Marks v. First National Bank

79 Ala. 550
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 79 Ala. 550 (Marks v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. First National Bank, 79 Ala. 550 (Ala. 1885).

Opinion

SOMEPYILLE, J.

The main question in this case, reduced to its last analysys, is simply, whether, in the case of accommodation negotiable paper, the fraud of the maker, in procuring the signature of an accommodation indorser, is a good defense to a suit brought against such indorser by the payee, who knows the nature of the paper, but is ignorant of the fraud.

We are of opinion, upon fundamental principles of law governing the subject of commercial paper, that the defense can not be sustained.

1. Accommodation indorsers, beyond all doubt, are liable precisely to the same extent as if they had received value, when the paper upon which their names appear has come into the hands of a holder for value, who has taken it bona fide, before maturity, and without notice of any fraud or other equity, which would vitiate it. It is entirely immaterial that such purchaser was cognizant of the fact that the bill or note was founded on an accommodation transaction, and was, therefore, to this extent, without consideration as between the indorser and the maker. The obvious reason is, that the purpose of making the paper was to loan the credit of the accommodation indorser, or other surety, to the maker, or party for whose accommodation the paper is made, that he might obtain money or credit from a third person on the faith of it. Unless this [558]*558rule prevailed, it is easy to see how the circulation of accommodation paper would be so far frustrated as to destroy its use in commerce.—Chitty on Bills, pp. 80, 305; 2 Parsons Notes & Bills, p. 27; Park Bank v. Watson, 42 N. Y. 470. The rule, in other words, is, to use the language of Judge Story, that “the parties to every accommodation bill hold themselves out to the public, by their signatures, to be absolutely bound to every person who shall take the same for value, as if that value were personally advanced to them, or on their account, and at their request.”—Story on Bills, § 192.

This familiar principle is a full answer to the argument, that the notes in suit were obtained by the plaintiff from the maker, Eellows, and that this fact charged the plaintiff with a knowledge of the nature of the paper as being of an accommodation character.

2. That the notes were taken by the bank in payment of an antecedent debt, did not render it any the less a purchaser for value, in due course of business, than if it had advanced the money on the faith of the paper. Such transactions are constantly occurring among merchants, and it may, therefore, be said to be according to their usage. The notes were payable to the bank on their face, and of this fact the defendant was necessarily apprised, when he loaned Fellows the credit of his indorsement.—1 Parsons Notes & Bills, pp. 256-257; 2 Lead. Cas. 242; Connerly v. Planters' Ins. Co., 66 Ala. 433; Bank of Mobile v. Hall, 6 Ala. 639. The case of McKenzie v. Branch Bank, 28 Ala. 606, cited and relied on so strenuously by appellant’s counsel, is easily distinguishable from this case. Here, accommodation paper is taken in absolute payment of a pre-existing debt. — there only as collateral security for such debt. In the former case, the holder, under our decisions, is a purchaser for value; in the latter, not.—Miller v. Boykin, 70 Ala. 469.

3. That the liability of the defendant was that of an indorser, is too well settled by the decisions of this court to admit of discussion. It is true that his name was written in blank on the back of the notes, before they had been indorsed by the payee, who never put them in circulation; and' the indorsement was, therefore, wdiat is commonly termed an irregular and imperfect one. But this was immaterial, as no effort is made to show by parol evidence, or otherwise, that the defendant, at the time of the indorsements, in any manner qualified or restricted his liability, so far as concerns the plaintiff, or contracted to assume, as between him and the plaintiff, any other liability than that of an indorser.—Hooks v. Anderson, 58 Ala. 238; Price v. Lavender, 38 Ala. 389; Tankersly v. Graham, 8 Ala. 251; Jordan v. Garnett, 3 Ala. 610; Day v. Thompson, [559]*55965 Ala. 269. The case raises no inquiry as to the circumstances under which irregular indorsements may be qualified by parol proof of the real contract between the parties litigant — who are here the payee and the indorser. As between the indorsers themselves, the inquiry might assume entirely another phase, which it is unnecessary for us to discuss.

4. This brings us back to the first inquiry, as to how far the alleged fraud practiced by the maker, whereby he obtained the consent of defendant to become one of his accommodation indorsers, is to affect the payee, who is entirely ignorant of it. The evidence shows that Dawson, the first indorser on the notes, made his indorsement upon the condition, that' the maker, Fellows, was to obtain the names of two other responsible indorsers on the paper, before delivering it to the bank, such indorsei’s to be jointly liable with him. This condition was not communicated to the defendant, and this may be admitted to be a swppressio veri, which was a fraud in law. But the plaintiff was as ignorant of the alleged fraud as was the defendant, being an innocent purchaser of the legal title, before maturity; and for value. Why should the bank, then, be held responsible for a deception in wrhich it had no participation ? Its officers trusted to the paper, and the affirmed genuineness of the signatures, which were sufficient on their face to create a legal liability. They placed no special trust in any representations of the maker, as to the nature of the paper. The defendant, however, trusted the maker, by standing as his surety, and did not either inquire or inform himself as to the terms upon which Dawson had indorsed the notes. One giving currency to commercial paper, by indorsement, is understood, not only to assert the genuineness of all previous signatures, but also “ the regularity of all such previous transactions as he was bound to know.”—2 Greenl. Ev. § 164. He was guilty of negligence, in this particular; and its consequences should rather be visited on him, than upon one who has parted with value on the faith of his indorsement.—Anderson v. Warne, 71 Ill. 20; s. c., 22 Amer. Rep. 83. Fellows, moreover, was, to a certain extent, the agent of the defendant to deliver the note to the bank — without special instructions, and without the imposition of any conditions or terms of delivery. Here, again, was the reposing of confidence; and the rule is, that where one puts trust and confidence in a deceiver, it is more reasonable that he should be the loser than a stranger, who deals with him with him without any relations of confidence. The case can scarcely be stronger, than if the notes had been indorsed to be used for some special purpose, and had been fraudulently misappropriated to another purpose by the maker, without knowledge on the part of the payee of such restriction [560]*560or misappropriation. Yet, in such a case, it has been often held, that a bona fide holder for value can recover o£ theaccommodation indorser, although he knows that the paper is founded on an accommodation transaction.—Merchants’ Bank v. Comstock, 14 Amer. Rep. 169; Quinn v. Ward, 5 Amer. Rep. 284; 1 Parsons Notes & Bills, p. 279, note (u); 2 Ib. p. 27.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Ala. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-first-national-bank-ala-1885.