Miners State Bank v. Auksztokalnis

128 A. 726, 283 Pa. 18, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 9, 1925
DocketAppeal, 87
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 128 A. 726 (Miners State Bank v. Auksztokalnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miners State Bank v. Auksztokalnis, 128 A. 726, 283 Pa. 18, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 339 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschziskeb,

This suit was brought by the Miners State Bank to recover from the estate of Michael Rosenberg, deceased, the balance due on a judgment note for $5,000, made by one Archbishop Alexander Nemolosky, dated January 5,1920, payable “on demand after date,” to the order of plaintiff, containing on its reverse side a writing (hereinafter called “the endorsement”) in the form of an assignment of the instrument to the Miners State Bank, a “guarantee”'of payment and a warrant to confess judgment, signed by the above-named decedent and others, the endorsers appearing in the following order: Elias S. Barny (Seal), Valentine W. Quigel (Seal), Alexander Nemolosky and Mike Rosenberg (without seals), as more fully shown in the reporter’s note accompanying this opinion.

The statement of claim averred that defendant was executor of the estate of Michael Rosenberg, who died February 27, 1923; that “Michael Rosenberg during his lifetime” had “endorsed the said note and guaranteed payment thereof to the Miners’ State Bank”; that the note was “payable on demand”; that it had been duly *23 presented to the maker, who paid only $500 thereon and refused to meet the balance, “though repeatedly requested so to do”; “of all of which premises the said defendant had notice,” and, on his refusal to settle, the present action was instituted to collect the amount due, with interest from July 5,1921, to which date it had been paid.

Defendant filed an affidavit of defense in the nature of a special demurrer, as follows: (1) “The statement of claim bases this action on an alleged endorsement of a promissory note upon which plaintiff is the payee, and of which it is the holder; the endorsement purports to be an assignment or transfer of said note by defendant’s decedent and others to the Miners State Bank, the payee and the holder of said note; the statement does not aver that defendant’s decedent was a party to said note, holder or owner of it, or the owner of any interest therein which he could assign and transfer; the endorsement was not effective for any purpose and cannot operate to make the estate of defendant’s decedent liable for the amount of the note or any part thereof.” (2) “The obligation of the endorsers, as disclosed by the statement of claim, was one of guaranty; the statement does not aver that the maker is insolvent, and it shows that the plaintiff did not exercise proper diligence in its efforts to collect the note from the maker; the action therefore cannot be maintained.”

The affidavit ends thus: “Wherefore defendant prays judgment if he should make further answer or denial; and prays judgment dismissing plaintiff’s statement of claim and sustaining this proceeding in the nature of a demurrer.”

The court below entered judgment for defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.

To sustain the judgment, defendant points to the note as an instrument under seal, and to the Act of May 28, 1715, 1 Sm. Laws 90, 1 Purdon’s Digest, 13th ed., 469, which provides how a specialty must be assigned to en *24 able the assignee to sue thereon in his or its own name; and defendant contends that, a lack of compliance with the act being shown by plaintiff’s statement, the suit must fail. This, in short, is the argument to sustain point one of the affidavit of defense.

In reply, plaintiff contends that the Act of 1715 has no application; that it sues, not as assignee but as the original holder and payee of the note, to recover from defendant as an original surety thereon.

As to the capacity in which plaintiff sues, point one of the affidavit of defense, as drawn, admits, in effect, that plaintiff sues as payee and holder and not as assignee; but, despite his own affidavit, defendant argues, “It must be taken as conclusive that appellee’s decedent had a title,” in the sense of an assignable interest, because the written endorsement on the note contains a transfer of title, and this is equivalent to a warranty of possession of title by each signer of such endorsement; hence, notwithstanding the pleadings to the contrary, defendant contends that it must be assumed plaintiff sued in the capacity of assignee. This contention is not properly before the court, however, for the affidavit of defense not only fails to suggest that the decedent had, or must be presumed to have had (in accord with the present argument), an assignable interest, but, by implication at least, denies it, showing by the very words of point one that defendant understood and accepted the fact that plaintiff claims no such interest. Therefore, on the pleadings, the Act of 1715 falls out of the case.

The note itself contains a warrant of attorney to confess judgment at any time, and this, as admitted by both sides, makes it a nonnegotiable instrument: Volk v. Shoemaker, 229 Pa. 407, 410. Under such circumstances, if the endorsement were merely defendant’s decedent’s signature, and nothing more, there could be no recovery thereon (Wilson v. Martin, 74 Pa. 159; Shaffstall v. McDaniel, 152 Pa. 598, 600, 601); this is not the case, however, for defendant’s decedent did more *25 than merely endorse a nonnegotiable instrument, he signed what may “be interpreted to mean a liability by contract”: Kline v. Keiser, 87 Pa. 485, 486-7.

True, the endorsement says, “I hereby......guarantee payment,” and, on these words, defendant, adopting the view of the court below, argues that plaintiff cannot recover because it seeks to enforce a guarantee against decedent’s estate without any consideration moving to the latter to assume the obligation. As to this, it may be noted first, that, no such point of demurrer, as absence of consideration, is made in the affidavit of defense; next, in a case like the one before us, where the secondary obligation, or suretyship, is entered into at the time of the creation of the principal debt (and in the present instance, there being nothing to indicate any other time, it must be assumed to have been then entered into: Woods v. Sherman, 71 Pa. 100, 105; Siegel v. Baily, 252 Pa. 231, 233, 235), the payment of the money to the principal debtor is sufficient consideration to support the obligation assumed by the surety. We early said, in Snevily v. Johnston, 1 W. & S. 307, 309, that where the promise to meet the debt of another “is made at the same time with the principal contract, and becomes an essential ground of the credit given to the principal debtor,......no other consideration need be shoAvn than that for the original agreement”; and, later, in Campbell v. Knapp, 15 Pa. 27, 30, we stated: “The guaranty being a part of the [original] transaction, the consideration for it is sufficient to maintain the action.” Then, in Paul v. Stackhouse, 38 Pa. 302, 306, we said: “It is not essential that a consideration move to the surety,— it is sufficient if the principal derive a benefit from the promise.”

What we have already said disposes of the contention as to lack of consideration to sustain the endorsement, and this is so whether defendant’s decedent was a surety or a guarantor; but we have referred to him as a surety because the note at bar is an obligation payable on de *26 mand, with a contractual endorsement of a character which, this court has ruled, creates the liability of suretyship, when on a demand note.

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 726, 283 Pa. 18, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miners-state-bank-v-auksztokalnis-pa-1925.