Nightingale v. Chafee

11 R.I. 609, 1877 R.I. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 28, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 R.I. 609 (Nightingale v. Chafee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nightingale v. Chafee, 11 R.I. 609, 1877 R.I. LEXIS 61 (R.I. 1877).

Opinion

Dubeee, C. J.

This is an assignee’s bill for instructions. The case stated is this: In 1867 the three brothers, George, John, and Charles Adams, were and for some time had been in business as copartners under the firm of Adams Brothers, and on the seventh day of February, 1867, they gave a mortgage on a portion of their property to Sarah Adams, Tully D. Bowen, and Zechariah Chafee to indemnify or secure them for certain guaranties or indorsements made and to be made for the accommodation of the firm. The clause of defeasance recites the giving of two notes by the firm: to wit, one for $25,000, dated July 20,1866, payable to the Providence Institution for Savings in one year, indorsed by Sarah Adams and Tully D. Bowen; and the other for $20,000, dated October 22, 1866, payable to the People’s Savings Bank in six months, indorsed by Sarah Adams and Zechariah Chafee, and states that it was contemplated that said Adams, Bowen, and Chafee should severally thereafter indorse and guarantee notes and other money paper for the firm, from time to time, and also notes in renewal of the notes aforesaid. It then provides that if the firm shall pay the notes and paper so indorsed or guarantied by all or either of said parties, and all moneys loaned or advanced to the firm by them or either of them, and shall hold them severally harmless from all loss or liability by reason thereof, the deed shall be void.

The firm of Adams Brothers remained unchanged until November 1, 1875, when George retired, leaving John and Charles, who continued to carry on the business under the old firm name. On the second day of November, 1875, the three brothers, members of the old firm, gave a second indemnity mortgage to Sarah Adams, which covered the property covered by the first, and also property not covered by it. The clause of defeasance in the new mortgage, after mentioning the indorsements of said Sarah, *616 then existing for the old firm, recites that she may continue to indorse and guaranty the notes and paper made by the new firm “ either in renewal of, or in substitution for, or in addition to, the paper aforesaid now outstanding.” It then states the condition of defeasance which secures or indemnifies her for her indorsements for the old firm as well as for the new.

On the 26th day of January, 1876, Adams Brothers failed, and Sarah Adams assigned all her property to the plaintiff in trust for the equal benefit of all her creditors. The notes of Adams Brothers, on which she was then held, or has since become liable as indorser or guarantor, amount to $174,500. Two of these notes, to wit, a note for $25,000, dated January 14, 1870, and a note for $20,000, dated April 18, 1875, were also indorsed or guarantied by Chafee. All the others were indorsed or guarantied by her alone, Bowen’s indorsement having ceased. Seven notes so indorsed by her alone were given November 1, 1875. We understand that it is conceded that these notes are to be regarded as notes of the old firm. But five notes, indorsed or guarantied by her alone, amounting to $42,500, were given after November 2, 1875, the date of the second mortgage. They were not, however, given for any new loan to the new firm ; but they represent, so to speak, loans or advances to the old firm, for which the old firm had given its notes, indorsed or guarantied by Sarah Adams, said notes of the old firm being surrendered or cancelled, when the notes of the new firm, indorsed or guarantied by her, were given.

The assignee has sold, with the consent of creditors, the property assigned to him for $104,000, and he has agreed with Chafee and the creditors that $70,000 of this sum shall be taken as the proceeds of the first mortgage.

The assignee sets forth in his bill that questions have arisen in regard to the distribution of the fund in his hands, the creditors holding notes dated prior to November 2, 1875, claiming to be solely entitled to said sum of $70,000, and to be entitled pro rata in the residue ; while the other creditors claim that the notes held by them are but renewals of notes given by the old firm, and that they are therefore entitled to share in the entire fund equally with the creditors first mentioned. In view of these conflicting claims the assignee asks for instructions.

*617 The right of the creditors to have the securities marshalled is not disputed, notwithstanding’ the assignment is for their equal benefit. The controversy has been argued as turning upon the question whether the new paper is to be regarded as given in payment, or only in renewal or extension, of the old ; for if it is only in renewal or extension, it is conceded that the holders of the new paper are entitled equally with the holders of • the old under the first mortgage.

It is settled in this state by repeated decisions that giving a note for an antecedent debt does not absolutely pay the debt, unless it is given and received as payment, and that the burden is upon the debtor to show that it is so given, and received. Sweet & Carpenter v. James, 2 R. I. 270, 293; Wheeler v. Schroeder, 4 R. I. 383, 389; Wilbur v. Jernegan, ante, p. 113. In these cases the maker of the note was also the debtor. In the case at bar the original debtors were more numerous than the makers of the new paper. Does that make any difference ?

The earlier English cases held that an agreement to accept the liability of one or more of several partners, in lieu of the whole, was invalid for want of consideration. Lodge v. Dicas, 3 B. & A. 611; David v. Ellice, 5 B. & C. 196. Later cases are inore liberal, and hold that if a creditor actually agrees to take a firm, from which one partner has retired, as his debtor, in lieu of the old firm, he will be bound by his agreement ; but that in any given case, whether he has so agreed or not is a question of fact to be proved against him. Thompson v. Percival, 2 B. & Ad. 968; Hart v. Alexander, 2 M. & W. 484; Lindley on Partnership, 454. The law is the same in this country. It is also the law here that an agreement to discharge the retiring partner will not be inferred from the mere acceptance of the note of the continuing partners for the joint debt, but must be established by independent proof. 2 Amer. Lead. Cases, 5th edit. 273, 274, and cases cited. It follows that, in the case at bar, the holders of the new paper have the same right as the holders of the old, unless there is satisfactory proof that they agreed to take the new paper in payment of the original debt.

Such proof, it is claimed, exists in the fact that a new mortgage was given to secure the new paper, and also in the fact *618 that the old paper was surrendered or cancelled when the new was taken.

We do not think the mortgage affords any inference against the new paper It was not given as security for creditors, but for an accommodation indorser. It was given by all the members of the old firm, and it protects the old paper as well as the new; and creditors, therefore, could not gain and might lose by taking the new paper in satisfaction of the old.

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Bluebook (online)
11 R.I. 609, 1877 R.I. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nightingale-v-chafee-ri-1877.