National Exchange Bank v. Gay

17 A. 555, 57 Conn. 224, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 17 A. 555 (National Exchange Bank v. Gay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Exchange Bank v. Gay, 17 A. 555, 57 Conn. 224, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 17 (Colo. 1889).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

The plaintiff corporation was organized on [231]*231April 5th, 1864, under the act of Congress of February 25th, 1868. Under that law its existence would have terminated on February 24th, 1883. By an act of Congress passed July 12th, 1882, entitled an “Act to enable National Banking Associations to extend their corporate existence and for other purposes,” it was enabled to, and did, extend its existence during twenty additional years.

On January 8th, 1872, the defendant, with others, executed a bond as follows:—

"Know all men by these presents, that, whereas the National Exchange Bank of Hartford, Connecticut, has discounted, and may hereafter discount, for the Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company, (a corporation existing under the laws of the state of Connecticut, located and doing business in the town of Farmington,) promissory notes, drafts, and bills of exchange: Therefore we, James W. Delaney, George Dunham, Lucas Richards, Samuel Q. Porter, George Richards & Co., Augustus Ward, William Gay, Winthrop M. Wadsworth, and Samuel S. Cowles, for value received, jointly and severally guarantee to the said National Exchange Bank the full, prompt and ultimate payment of all promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange, or other evidences of indebtedness which the said National Exchange Bank have discounted or may hereafter discount for the said Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company to an amount not to exceed fifteen thousand dollars in all at any one time. And in case of non-payment we do hereby bind ourselves, our heirs, and executors, to pay the same on demand, with all costs and damages. It is, however, agreed and understood between the parties to this instrument that any one or all of the signers thereof may, at any time hereafter, give notice in writing to the president or cashier of the said National Exchange Bank, that such signer or signers of said bond will not be holden upon said bond for any liabilities created by said Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company subsequently to the giving of said written notice, and that such signer or signers shall thereby and thereupon be released and discharged from any claim by [232]*232said, bank upon said bond for any liability created as aforesaid, after the giving of said written notice. Dated at Farmington on this eighth day of January, A. D. 1872.”

In a suit by the bank against William Gay, one of the signers of the bond, the defendant by way of answer averred “ that, at the time said bond was made, the obligee therein described was a corporation duly organized on the 5th day of April, 1864, under the banking laws of the United States, to continue as such national banking corporation until the close of business on the 24th day of February, 1883, but it had no power or right of succession or of corporate existence for a longer period than twenty years from and after its said organization, to wit, after said 24th day of February, 1883.”—Also “ that the only consideration for said bond was such as might arise from time to time by the said obligees discounting notes and other evidences of indebtedness for the benefit of said Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company within such time as the said bond might continue in force, and that none of the notes described in the plaintiff’s complaint were discounted by said obligee prior to February 25th, 1883, but were all discounted in 1887 and 1888, as specified in said complaint, and long after the expiration of the corporate existence of said obligee under the banking laws in force at the time of its organization as aforesaid or at the time of the making of said bond.”

In reply the plaintiff averred “ that the notes described in the complaint were discounted for the Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company since February 24th, 1883; that from the date of said bond (January 8th, 1872) to the commencement of this suit, the plaintiffs have held at all times some notes, drafts, bills of 'exchange, or other evidences of indebtedness which they had discounted for said manufacturing company, relying upon said bond as security therefor, and that all of the notes described in said complaint were renewals and extensions in whole or in part of loans and discounts made for said Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company upon the faith of said bond before said 24th day of February, 1883; and that the defendant and the other sign[233]*233ei\s of said bond were severally stockholders of said Delaney & Munson Manufacturing Company, and executed the same for the purpose of securing the plaintiffs for all discounts they should thereafter make for said company, and all the notes or commercial paper subsequently discounted by the plaintiffs,’including the notes described in the complaint, were discounted by the plaintiffs in good faith and in full reliance on the security of said bond.”

To this reply the defendant demurred, and the case is reserved on the demurrer for the advice of this court.

Courts, when called upon to construe contracts guaranteeing the faithful discharge of the duties of an office, adhere closely to the letter, for this reason, that the obligor has assumed a burden of responsibility solely for the benefit of another, without compensation or possibility of profit to himself, and therefore the law will add nothing to it by way of presumption.

In the case before us the defendant with others, desired to become a manufacturer, of course for pecuniary profit. For the purpose, among others, of putting a limit to individual responsibility for losses, they associated themselves under the statute as a joint stock corporation. Being unwilling individually to contribute the necessary capital from money in hand, they determined to borrow it from the plaintiff. For convenience in the transaction of the business the money was borrowed upon notes made by the corporation. To avoid the inconvenience of indorsements by several individuals upon each of a large number of original notes and the renewals thereof, the obligors made one comprehensive continuing contract of indorsement in the form of a guaranty under their respective hands and seals. In effect, therefore, the defendant borrowed money for himself and his associates; he received and used it for his and their profit; and still has it in possession. It is difficult therefore to perceive any distinction between his ease and that of any other borrower; difficult to perceive any of the essential elements of a suretyship in his position ; therefore difficult to see any reason why he should ask, or the court should [234]*234grant, the special protection of the law applicable to that relation.

It may well be presumed that obligors would desire to limit the time during which they would be bound for the faithful performance of the duties of an office by another. But, inasmuch as both morally and legally it is the duty of every man to repay money borrowed for his own use and profit, it must be the presumption that these obligors intended to do so; that they intended to pay it to the plaintiff, or even to such person or other corporation as should legally become the assignee of its right to receive.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A. 555, 57 Conn. 224, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-exchange-bank-v-gay-conn-1889.