Ham v. Greve

34 Ind. 18
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 34 Ind. 18 (Ham v. Greve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ham v. Greve, 34 Ind. 18 (Ind. 1870).

Opinion

Worden, J.

Suit on the following note:

“$418. Louisville, Ky., June 12th, 1867.

Sixty days after date, we promise to pay to the order of Greve, Buhrlage & Co. four hundred and eighteen dollars, without defalcation, value received; negotiable and payable at the office of the Western Insurance Company in Louisville, Ky. James G. McNett,

Jason I-Iam, security.”

The defendant Ham pleaded: First. Payment. Second. Want of consideration. Third. That his signature to the note was obtained by the fraud of the plaintiffs, without showing the circumstances. Fourth. That prior to the execution of the note McNett was the proprietor of a retail furniture store in .Louisville, Ky., which, including the stock, had been [20]*20sold to him .by said Ham, for which McNett owed him the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars; and that it had been agreed between said McNett and Plam that the latter should hold a lien on said stock and all additions thereto to secure said indebtedness, and. that McNett was to execute a mortgage on- the same for that purpose; that the plaintiffs, who were wholesale furniture dealers in the same place, knew of the indebtedness of McNett to the defendant, and, intending to. deceive the defendant and induce him to sign the note as security, represented to him that McNett was doing a good business and was getting along well, but that he needed more stock, and that the plaintiffs would furnish him some more goods if the defendant would become security on -his note for the same; that the defendant, relying upon said statements, and in consideration of the fact that the goods so to be furnished were to be added to the stock, thus augmenting his security, agreed that he would become surety on such note, and therefore he placed his name upon said note as such surety, believing at the time that the note was given for the price of goods furnished by the plaintiffs to McNett as aforesaid; whereas the plaintiffs did not furnish to McNett any goods, but the whole consideration of the note on the part of McNe'tt was a prior indebtedness of. McNett to the plaintiffs on a note which had been protested for non-payment, of which fact the defendant was at the time ignorant; and McNett was at the time insolvent, and was not prospering in his business, ■as the plaintiffs then well knew. Said McNett has never paid his indebtedness to the defendant, and defendant never received-any consideration, for-his signature to the note.

Fifth. That, he signed the note merely as surety to said McNett, who was the principal therein, and at the time of the execution of said note the said McNett was wholly insolvent, which fact was well known, to the plaintiffs, but was not known to the defendant; and the said plaintiffs then and there fraudulently concealed the fact of said insolvency from the defendant, and induced him to sign the said note, and he [21]*21has never received any consideration whatever for such signature.

A demurrer was sustained to the third and fifth paragraphs of the answer, and exceptions were taken. Reply in denial of the first, second, and fourth paragraphs; also a reply denying all fraud charged in the fourth.

Trial of the issues by a jury; verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs, a new trial being asked for and denied.

Error is assigned upon the ruling on the demurrers. The ruling on the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer was very clearly right. That paragraph set up fraud in obtaining the defendant’s signature to the note, without stating in any manner in what the fraud consisted. That such pleading is bad, has been decided so often by this court, that to cite the cases would extend this opinion into needless prolixity.'

The fifth paragraph raises a more debatable question, but we are of opinion that that also was bad, and the demurrer to it correctly sustained. The substance of that paragraph is, that at the time the note was given, McNett was insolvent, which fact was unknown to the defendant, but was known by the plaintiffs, and by them concealed from the defendant. The pleading says it was fraudulently concealed, but it states no fact of which fraud is predicable. It does not appear that the plaintiffs knew that the defendant was ignorant of McNett’s insolvency; and unless the simple fact that the plaintiffs knew he was insolvent made-it their duty to communicate that fact to the defendant, they had the right to remain silent; and the charge of fraudulent concealment, without any statement of circumstances that made it their duty to disclose the fact to the defendant, does not add anything to the'statement.

We think the real question presented by this paragraph may be stated thus: Is it the duty of a person about to take a note, with surety, from one whom he knows to be insolvent, to disclose the fact of such insolvency to the proposed surety ? and in default of such disclosure, will the contract of the surety be void? We are of opinion, that this [22]*22question must be answered in the negative. The creditor in such case may suppose that the proposed surety is as well advised of the pecuniary condition of the principal as. he is himself, and knowing his condition, is willing to help him by becoming his surety. Undoubtedly, if the proposed surety should apply to the creditor for information as to the responsibility or solvency of the principal, it would be the duty of the creditor to give him all the information he possessed on that subject, and if he should withhold any fact within his knowledge, material to the risk to be assumed by the surety, the latter would not be bound. But the creditor is not bound in such case to volunteer his information unsolicited and uncalled for. It is said, that “any concealment of material facts, or any express or implied misrepresentation of such facts, or any undue advantage taken of the surety by the creditor, either by surprise or by withholding proper information, will undoubtedly furnish a sufficient ground to invalidate the contract.” 1 Story Eq. § 324. The fact of the insolvency of the principal cannot be said to be concealed by the creditor, unless he is called upon by the surety, or by the circumstances of the transaction, to make the disclosure, and he fails to do so. His silence is no fraud unless the proposed surety or the nature of the transaction calls upon him to speak. The author just quoted, in § 325 a, says, “It is now regarded as settled that there must be something which amounts to fraud, to enable the surety to. say that he is released from his contract on account of misrepresentation or concealment.”

Circumstances might exist that would make it tire duty of the creditor to disclose his knowledge of the principal’s pecuniary condition, though not called upon to do. so by the surety j but no such circumstances are alleged in the paragraph in question.

We pass to other questions arising in the record.

On the trial of the cause, while the defendant Ham was on the stand as a witness in his own behalfj his counsel offered to prove by him, “that prior to the execution of the note in [23]

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ind. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ham-v-greve-ind-1870.