Hutchinson v. Brown

19 D.C. 136
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1890
DocketNo. 26,614
StatusPublished

This text of 19 D.C. 136 (Hutchinson v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Brown, 19 D.C. 136 (D.C. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cox

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action on a promissory note. The note furnishes an example of what is called in the books an irregular indorsement. On December 27, 1882, S. P. Brown, as general manager of the A. L. L. & B. Company, executed a note for $3,000, payable four months after date, wherein he promised to pay to the order of H. Hutchinson $3,000, value received, wijth interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum until paid. The note was never' indorsed by the payee, Hutchinson, but George M. Bobeson indorsed it, and it then [142]*142came into the hands of Hutchinson, to whose order it was made payable, and his executrix brings this suit upon the note. The declaration contains three counts. In the first count, the claim is made against- Robeson as indorser; in the second count, as guarantor; and the third count claims that Robeson and Brown were joint makers. Robeson filed a number of pleas to the declaration, and in the eighth plea he says that he wrote his name upon the back of said note as an indorser at the request of Samuel P. Brown, and for his accommodation, to enable him to raise money thereon, with the express understanding and agreement that the payee thereof, Hayward M. Hutchinson, should indorse the same as first indorser, for the accommodation of the maker, before the same should be negotiated; that the said note was passed to said H. M. Hutchinson without this defendant’s knowledge or assent, and in violation of said understanding and agreement; that he did not indorse said note to said Hutchinson, nor did he place his name upon the back of said note for the purpose of making himself liable to said Hutchinson, nor for any other purpose than to make himself responsible upon said note as second indorser, and that said Hutchinson was fully aware of this defendant’s relation to said note, and the defendant is not liable to the plaintiff.

The testimony of the witnesses on the two sides is directly contradictory.

John F. Olmstead, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he was the son-in-law and business agent of Hayward M. Hutchinson; that Brown was indebted to Hutchinson on account of a note for over $5,000, and he, witness, had been anxious to have a settlement of the note, and finally Hutchinson instructed him that if Brown would give a note for $3,000, indorsed by Robeson, he would accept it and deliver up the old note; and he further testified that A. P. Brown, acting for the defendant, S. P. Brown, brought to him the note in suit, which was delivered in satisfaction of the original note; that he accepted it and surrendered the old [143]*143note, and that when it fell due it was duly presented and protested for non-payment, and afterwards put into the hands of an attorney for suit. Immediately before the trial the defendant, S. P. Brown, came forward and asked leave of the court to be allowed to confess judgment against himself for the amount in issue, and leave was granted and judgment entered, notwithstanding the objections against the same by the plaintiff’s counsel. This was done to relieve Mr. Brown from the disqualification of being a. party to the suit, and being thereby disabled to testify to transactions with the deceased. Thereupon he testified, in substance, that there never was 'any note due from him to Hutchinson for $5,000 or over, .but he simply applied to him for a loan of $3,000. Hutchinson told him, he says, that he would get him the money if-he would bring a note to him with a good indorser, and he named Robeson as a satisfactory indorser; that he would get the note discounted in bank and procure the money for him in that way; that he, Brown, thereupon made the note in question and took it to Robeson and requested him to indorse it. Robeson remarked that the payee had not yet indorsed it, whereupon Brown said that he would see that the payee indorsed it before the note should be discounted, and that Robeson put his name on it with the understanding between Brown and Robeson that Hutchinson was to indorse it afterwards as first indorser; that he took' the note with Robeson’s name on it to Hutchinson, and they went to Middleton & Company’s Bank to have it discounted, but the latter refused” to do it; that thereupon Hutchinson drew his check to Brown for $3,000, gave him the money, and retained the note.

If Olmstead’s story is true, that this note was indorsed by Robeson for the purpose of enabling Brown to pay off and discharge a debt to Hutchinson, and the note was delivered to Hutchinson with this indorsement of Rdbeson’s on. it, it is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that [144]*144Hutchinson had a right to treat him as maker of the note with Brown, and of course has his right of action against, him.

On the other hand, if Brown’s story is correct, that Robeson indorsed the note with the understanding that his name was to be used as a second indorser, then the claim of defendant Robeson is, that instead of his being liable to Hutchinson, Hutchinson would be liable to him, if he, should have to pay the note to holder, and that Hutchinson had no claim against him at all.- At the trial of the case, various instructions were asked, based upon these different versions of fact, and it was also asked of the court, by the plaintiff, that the whole of the testimony of Brown should be excluded from consideration by the jury upon the ground that he could not qualify himself to testily by confessing judgment in the case against the objection of the plaintiff.

In this condition of the case it becomes important, first, to ascertain what is the law in relation to these irregular indorsements.

This matter was before the United States Supreme Court in the case of Good vs. Martin, 95 U. S., 90, and Judge Clifford, in delivering the opinion of the Court, says:

“Decided cases almost innumerable affirm the rule that if one, not the promisee, indorses his name in blank on a negotiable promissory note before it is indorsed by the payee and before it is delivered to take effect as a promissory note, the law presumes that he intended to give it credit by becoming liable to pay it, either as a guarantor or as an original promissor.”
“Beyond all doubt the contract should be construed as it -was at the time it was made. If made at the inception of the note, it is presumed to have been for the same consideration and a part of the original contract expressed by the nofe. If made subsequently to the date of the note and without a prior indorsement by the payee, it will be pre[145]*145sumed that it was not made for the same consideration, and the party, if liable at all, will be regarded as a guarantor.
“ These remarks apply where the third person indorses the note before the payee.
“Irregularities of this kind in the execution of promissory notes are noticed by Judge Story in his work on Promissor}^ Notes, and he says that the maker and such a party are both to be deemed original promisors, and the note a joint and several promissory note to the payee, although as between the maker and the other party they stand in the relation of principal and surety.
“None will deny, it is presumed, that the cases cited sustain the proposition, where the third person indorses his name in blank on the note at the time when it was made and before it was indorsed by the payee.”

He sums up as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
19 D.C. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-brown-dc-1890.