Knaffle v. Knoxville Banking & Trust Co.

128 Tenn. 181
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 128 Tenn. 181 (Knaffle v. Knoxville Banking & Trust Co.) 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
Knaffle v. Knoxville Banking & Trust Co., 128 Tenn. 181 (Tenn. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Under an intervening petition filed in this, a proceeding to wind up defendant bank as an insolvent corporation, it appears that, at the date of insolvency found, a note to the hank as payee, to mature approxi[183]*183mately three months thereafter, had been executed by McNichols Art Shop and Mrs. J. A. McNichols, whose signatures were appended as if both were makers, and that the first (the trade name of R. T. P. McNichols) received the proceeds; the second signer becoming surety when the bank required a second name on the paper. Mrs. J. A. McNichols had deposits in the bank ' that aggregated a sum greater than the amount of the note.

The petition was filed by both the McNicholses, soil and mother, seeking to have her deposits set off in payment of the note. The son, principal obligor on the note, is not alleged to be insolvent, and is in fact solvent. The receiver of the bank answered, resisting the grant of relief; and the chancellor and court of civil appeals have held with the receiver and denied the claim of set-off.

The first insistence is that both of the signers of the note are, under the Negotiable Instruments Act (Acts 1899, ch. 94), to be deemed primarily liable so far as the bank is concerned, and no one of them a surety.

In Building, etc., Co. v. Northern Bank, 206 N. Y., 400, 99 N. E., 1044, where it appeared that two persons, solely for the accommodation of plaintiff company, had as makers executed their note to it as payee, which note it had indorsed to defendant bank, it was held that such indorser would be treated as the one “primarily liable” on the instrument, in testing its right to equitable set-off against its deposit in the bank in insolvency proceedings. The court said:

[184]*184“It nowhere appears from the Negotiable Instruments Law, or from anything that can be considered in determining the intention of the legislature, that .said sections 3 and 55 [in relation to primary liability] were intended to prevent the courts from determining in equity all questions between an insolvent holder of a note and the one primarily liable for the indebtedness on the instrument as a matter of fact, whether maker or indorser. . . .

“If we assume that in an action at law the makers ■of the note must arbitrarily be treated as primarily liable thereon, and the plaintiff as secondarily liable thereon, it does not prevent the court in an action in equity from determining and enforcing the rights of the parties as the same are found as a matter of fact. Winne v. Winne, 166 N. Y., 263, 271 [59 N. E., 832, 82 Am. St. Rep., 647.].”

In this view of the Negotiable Instruments Act we ■concur; and, on the proof, Mrs. J. A. McNichols is to be treated, not as comaker, but as a surety secondarily liable, for the purpose of testing her right of equitable .set-off.

The point yet more seriously contested is the remedy of the surety to have equitably offset her deposits against the note. She has not been sued on the note; and we have not, therefore, for consideration how far ■she could in such an action successfully plead in set-off this demand, as to which see Wilson v. Exchange Bank, 122 Ga., 495, 50 S. E., 357, 69 L. R. A., 97, 2 Ann. Cas., 597, and Corbett v. Hughes, 75 Iowa, 282, [185]*18539 N. W., 500 (which seem to make the matter turn on whether or not the demand grew out of the transaction in which the note was executed).

The remedy of equitable set-off may he enforced independently of the statutes governing set-off, where from the nature of the claim, or from the situation of the parties, it is impossible to obtain justice by plea or cross-action. Lindsay v. Jackson, 2 Paige (N. Y.), 581; Becker v. Northway, 44 Minn., 61, 64 N. W., 210, 20 Am. St. Rep., 543; Scholze v. Steiner, 100 Ala., 148, 14 South., 552. But there will he a grant of the remedy only for the purpose of securing an equitable result, and not where its allowance would work on injustice to others having equal equities. Graham v. Middleby, 213 Mass., 437, 100 N. E., 750, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.), 977, 981; 34 Cyc., 726, and cases cited.

In Nolan Bros. Lumber Co. v. Dudley Lumber Co., 128 Tenn., 11, 156 S. W., 465, the nature of equitable set-off was considered, and it was there held that where a defendant sued was an indorser of a note executed by the plaintiff’s, assignor, as maker, and had been forced to pay same, an assignment (prior to such payment) of a debt due by account from defendant to the assignor did not preclude defendant from establishing an equitable set-off; it appearing that the assignor was insolvent at the time he executed the note and when he assigned the account. This case is now cited as authority in behalf of the petitioning surety. That case was one that dealt with the rights of an indorser as against his principal, and the equity that supported [186]*186the set-off was found in the insolvency of 1ns own principal, to whom the indorser stood as potential creditor at the time the account sued on was assigned, and the discussion and marshaling of authorities related almost wholly to a phase other than the one here presented — the status of a surety who on assignment date had not paid his principal’s debt.

In the case at bar the surety’s principal is solvent, and the effort is to have the insolvency of the bank constitute the equity in support of the remedy sought.

In the cited case, the account sought to be met by set-off was the principal’s against the indorser, while in the case at fear the effort is that of a surety to set off her own demand against a debt that is primarily not hers, but the real debt of her principal, .the son. It is manifest, on analysis, that the Nolan Lumber Co. Case is not authority for petitioner’s contention, and could only be, by analogy, were it made to appear that the surety’s principal was insolvent.

The bank’s insolvency in instances would be reason for, and sustain, an equitable set-off; for example, in accelerating the maturity of demands, for equity’s purposes in set-off. Nashville Trust Co. v. Bank, 91 Tenn., 336, 347, 18 S. W., 822, 15 L. R. A., 710.

The question here presented for determination, therefore, recurs: Is the surety on a note held by the receiver of an insolvent bank entitled to have set off against the same the amount of an individual deposit due the surety by the bank, when the bank is not suing, and the maker and primary obligor is solvent?

[187]*187Chancellor Walworth in the early case of In re Middle District Bank, 9 Cow. (N. Y.), 414, note, said: ■“If the real debtor is nnable to pay, and the receiver is compelled to resort to the indorser, who is event-nally to be the loser, he has the same equitable claim to offset bills which he had at the time the bank stopped payment. Bnt no such offset should be allowed to an indorser where he is indemnified by the real debtor, or when the latter can be compelled to pay.”

In Davis v. Industrial Manufacturing Co., 114 N. C., 321, 19 S. E., 371, 23 L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
128 Tenn. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knaffle-v-knoxville-banking-trust-co-tenn-1913.