Henriques v. Ypsilanti Savings Bank

47 N.W. 558, 84 Mich. 168, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 572
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 N.W. 558 (Henriques v. Ypsilanti Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henriques v. Ypsilanti Savings Bank, 47 N.W. 558, 84 Mich. 168, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 572 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Grant, J.

This is a suit in equity to enjoin the defendant the Ypsilanti Savings Bank from enforcing the collection of two promissory notes for $2,500 and $4,000, respectively. They were executed by Samuel Earp and complainant, the latter signing only as surety for Mr. Earp, and were payable to the order R. W. Hemphill, cashier of the defendant bank. Mr. Earp was at the [171]*171time, and had been for several years, rector of the Episcopal Church, at Ann Arbor, where complainant resided. She was' his parishioner, and a communicant of his church.

On April- 19, 1889, the bank held'a note for $6,500, executed by Mr. Earp and Victoria O. Morris, which was then two months past due. This note was discounted for the sole benefit of Mr. Earp. Mrs. Morris, a married woman, was merely a surety, and received no benefit or consideration. When it became due, she declined to renew it. The bank sent Mr. Batchelder, its president, to Ann Arbor, to see Mr. Earp jn regard to the matter. On his return, he directed Mr. Hemphill to send to Mr. Earp two notes, one for ■ $2,500, payable- in 10 days, and one for $4,000, payable in 30 days, which were the notes now in dispute. The notes, dated April 15, were sent, and on April 19 were returned to the bank, signed by Mr. Earp and complainant, and accompanied by the following letter:

“ St. Andrew’s Rectory, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
“April 19, 1889.
“My Dear Friend: I went to see Mrs. M., as Mr. B. requested yesterday afternoon, but found that she had promised her husband during his sickness that she would not sign any more papers for any one. This was occasioned by a loss sustained through another party. She feels that her promise is sacred, and she is so completely crushed anyhow that I could not press the matter any further. I return two notes signed by Miss Henriques, who is just as responsible, and whose funds, perhaps, are in a more available shape. You can retain the other papers as a sort of collateral, Mrs M. having no objection to them as they are, and to her responsibility until they are paid. I hope this will remove your immediate difficulty. I have word this morning that the funds will be on hand within a few days, and all settled. I regret the inconvenience to Mr. B. of coming up here twice. If there is any expense attached to it, please charge it to me. ' Yours very truly,
“S. Earp.”

[172]*172Upon the receipt of these notes, Mr. ITemphill, the cashier, pinned them to the Morris note,'put them in an envelope, and in this condition has always kept them. The bank made no entry whatever of the Henriques notes upon any of its books or records. No entry is made in the book of discounts, or the register of bills payable. Mr. Earp had an account with the bank, including the Morris note, but no credit is given him thereon. No indorsement of payment is made upon the Morris note. There is nothing whatever in any record or paper of the bank to indicate that these notes had been discounted, or that they had ever been classified as discounted paper. The only testimony on the part of the bank to show that they were discounted, or that the bank parted with value, comes from Mr. Hemphill, who testified that they were received in payment pro tanto upon the Morris note. If so received, only a few dollars of interest remained due upon the Morris note. But there are other significant facts shown by the evidence, bearing upon this question. Mr. Hemphill testifies that, after the receipt of these notes, he held the Morris note under the instructions in the letter above given,—

“As a sort of collateral to the balance of interest that was due on this [the Morris note] and some other little matters that he owed me.”

The instructions in the letter are:

“You can retain the other papers [meaning the Morris note] as a sort of collateral, Mrs. M. [meaning Mrs. Morris] having no objection to them as they are, and to her responsibility until they are paid.”

Mr. Earp was at this time indebted to the bank, aside from the Morris note, to the amount of several hundred dollars. Mr. Hemphill says that he held the Morris note/ expecting to squeeze him on the other matters if he could.

[173]*173He admits having told Mrs. Morris in June, when she. came to see him about her note, that she and Miss Henriques had better fix the matter up some way among themselves. He also gave similar advice to Mr.. Jones» the agent of Miss Henriques, and admits that he might have said that the best arrangement was for each to pay one-half. To neither of these did he state that the Morris note, or any portion of it, was paid. In these interviews he treated it as a full and subsistent obligation. About the time of this interview between Mrs. Morris and Mr. Hemphill, the dishonest transactions of Mr. Earp, at Ann Arbor, had been exposed. The sheep’s clothing had been removed, and the wolf, in the garb of the priest, appeared in his true character. It was evidently in consequence of this that Mrs. Morris went to the bank to ascertain what her liability was. She is a lady of the highest character, was not cross-examined, and entirely disinterested as between the real parties to this suit. It does not appear whether she knew that she was not liable upon the note because of her coverture. If she did not, then her testimony.was against her supposed interest. Her testimony is as follows:

“I told Mr. Hemphill that I came to see if I was involved in any way through Mr. Earp’s transactions. Mr. Hemphill told me that there was a note which I had signed in his favor, but that, since my note had been signed, Miss Henriques had also signed a note, which he held as additional security. * * * Mr. Hemphill told me that he held me jointly responsible with Miss Henriques for the payment of the note.’’

Mr. ■ Hemphill admits informing her that he still held her note as collateral, but says:

<fMrs. Morris is mistaken in the notes that I held. That is all. I told her that I held them according to Dr. Earp’s letter; her note, under his instructions, as collateral security for anything that he owed.’’

[174]*174He testifies that he supposed he could so hold it, and did hold it with that understanding until after this suit was brought. About this same time complainant, hearing rumors about these papers, went to Ypsilanti, first to the National Bank, and then to defendant’s bank, and was informed by Mr. Hemphill that he had Mrs. Morris’ note too.

The complainant is a maiden lady, upwards of 50 years of age, and possessed of considerable property. She had had considerable experience in loaning' her money, and had received notes, bonds, and mortgages. She had never signed a note before the ones now in suit. Previously to this, Mr. Earp had so secured her confidence that he had borrowed from her at one time $1,000, at another, $250. On the morning of April 19, 1889, being Good Friday, he called at complainant’s home. Her statement of what there took place is as follows:

“He said he had a little matter, a little investment, I think, in Ypsilanti. He would like to ask a favor of me. He said he knew I was a pretty good friend of his. I said I hoped so, and he wished me to sign these papers. He asked me if I would sign a paper.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W. 558, 84 Mich. 168, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henriques-v-ypsilanti-savings-bank-mich-1890.