McGlynn v. Granstrom

210 N.W. 892, 169 Minn. 164, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1412
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 19, 1926
DocketNo. 25,470.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 892 (McGlynn v. Granstrom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGlynn v. Granstrom, 210 N.W. 892, 169 Minn. 164, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1412 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Action by the payee against an indorser of a promissory note. After verdict for defendant, plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for judgment or a new trial.

The defense was that the payee was party to an executed oral contract with the maker and third parties which released the former. If the contract was made, the maker was discharged. The jury decided that issue for defendant. The evidence is conflicting and the verdict must stand. It is therefore a case where the indorser of the note is discharged because the maker has been discharged. Section 120, N. I. L. (§ 7163, G. S. 1923).

The contract was not in writing. For that reason plaintiff invokes section 122, N. I. L. (§ 7165, G. S. 1923), which provides that the holder may “expressly renounce his rights against any party to the instrument” and that an unconditional “renunciation” of such rights against the principal debtor at or after maturity discharges the instrument. The section concludes thus; “A renunciation must be in *166 writing, unless the instrument is delivered up to the person primarily liable thereon.” There was no delivery to the maker of the note in suit. Hence it is argued, there being no renunciation in writing, that defendant is still liable. We cannot so hold.

Section 122 is to be construed with the rest of the statute and particularly sections 119 and 120 (§§ 7162, 7163, G. S. 1923). The first enumerates the methods whereby a negotiable instrument itself is “discharged” and attaches that result to intentional cancel-ation or “any other act which will. discharge a simple contract for the payment of money.” Section 120 in similar fashion enumerates the conventional methods of discharging parties secondarily liable.

It is significant that discharge is dealt with in two of the sections but only express “renunciation” in the third. That suggests rather pointedly that the renunciation of section 122 is something different from the discharge of sections 119 and 120. If the latter are unqualified there may be a discharge without an instrument in writing or a delivery back of the bill or note. But under section 122 there cannot be a renunciation save in writing or by delivery back. If it was the intention to apply section 122 to any of the subject matter of sections 119 and 120, why the change in terminology from discharge to renunciation? Why in that case is .express renunciation rather than discharge made the subject of legislation?

It is not permissible to deny the change of significance and so conclude that it does not indicate a change of thought. If it had been the intention to qualify sections 119 and 120 by the requirement of an instrument in writing, it would not have been left to implication. That is one reason for avoiding the construction which makes the renunciation of section 122 the same process as the discharge of the earlier sections. Another is that the idea of a writing as an essential to every discharge of a negotiable instrument or a party thereto is a stranger to the law merchant which it was sought to express and make uniform, but not new or strange, by the N. I. L. It would be a radical as well as an impractical departure to make essential to any of the discharges of sections 119 and 120 a written memorial of the transaction'.

*167 Under section 119 the cancelation of a negotiable instrument discharges it. Although it may well be in effect a renunciation of the maker’s rights against all the parties and discharge them, it certainly need not be in writing. It may be by purposely burning the instrument or otherwise destroying it. Henson v. Henson, 151 Tenn. 137, 268 S. W. 378, 37 A. L. R. 1131. So also there may be a discharge through novation or an accord and satisfaction. Yet there need be neither writing nor delivery back, unless required by section 122, for a negotiable instrument may be discharged by any “act which will discharge a simple contract for the payment of money.” “A verbal agreement of the payee of a note with the maker to release him, and accept a third party in his stead, who signs in pursuance of such agreement, is upon sufficient consideration, and is valid.” 2 Daniel, Neg. Inst. (4th ed.) § 1290. So also the maker of a note may pay it by transferring property to the holder with that agreed purpose and effect. There is a discharge of the instrument even though it is not surrendered to the maker and there is no memorial in writing.

So it is an anomalous thing to require a written instrument in order to effect in every case, where there is no delivery back of the bill or note, a discharge of the instrument or a party thereto. Moreover it is directly contrary to the literal effect of sections 119 and 120 of the N. I. L. itself. That difficulty requires construction and the search for a basis for concluding that the renunciation of section 122 is something different or less than the discharge of sections 119 and 120. As already stated the very difference in terminology indicates a change in thought and the purpose to make the subject matter of section 122 something different from that of the other two.The difficulty disappears and an answer to the problem found if section 122 is traced to its source.

Section 122 came to us from the British Bills of Exchange Act. According to Judge Russell of the supreme court of Nova Scotia (Russell, Bills [2d ed.] 421) it “embodies the law as laid down” in Foster v. Dawber, 6 Ex. 839, 851. There it was held that both bills and notes could be discharged by “express waiver” without con *168 sideration. Parke, B., explained that the rule had come into English law from the law merchant. He referred to it as “that rule * * * prevailing in foreign countries, viz., that there may be a release and discharge from a debt by express words, although unaccompanied by satisfaction or by any solemn instrument. Such appears to be the law of France, and probably it was for the reason above stated that it has been adopted here.” Expounding the statute, Judge Bussell says in his text:

“The acceptor may be discharged from his liability on the bill by a renunciation. * * * Before the passing of the Act this renunciation was complete and effective without any writing and without the surrender of the instrument, but it was thought well to require some formality. It still remains law that no consideration is necessary for such a discharge, but in order to be effective a renunciation must be in writing unless the bill is delivered up to the acceptor.”

The same concept of renunciation, express waiver without consideration, is expressed by another English authority, Byles, Bills (18th ed.) 233. To the same effect are the Annotations by Mr. Smythe of the Canadian Bills of Exchange Act of 1890, p. 111. Sir M. D. Chalmers, draftsman of the British Bills of Exchange Acts of 1882 and 1906, says [Chalmers, Bills of Exchange (8th ed. 244]:

“The words requiring the renunciation to be in writing were added in committee. They alter the English law, but bring it into accordance with Scottish law. At common law a contract cannot be discharged by accord without satisfaction. The special rule as to bills and notes partially reproduced in this section seems to have been consciously imported into the law merchant from French law, (citing Foster v. Dawber, supra).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Farmers Union Oil Company v. Fladeland
178 N.W.2d 254 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1970)
Bickart v. Greater Arizona Savings & Loan Ass'n
430 P.2d 928 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1967)
Berta v. Rocchio
369 P.2d 51 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1962)
In Re Kirschenbaum
130 A.2d 640 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1957)
Miller v. Miller
296 S.W.2d 684 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1956)
Shaffer v. Akron Products Co.
109 N.E.2d 24 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1952)
Brown v. Brown
208 P.2d 1081 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1949)
Bagley v. Kerr
112 P.2d 459 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1941)
Northern Drug Co. v. Abbett
284 N.W. 881 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1939)
Beach v. Bello
193 A. 526 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)
Johnston & Larimer D. G. Co. v. Helf
1936 OK 845 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Wilkins v. Skoglund
256 N.W. 31 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)
Bank of the United States v. Manheim
189 N.E. 776 (New York Court of Appeals, 1934)
Bankers Mortgage Co. v. Breyfogle
15 P.2d 440 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1932)
Hazlehurst Oil Mill & Fertilizer Co. v. Booze
133 So. 120 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1931)
Portland Iron Works v. Siemens
295 P. 463 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 892, 169 Minn. 164, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcglynn-v-granstrom-minn-1926.