Montgomery Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelly

81 So. 612, 202 Ala. 656, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 1, 1919
Docket3 Div. 379.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 81 So. 612 (Montgomery Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelly) 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
Montgomery Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelly, 81 So. 612, 202 Ala. 656, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 356 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

[1] The plaintiff (appellant) sued the defendant (appellee) on two promissory notes. These notes were for $503.97 and $2,868.96, respectively. They were executed by R. O. Blakey to the defendant on, to wit, June 4, 1909. They respectively matured on October 2 and 6, 1909. The defendant indorsed them to the plaintiff on or about the date of their execution, under limitary circumstances, according to defendant’s contention, to be stated. The complaint, as amended, contained four counts. The first and third counts declare on the note for $503.97, and the second and fourth counts upon the note for $2,868.96. The second count “admits payments on said note 'as follows: July 6, 1909, $86; January 7, 1910, $87; February 15, 1911, $80.80; July 2, 1911, $87; January 20, 1912, $87.” Now, the fourth count omits the admission just quoted. Upon the considerations to be indicated, we may, for convenience, at this point eliminate that feature of the argument for appellant wherein resultant advantage is claimed because of the absence of any plea of payment, partial or total. There was, in fact, no plea of payment. It appears with certainty that the note described and declared on in the fourth count was the same note described and declared on in the second count, where the credits listed were admitted. It is recited in the bill of exceptions that the “plaintiff admitted the credits shown * * * on one of said notes.” Furthermore, it appears from the bill of exceptions that in response to inquiry by the court upon the conclusion of the oral charge, counsel for plaintiff said:

“I think possibly you might be a little more accurate, that those credits should be given as partial payments. My point is that in any event they are entitled to those credits on the notes.”

Under the circumstances presented by the pleading, and record otherwise, the appellant cannot take anything from the fact that no plea of payment was interposed to avail of the payments admitted by the appellant. 3 Sedgwick on Dam. (9th Ed.) § 1074.

[2] The defendant filed six special pleas. That numbered 6 was stricken on plaintiff’s demurrer. There was no general traverse of the . complaint. The trial proceeded throughout on the theory that the defendant was liable as an indorser on the notes, unless the matter set up in his pleas partially or whol *658 ly exonerated him. All of these pleas (except the sixth that was stricken as stated.) were, in nature, pleas of set-off and recoupment, consequent, in allegation, upon a breach by plaintiff of an agreement entered into by the plaintiff and defendant as a part of the contract resulting in the indorsement of these notes to the plaintiff, an engagement that will be later recited. While in plea 5 the defendant asserted that $500 of the amount expressed in the note for $2,-S68.90 (described in the .second and fourth counts) was simply and only an act of accommodation to the plaintiff (which arose out of an antecedent indebtedness, in the amount of $500, that Blakey owed the plaintiff, with which defendant had no previous connection of any kind), yet neither in the oral charge of the court nor in any of plaintiff’s special requests for instruction was any reference made to this particular feature of plea 5; and the demurrer addressed to plea 5 takes no objection to the sufficiency of the plea in the respect of the feature mentioned. Doubtless, the plea was regarded, because of its possession of a feature common to the other pleas — a feature that was predicated of the breach of contract to which allusion has been already made — as presenting the cross-claim asserted in the other pleas. No consideration can be given the sufficiency of plea 5 in the partial aspect to which we have referred.

The agreement upon which the pleas of set-off and recoupment relied is, in substance, this: Blakey being unable to pay for capital stock he had purchased in plaintiff bank had become indebted on that account through notes (one for $500 and another for $2,350) executed by him to defendant who, in turn, indorsed them to plaintiff. These notes were secured with shares of the capital stock in the plaintiff. Later, when Blakey had not paid the notes then held by the plaintiff, the president of the plaintiff presented to defendant for his execution renewal notes. These are the notes now sued on. It is averred that the president of the plaintiff agreed with defendant that if he would sign these notes (collateral security of which Blakey had put up in the shape of stock in the plaintiff of a face value of $3,300), the plaintiff would, if Blakey did not pay the renewal notes at their maturity, sell the stock. It is further averred that Blakey defaulted; that the agreement stated was not kept by the plaintiff; that plaintiff failed to sell the stock; and that the stock, then and for a while afterwards, was worth par, subsequently becoming practically worthless. The effect of the agreement was that the plaintiff assumed the definite obligation to sell the stock upon the nonpayment of the notes at their maturity and credit proceeds on the notes; this apart .from the further positive averment in plea 4 that “the plaintiff would not call upon him (i. e., defendant) to pay the same, * * * ” in the event of default.

[3-8] It is true that in the absence of a special agreement a pledgee is invested with a discretion with respect to a sale of the subject of the pledge, and is not bound to sell collateral in order to avoid liability for its depreciation occurring after the maturity of the debt to secure which the property is pledged. 31 Cyc. 828; Lake v. Little Rock Trust Co., 77 Ark. 53, 90 S. W. 847, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1199, 1200, 7 Ann. Cas. 394, note, pp. 395, 398; 21 R. C. L. 689. Where, as here, the pledgee, or one standing in that relation, assumes by contract a definite, positive obligation to sell the collateral upon default in the payment of the debt thereby secured, the rule stated does not apply, for, in such circumstances, the contract fixes the obligation and duty of the pledgee in the premises. Cooper v. Simpson, 41 Minn. 46, 42 N. W. 601, 4 L. R. A. 194, 16 Am. St. Rep. 667. Since the contract averred stipulated for a sale upon default in payment of the notes, and affirmatively bound the plaintiff to do so, no discretion in the premises, like that the common law recognizes in the absence of special agreement, was left in the pledgee, plaintiff; and no notice or demand by the defendant was a prerequisite to plaintiff’s liability if the plaintiff breached its contractually assumed, positive duty to sell upon the happening of the event stipulated.

The decision in Taggard v. Curtenius, 15 Wend. (N. Y.) 155, cited on appellant’s brief, is readily distinguishable from the case under review. There the plea set up, in bar of a recovery on the notes, negligence on the part of the pledgee in respect of the disposition of the property pledged; and the court there clearly indicated its opinion that a different question - would have arisen had the plea sought to effect a set-off. Furthermore, there was no special agreement superseding the common-law rule. The other decisions cited on brief for appellant must be discriminated on those considerations. The text in Jones on Pledges, § 602, defines the common-law rule, unaffected by a special agreement binding the pledgee to sell in a definite event.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 612, 202 Ala. 656, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-bank-trust-co-v-kelly-ala-1919.