsic evidence ” any more “ than if such effect had been expressed.” Headnote in Pattison v. Hull, 9 Cow. 747. In Bank of Albion v. Smith, 27 Barb. 489, it is said (at p. 491): “An indorsement in blank imports, in law, a precise and definite undertaking * * * It is, in legal effect, a promise in writing.

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