Nussear v. Hazard

129 A. 506, 148 Md. 345, 1925 Md. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 A. 506 (Nussear v. Hazard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nussear v. Hazard, 129 A. 506, 148 Md. 345, 1925 Md. LEXIS 40 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Qettttt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On or about April 18th, 1922, James G. Pugh and Stuart I. Whitmarsh, wishing to borrow $10,000 to finance a coal operation, applied to William Seheffenacker and Louis A. Hazard for the loan. Seheffenacker and Hazard agreed to lend the money, and on that day Pugh and Whitmarsh each executed to them a promissory note in the following form:

“Baltimore, Md., April 18th, 1922.
“$5,000.00
“Pour months after date I promise to pay to Louis A Hazard and William Seheffenacker, or order, five thousand and 00/100 dollars, value received.
“Note: — It is understood and agreed that this note is intended to be secured by a second mortgage on the home of the maker, on Melanchthon Avenue, Luther-ville, Maryland, subject to a first mortgage of $4,500, and by a deed for and title to the Baum Coal Mine, at Jennings, Garrett County, Maryland, and also by a lease- of 113 acres of coal nearby to be hereafter executed by the Morgart Coal Mining Corporation to said maker or to his nominees, in accordance with an agreement between said payees and said maker and others bearing even date herewith, as security both to the said payees, and the endorser hereof, for the payment hereof, and that in case said coal properties *348 are transferred to a corporation in exchange for its capital stock, the said stock is to be taken and held by said payees in lieu of said coal properties as such security; said properties being particularly mentioned and referred to in said agreement.
(Signed) James C. Pugh.
“Endorsed by Jas. S. Hussear, Jr.
“(Due Eriday, Aug. 18, 1922.)”

On the same day Pugh, Whit-marsh and the appellees executed the agreement referred to in the notes, under which the appellees agreed to borrow on security owned by them $,'12,-000; of which $10,000 was to be by them loaned to Pugh and iWkitmarsh, and $2,000 paid by them as a bonus for securing the loan. The $10,000 was to be loaned to 'Whit-marsh and Pugh severally, $5,000 to' each, and the loan to Pugh was to be secured in the following manner:

“That the said James G. Pugh, one of the parties of the second part, to more fully secure the repayment of the indebtedness set forth in paragraph two, shall pledge as collateral a four months promissory note,dated April 18th, 1922, signed by James S. Hussear, Jr., for five thousand dollars, and as additional collateral to execute a second mortgage upon the residence of James Gr. Pugh, at Lutherville, Maryland, and also the right, title, and interest of the said James Gr. Pugh to all coal properties in Garrett County, Maryland.”

As further evidence of the loan it was agreed:

“That the said parties of the second part shall exer cute their four promissory notes each for three thousand ($3,000) dollars each payable to the order of the said parties of the first part, each dated April 19th, 1922, and payable thrée-four-fíve and six months respectively from the 19th day of April, 1922, being the sum of ten thousand ($10,000) dollars indebtedness set forth in paragraph two hereof and the sum of two thousand ($2,000) dollars, the bonus payable for the obtaining of. the net sum of ten thousand ($10,000) dollars by the said parties of the first part.”

*349 The agreement also provided for the pledging and redemption of other collateral and for the transfer hy Piigh to the appellees of the stock owned hy him of a corporation to he formed thereafter to he held by them pending the loan.

The note referred to in that 'agreement, and set out above, was executed hy P'ugh, endorsed by James S. Nussear, Jr., .and delivered to the appellees.

There was evidence tending to show' that the mortgage referred to in that note and agreement was not executed until August 8th, 1922, and whether when it was executed it referred to the note endorsed hy Nussear, or whether a second mortgage note was executed at the time the mortgage was executed, is not shown by the record.

When the note endorsed by the appellant in this case matured, the holders, who were .also the payees, did not present it for payment to the maker, Pugh, but presented it, according to their testimony, to the “endorser.” They excused their failure to present it to the maker on two grounds: Eirst, they said that Pugh Was out of the State on the day it matured, and, second, that he had an office with them, and that the note was in the safe at that office when it matured. It was not paid either by the maker or the “endorser,” and this suit was brought hy the holders, the appellees here, to recover the balance due on it. The Case was tried before a jury in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, and the verdict and judgment being for -the plaintiffs, the defendants appealed.

The record contains two exceptions. The first is said to be based on a ruling of the trial court in refusing to permit Scheffenacker, one of the appellees, to he asked on cross-examination whether he ever hypothecated any of the collateral which he held as security for the loan. No such ruling appears in the record, hut if we assume that the question is properly before us, we do- not see how the appellant could have been injured by the supposed ruling, for it is not contended that the appellees received anything for the sale of -eollaterlal which was not credited on the note, nor that they *350 could not have returned the collateral if the note had been paid at. maturity.

The second exception relates to the court’s rulings on the-prayers. The defendant offered five prayers, the first of which was refused, while the remlaining four were modified' by the court and granted. Although the exception challenges the propriety of the court’s action in modifying these prayers, no point was made of that in the oral 'argument or the brief in this Court, and indeed we are not able to learn definitely from the record how those prayers were modified by the court, or in what form they were originally offered,, and we could not, therefore, gay that the trial court -acted improperly in modifying them.

The only question before us, therefore, is the propriety of the court’s action in refusing the -appellant’s first prayer, and' in considering that question we will necessarily assume the truth of such evidence as tends to support the plaintiff’s-claim, together w-ith such inferences as may naturally and legitimately he drawn therefrom.

That prayer is based upon the -theory that the note sued on is a negotiable instrument, but that, whether negotiable- or not, the holders could not proceed against the “endorser”' until they bad at least demanded payment of the maker, and that since that was not done in this case, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, -but that even if .a demand was not necessary, nevertheless the “endorser” is n-ot liable because the payees, who are also the holders, extended the time of payment of the note without the knowledge or consent of the endorser, and these questions we will consider in the order in which they have been stated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 506, 148 Md. 345, 1925 Md. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nussear-v-hazard-md-1925.