Neylon v. Liberty Nat. Bank of Pawhuska

1927 OK 302, 259 P. 545, 126 Okla. 188, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 20, 1927
Docket17533
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1927 OK 302 (Neylon v. Liberty Nat. Bank of Pawhuska) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neylon v. Liberty Nat. Bank of Pawhuska, 1927 OK 302, 259 P. 545, 126 Okla. 188, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 112 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

MASON, V. C. J.

The Liberty National Bank of Pawhuska, as plaintiff, brought suit against J. A. Neylon, as defendant, to recover the sum of $471.80, with interest and attorney fees, upon a promissory note. The defendant filed answer in which he admitted the execution of the note, but alleged that he was not liable thereon, be *189 cause it was .executed without consideration and for the accommodation of the plaintiff, and for the further reason that the cashier of plaintiff bank had agreed that the defendant was not to be held liable thereon. For cross-petition, he alleged that the plaintiff had received $128.20 of defendant’s money, and, without his consent, had applied it on said note, for which amount lie prayed judgment. Plaintiff filed reply consisting of a general denial and allegations that at all times mentioned in his answer, the defendant was a stockholder and director of the plaintiff corporation and was estopped from pleading that he executed said note as an accommodation to the plaintiff and without consideration. It was also alleged that the defendant was estopped from making the further defense pleaded in his answer for the reason that such conduct was a violation of the banking laws of the United States and was contrary to and against public policy.

The defendant, upon the trial of the case, assumed the burden of proof and after all his evidence had been introduced, the trial court sustained the plaintiff’s motion, and instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount sued for. Motion of defendant for an instructed verdict on his cross-petition was denied.

The defendant has perfected his appeal and for reversal counsel urge that the evidence of the defendant was sufficient to constitute a defense to the plaintiff’s action.

Defendant’s evidence, in substance, is as follows:

That at the time the note sued on was made, the defendant was a stockholder and director of the plaintiff 'bank and employed therein; that both the president and the cashier were out of town on their vacations; that the cashier, before leaving, gave instructions to the employees of the bank, including the defendant, to take care of Frank and Mary Simpkins, customers of the bank; that the Simpkins came to the bank on the date of the note sued on for the purpose of borrowing more money; that the records of the bank disclosed that they had previously borrowed the full amount authorized by law; that the defendant. Neylon, talked the situation over with John Evans, another employe of the bank, after which the defendant executed the note sued on herein and deposited the $600 to the credit of the Simpkins, and it was subsequently cheeked out and used by them; that at the same time Frank and Mary Simp-kins executed their note for $000 and delivered it to the defendant, which he carried in the cash drawer of the defendant bank, but the defendant testified that the note never became a part of the assets of the bank and that later, when he severed his connection with the bank, he took the note with him. The defendant further testified that he never received any portion of the consideration of the note sued on heroin and that it was executed for the sole purpose of enabling Frank and Mary Simpkins to borrow additional money after the limit, as provided by law, had been reached. The defendant admitted, on cross-examination, that no agreement had been made by the plaintiff bank not to hold him liable at the time said note was executed; that it was his intention to substitute the note he held for the note sued on herein, after the Simp-kins had reduced their indebtedness to such an amount as to make the additional $600 a legal indebtedness. It seems that this was never done, and for that reason he was unable to exchange the notes, but he contends that he received no consideration for his note and that it was executed wholly for the benefit of the plaintiff bank and, therefore, he is not liable thereon.

The fact that the defendant, as maker of the note, received ño benefit from the transaction, did not constitute a defense. The loan made by the bank to Frank and Mary Simpkins was sufficient consideration. Doxey v. Exchange Bank of Perry, 19 Okla. 183, 92 Pac. 150. See, also, Wright v. McKitrick (Kan.) 43 Pac. 977 ; 6 Cyc. 690 ; 8 Corpus Juris, 214. In Doxey v. Exchange Bank of Perry, supra, the court said:

“The real test is: Did the payee part with value or waive a legal right by reason of the execution and delivery of the note? If he did, it is sufficient consideration to authorize a recovery for the amount due thereon.”

Although the defendant testified that he was not to be bound by said note, but executed it for the accommodation of the plaintiff bank, the facts set out disclose that in legal contemplation Frank and Mary Simp-kins were the parties accommodated.

The rule, as stated in 8 Corpus Juris, 254, is as follows:

“The accommodated party is he to whom the credit of the accommodation party i§ loaned, and is not necessarily the payee, since the inquiry always is as to whom did the maker of the paper loan his credit as a matter of fact. And the fact that one derives some incidental benefit from the paper will not make it accommodation paper as to him.”

The foregoing text cites the case of Thom *190 v. Kibbee, 62 N. J. L. 753, 42 Atl. 729, where the court said:

“The accommodated party, in a legal sense, is the person to whom the credit of the accommodating party is loaned, not a third person who may receive an advantage by the loan of the credit.”

In our opinion, the credit of the defendant herein was loaned not to the plaintiff bank, but to the Simpkins; the effect of the transaction being to enable them to borrow upon the credit of the defendant after the .credit which the bank, under the law, could extend them had been exhausted. The evidence that the Simpkins had an existing indebtedness with the plaintiff bank for the full amount which it was permitted by law to carry and that the defendant signed said note pursuant to instructions and for the accommodation of the plaintiff bank does not affect the legal relation of the parties.

The situation is entirely different from that in the cases wherein it is held that a bank is bound to protect the maker of a note executed to it for its accommodation, the proceeds of which it retains. There is no contention in the instant case that the proceeds of said note were retained by the bank, but, on the contrary, the evidence discloses that the money was loaned to the Simp-kins upon the strength of the note signed by the defendant and without which the loan could not have been made.

We are not unmindful of the cases which hold that a defense to a note is established by a showing that it was given to a bank, which parted with nothing on the strength of it, merely to enable an officer to deceive the examiner, but the present case is distinguishable from those cases on the ground already stated that in the case at bar there was a consideration for the note.

The plaintiff in error cites and relies very largely upon the cases of Oilton State Bank v. Ross, 108 Okla. 24, 234 Pac. 567, and Lindsay State Bank v. Forbis, 108 Okla. 126, 235 Pac. 470.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 302, 259 P. 545, 126 Okla. 188, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neylon-v-liberty-nat-bank-of-pawhuska-okla-1927.