Hermitage National Bank v. Carpenter

131 Tenn. 136
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 Tenn. 136 (Hermitage National Bank v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hermitage National Bank v. Carpenter, 131 Tenn. 136 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The McLemore Grain Company, a body corporate (for convenience referred to at places in this opinion as the old company) about the first of the year 1910 opened an account with the Hermitage National Bank of Nashville. It also did business with the Fourth National Bank of the same city.

The grain company became debtor to the Hermitage Bank by notes, some secured by personal indorsement, and some by collateral security, and also by way of overdraft, so that on April 1, 1910, a considerable [138]*138aggregate of obligations existed. These are referred to below as old-company obligations.

On that day that company’s indebtedness to tbe bank was unexpectedly swelled, and insolvency confronted tbe grain company. This condition was precipitated by tbe fact that $4,500 of tbe checks of tbe grain company which bad been drawn on tbe Fourth National Bank, and which had been cashed by complainant bank, were upon presentation dishonored by the drawee bank.

Oheairs, the cashier of complainant bank, anxious to secure his bank against loss, called upon J. B. McLemore, president of the grain company, to make good the amount of these dishonored checks. As the result of a conference between cashier Oheairs, Mc-Lemore, and the father-in-law of the latter, a plan was devised to put McLemore in a position to continue in business and to obtain for the bank security, by way of personal indorsement, for the $4,500 of unpaid checks. McLemore’s father-in-law it was expected would aid by becoming indorser, but he declined to commit himself to the considerable extent that was required. It was proposed by one of those in the conference that a new corporation be organized to do a grain and hay business to which complainant bank should make a loan of $7,500 on which to conduct the business; such loan to be carried until the $4,500 could be paid off at the rate of $300 per month, provided the total of $12,000 could be secured to the satisfaction of the bank.

[139]*139W. J. Howard, a resident of Columbia, Tenn., a boyhood friend of McLemore, who bad himself lived in Columbia before he removed to Nashville (as had also cashier Cheairs), was thought of as a prospective indorser for the new company. Howard was a man of means, and had to a very considerable extent theretofore aided McLemore in his business ventures.

On April 3d McLemore went to Colnmbia and had a conference with Howard and outlined the scheme to' him, with result that Howard consented to indorse the required notes. Steps were taken to obtain a charter for the new company under the style of Mc-Lemore G-rain & Hay Company. A number of contracts in blank, notes, etc., were prepared to be taken by McLemore on a second trip the following day to Columbia, on which visit he was .accompanied by Cheairs. The scheme, in object and outline, was again canvassed by both of the visitors with Howard, who signed the series of notes and also the contracts which were in the form of letters addressed to the' complainant bank.

Among the instruments prepared for Howard A signature in advance of the trip, to Columbia was the following, written on a letter head of Hermitage National Bank by its cashier, evidently after consultation with other officials of the bank:

“Nashville, Tenn., 4-4-10.
“Mr. N. F. Cheairs, Cashier, Hermitage National Bank, Nashville, Tenn. — Dear Sir: You hold unpaid checks of the McLemore G-rain Co. for approximately [140]*140$4,500. In consideration of yonr advancing a new company to be organized $7,500 npon a note of the new company with the personal indorsement of J. B. Mc-Lemore and myself, I agree to indorse notes covering $4,500 with the understanding that said indebtedness will be liquidated at the rate of $300 per month, and that the note for $7,500 as above referred to, will be carried by yon until after the $4,500 indebtedness, which is payable at the rate of $300 per month has been paid. In the event any monthly payment of $300 is not made, the entire amount on which I am indorser will become due and payable after thirty days’ notice and demand.
“Yours truly, [Signed] W. J. Howaed.”

The proof shows that the understanding of those in charge of the negotiation and execution of this obligation was, as explained by Cheairs: The proceeds of the $7,500 note were to go to the credit of the new company. On these proceeds the new company was to prosecute a new business, with the exception of the sum of $1,500, which was to be applied by the bank in payment of a note of that sum due to the bank by the old company on which Howard’s name was signed as surety.

Cheairs .says that Howard’s friendship for Mc-Lemore and his desire to .see McLemore get on his feet again, financially, induced him to sign the papers presented to him; that is, it is further explained, Howard’s name was lent in suretyship with the purpose of enabling McLemore to operate “his new business and [141]*141make enough to pay off these loans at the rate of $300 per month.”

We think it apparent from this record that Cheairs purposely made and caused to he left the impression on Howard that both Howard and the bank, through Cheairs, its cashier, would co-operate in enabling Mc-Lemore, a fellow, Maury Countian, and friend of both Howard and Cheairs, to recover himself financially through the medium of a new company equipped with a fresh capital of $6,000 net, as above indicated.

However, it appears that this scheme was materially departed from by the bank to the detriment of Howard. We believe it is fairly inferable from the facts in evidence that to save himself from criticism in allowing the old company to get so deeply into his bank’s debt, and certainly under temptation to save the bank presently, Cheairs began to divert and to knowingly take the benefit of diversions of the capital of the new company to the payment of obligations of the old company, which, as they matured, proved embarrassing to a national bank. We find that more than one-half of the $6,000 was thus diverted. The result was, of course, the strangling, of the new company, which survived only about three months.

Under these circumstances, is the bank entitled to hold Howard to respond as surety?

The doctrine of diversion in the law of suretyship-, relating to the release of the surety, is, broadly speaking, to the effect: If one becomes surety on a note for a specified purpose, according to the agreement [142]*142of the parties, he is not liable if it is nsed for a different purpose without his consent to one chargeable with knowledge of that purpose and of the diversion.

The diversion may have one of several aspects. The misuse oftentimes is of the note itself, as an instrument. And herein the diversion may be one from the intended payee to another not in the contemplation of the surety. The cases of Perkins v. Ament, 2 Head (39 Tenn.), 110, and Hickerson v. Raiguel, 2 Heisk. (49 Tenn.), 329, 334, are illustrative of this class of cases in their holding that, if a party becomes surety.on a note with the understanding that it shall be passed to a particular individual, and to no one else, he is not liable unless the note is passed to that person.

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Related

State Ex Rel. McConnell v. First State Bank
124 S.W.2d 726 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1938)
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Cohn v. Hitt
133 Tenn. 466 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
131 Tenn. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hermitage-national-bank-v-carpenter-tenn-1914.