Gladwin v. Gladwin

13 Cal. 330
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 13 Cal. 330 (Gladwin v. Gladwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gladwin v. Gladwin, 13 Cal. 330 (Cal. 1859).

Opinion

Terry, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Field, J. concurring.

Defendants, Gladwin, Hugg & Co. gave to the plaintiff a note to cover the amount of liabilities incurred by plaintiff by indorsements made for the accommodation of Gladwin, Hugg & Co. At the time of executing the note, Gladwin, Hugg & Co. were about to fail, and the note was given for the purpose ot enabling plaintiff to secure himself by attaching property. The [332]*332consideration of the note was the liability incurred by plaintiff as the indorser for defendants, and his express promise to assume and pay such liabilities. The note, which was dated the 17th of May, was delivered to plaintiff on the 18th, and an attachment issued on the same day, which was levied on the property of Gladwin, Hugg & Co. Subsequently, an attachment issued at the suit of Garrison & Co. against Gladwin, Hugg & Co. and was levied on the same property. Garrison then intervened in this action, and seeks to acquire precedence over plaintiff’s attachment, on the ground that the note given to plaintiff is within the statute of frauds and void as to the conditions of the maker.

It appears from the evidence and finding of the Court below, that there was no actual fraud in the transaction, and the question involved is, whether the promise of plaintiff to assume and pay certain liabilities which he had incurred as indorser for defendants, and which were not at the time due, was a sufficient consideration to support a promissory note on demand.

We think the case is within the principle announced by this Court in Dana v. Stanford, (10 Cal. 269.) In that case an insolvent, in order to secure a sum due, and, also, to protect his grantee against outstanding liabilities incurred as accommodation indorser, executed a mortgage upon his entire property. This mortgage was held to be good as against the creditors of the insolvent, and we can see no reason why a party who may create a lion on his property to secure a creditor or sunety may not execute a note which will enable the party to acquire a lien by legal process.

But the precise question here presented has been passed upon in the highest Courts of our sister States. The case of Little v. Little, (13 Pick. 426,) is in all respects analogous to the one at bar. A note on demand was executed in favor of plaintiff to cover the amount of outstanding liabilities incurred by plaintiff for the accommodation of the maker. These liabilities were not at the time due, and the note was executed to enable the plaintiff to secure himself by attachment. A subsequent attaching creditor contested the validity of the note, and plaintiff was nonsuited. Upon appeal the Court said :

“In many particulars the case resembles Cushing v. Gore, (15 [333]*333Mass. 73.) We think the fail* deduction from the principles laid down in that case is, that an outstanding liability as surety or indorser for another, together with a contract or promise, express or implied, by such surety or indorser to the principal, that he will make the debt his own, and pay it, and so indemnify the principal, is a good consideration for an express promise to pay an equal amount on demand.”

The case of Cushing v. Gore, was much stronger than the case at bar. It was a suit upon a promissory note for five thousand dollars, and a check upon one of the banks in Boston for two hundred. The note was given on the 18th day of January, 1817, and was ante-dated January 5th: the note was intended to cover the amount of liabilities incurred by the payee as indorser for the maker, and was given to enable the payee to secure himself by attachment. On the same day on which the note was executed suit was instituted, and an attachment issued, which was levied on the goods of defendant. Subsequently, the same goods were attached by other creditors, upon demands which fell due before either of the three notes so indorsed by the plaintiff became due, and the defendants contended that this operated as a fraud upon the other creditors, giving an undue advantage and preference to the plaintiff. And the defendant, Gore, who, alone appeared to defend, held himself bound, in justice to those other creditors, to take this ground of defense to the present action. On this point the Judge instructed the jury “ that the defendants, when they were enabled to pay all their debts, might, by our laws, give a preference to any one creditor, by paying or giving him security; and that as they might do this by assigning to the plaintiff any of their goods, so they might do it by giving a note to anticipate the day of payment, and so enable him to attach their goods.” Upon appeal, Parker, O. J. in delivering the opinion of the Court, said : “It is objected by the counsel for the defendants, that there was no legal consideration for this note; there being merely a liability on the part of the plaintiff to pay the notes which he had indorsed. We think, however, that such a consideration is good, and sufficient to support an express promise.

Whether the plaintiff should be called upon, or eventually be obliged to pay, was contingent when he indorsed the defendant’s [334]*334notes; but, there is no doubt, if he had refused to indorse them without receiving a promissory note of the defendants, to enable him to secure himself when danger should be apprehended, the defendants would be prevented from denying the validity of their promise. In the present state of the mercantile world, it would excite great surprise if we were to decide that a note deliberately given to an indorser, for the very purpose of enabling him to secure himself against the effect of his indorsement, would not answer the purpose for which it was intended.

* * * But if there were any doubt of the principle, to the extent mentioned, we think that when an indorser has, either expressly or impliedly, undertaken to pay the note by him indorsed, there can be no question that such an undertaking is a good and valuable consideration for a promissory note.”

The case of Haseltine v. Guild, (11 N. H. 390) is to the same effect, and we have seen no decision to the contrary. The cases cited by Appellant differ in several important respects from the one at bar. In Ryan v. Daly, (6 Cal. 238,) it was admitted that the judgment was confessed for the purpose of preventing the collection of plaintiff’s demand. In Taaffe v. Josephson, (7 Cal. 353) attachment was issued upon several promissory notes, one of which was not due, and this fact was held to vitiate the judgment. In McKenty v. Gladwin, a note bearing interest at two and one-half per cent, was executed for the amount of the debts not due and bearing no interest. The note was antedated for tho purpose of receiving a larger amount of interest upon it. The Court said, In this case it was only necessary to determine two questions:

1st. Was there any consideration for the interest secured to be paid by this note ? If there was no legal consideration for this interest, and the note should be enforced according to its terms, it would unjustly take from the other creditors and give to the plaintiff the amount.
2d. Was this result knowingly intended by the plaintiff?

In regard to the first question, the proof is conclusive. The plaintiff himself was examined as a witness by the intervenors, and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Cal. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladwin-v-gladwin-cal-1859.