Kyle v. Chattahoochee National Bank

24 S.E. 149, 96 Ga. 693
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 149 (Kyle v. Chattahoochee National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyle v. Chattahoochee National Bank, 24 S.E. 149, 96 Ga. 693 (Ga. 1895).

Opinion

Atkinson, Justice.

The Paragon Manufacturing Company was indebted to the Chattahoochee National Bank in the sum of fifty-four thousand dollars. The several items constituting this indebtedness were, a note drawn by J. P. Kyle for the accommodation of the Paragon Manufacturing Company, and by it indorsed to the Chattahoochee National Bank; two other notes for similar sums were drawn by other persons in the same manner, and these were likewise indorsed to the Chattahoochee National Bank. These three notes were drawn by the respective makers for the accommodation only of the Paragon Manufacturing Company, and to be discounted by that company in connection with its business. Another item of said indebtedness consisted of a note for ten thousand dollars drawn by the Paragon Manufacturing Company in favor of the Chattahoochee National Bank, and the remaining fourteen thousand dollars consisted o.f an open account due by the Paragon Manufacturing Company to the bank. These several items were each secured by a [695]*695mortgage drawn by the Paragon Manufacturing Company in favor of the bank to secure this indebtedness and to protect and save harmless the accommodation makers of such three notes against ultimate loss on account thereof. This mortgage was made subject to a pre-existing mortgage upon the same property, and of ■equal lien, effect and dignity with certain other mortgages executed upon the same date, but not necessary here to be described. As additional security for the payment of said several items of indebtedness, the Paragon Manufacturing Company assigned to the bank certain choses in action and manufactured goods, of the aggregate value of thirty-one thousand dollars. The item of fourteen thousand dollars, designated as open account, secured by the mortgage, consisted of a draft ■drawn by the Paragon Manufacturing Company against Frederick Vietor & Achilles in favor of the bank for ■six thousand dollars, and for amounts of overdrafts eight thousand dollars. Before the draft for six thousand •dollars was notified to the drawees and before its presentation or acceptance, all of the funds in the hands of the drawees were assigned to the bank by the Paragon Manufacturing Company, and accepted by the bank, according to the instrument under which the assignment was effected, as additional security for the notes and open account secured by the mortgage above referred to. Certain creditors of the Paragon Manufacturing Company filed a petition praying the appointment of .a receiver. This petition was granted, and under it, all the property of the Paragon Manufacturing Company, including that which had been mortgaged as above stated, was taken possession of by the receiver. The ■Chattahoochee National Bank, in this proceeding, foreclosed its mortgage. This mortgage, however, having heen assailed by unsecured creditors, the bank, with the ■consent of certain other of the creditors, parties to the [696]*696record — the present defendant not being one of them— compounded with the unsecured creditors, and paid them the sum of twenty-six hundred, sixty-four and 87/100 dollars, in consideration that they would abandon their attack upon the mortgage. This money being paid, the receiver thereafter, under the direction of the court, paid to the bank, for and on account of the-mortgage which it held, the sum of twenty-six thousand, nine hundred and seventy-five and 14/100 dollars, the-net sum received by the bank, under its mortgage and. under the assignment of choses in action, aggregating-thirty-nine thousand, five hundred and seventy-eight and. 59/100 dollars; against which sum the bank claimed, the right to deduct the sum paid to unsecured creditors-in making a settlement with them. The bank claimed, the right to appropriate the money received by it in the following manner: 1st, the amount paid by it to the unsecured creditors of the Paragon Manufacturing Company, $2,664.87; 2d, to appropriate exclusively to pay the draft held on Frederick Vietor & Achilles (included, in said open account item hereinbefore referred to),. $6,000.00; 3d, to appropriate exclusively to the payment, of the note of Paragon Mfg. Co., $10,000.00; 4th, to appropriate exclusively to payment of note of W. H. Dismuke, $10,000; besides interest on the above sums; and it accordingly so appropriated it. Subsequently, the bank brought suit against the defendant, J. P. Kyle, on his note, which was the same one secured by the mortgage hereinbefore referred to. To this action by the bank, the defendant Kyle pleaded, amongst other things, that he was entitled to have the bank apply the-sum received by it upon account of its mortgage ratably to the extinguishment of each of the several items of indebtedness secured thereby, without preference to either. Under the special verdict rendered, the jury-found in favor of the defendant, that as to the sum paid!. [697]*697in settlement with the unsecured creditors the defendant upon his note was entitled to be credited with his prorata share. As to each of the other issues, the finding was in favor of the plaintiff; that is, that as to the sum of ten thousand appropriated in extinguishment of the Dismuke note, the ten thousand appropriated in ex-tinguishment of the note of the Paragon Manufacturing Company, and the six thousand represented by the draft on Yietor & Achilles, he was not entitled to participate, nor to have a pro rata share thereof applied in extinguishment of his note. Upon his note for ten thousand dollars the jury found against him a verdict for seven thousand, six hundred and twelve and 54/100 dollars.

1. The court, in substance and in effect, charged the jury upon the appropriation of payments in accordance with the rule laid down in section 2869 of the code; and refused to charge in accordance with the request of the defendant, that if they should believe from the evidence, that this mortgage was given to secure these several items of indebtedness, and for the protection of the accommodation makers,' including this defendant, and was so accepted by the bank, the defendant’s note, being one of the evidences of indebtedness so secured, would be entitled, as a matter of law, to participate pro rata in the distribution of the fund arising therefrom, without reference to any direction given by the Paragon Manufacturing Company, or any appropriation made by the bank in the absence of such direction by the Paragon Company. We think, under the facts as they appear in this record, the request should have been given, and that it stated the true rule of law applicable to cases of this character. It will be observed from an examination" of the record, that at the time the bank accepted the note of this defendant, it knew that he was an accommodation maker only, and was in no sense interested in the consideration of the note. It knew that one of [698]*698the purposes intended to be accomplished by the execution of the mortgage, was to secure the defendant from loss as an accommodation maker. The president of the bank himself testified that the mortgage was executed to protect this- note along with others included in the mortgage. When the bank accepted the mortgage, it assumed along with the security the duty of executing the trust resulting from the considerations which led up to its execution. Each of these accommodation makers had a vested interest in all sums which should be realized upon the foreclosure of the mortgage. The mortgage itself was equivalent to an appropriation in advance of the fund.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 149, 96 Ga. 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyle-v-chattahoochee-national-bank-ga-1895.