Parks v. Sherman

176 N.W. 583, 208 Mich. 697, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 476
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1920
DocketDocket No. 65
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 N.W. 583 (Parks v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks v. Sherman, 176 N.W. 583, 208 Mich. 697, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 476 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This litigation had its origin in the financial delinquences of a fraternal organization which at one time existed in the city of Benton Harbor known as the “Loyal Order of Moose, Lodge No. 879,” which went out of existence with its debts unpaid some time prior to the commencement of this suit. Amongst its former active members were plaintiff Parks, defendant Sherman, Charles K. Farmer, A. J. Glennan, H. U. Rapp, and W. E. Marsh who was cashier of the Farmers & Merchants’ National Bank of Benton Harbor. Marsh had upon his own responsibility, without submitting the application to the loan committee of his bank, lent the lodge money from the bank’s funds. A loan of $1,000 which he made to the lodge on June 15, 1915, was not paid when due. It was evidenced by two notes of that date to the bank for $500 each due in six months with interest at 7%, signed by Charles K. Farmer and A. J. Glennan as a board of trustees of said lodge. When they fell due, on December 15, 1915, the lodge defaulted in payment. The officers of the bank notified Marsh that if this unauthorized loan made by him was not paid by December 31, 1915, the amount would be charged up to him and he would be held personally responsible for the same. He was not in financial condition to care for the notes as demanded by the bank and appealed to fellow-members of the lodge to help him out. Farmer, who as a trustee of the lodge had signed the note, called several meetings of certain members of [699]*699the order for the purpose of devising some means of taking care of the paper. Plaintiff attended five of them and defendant two or more. Negotiations were had with the cashier of another bank in Benton Harbor for a loan of $1,000 with which to pay the past due notes which Marsh’s bank held him responsible for. The following note which they supposed would be accepted was prepared and signed for that purpose:

“$1,000.
“Benton Harbor, Michigan, December 31, 1915.
“Sixty days after date, I promise to pay to the order of Benton Harbor State Bank $1,000 (one thousand and no/100 dollars) at Benton Harbor State Bank. Value received. With interest at 7% per annum.
“Charles K. Farmer,
“W. T. Parks,
“W. E. Marsh,
“A. J. Glennan,
“H. U. Rapp,
“Arthur Sherman.”

Endorsed on back:

“Protest waived. Loyal Order of Moose Lodge No. 879. Charles K. Farmer, A. J. Glennan, trustees.”

The cashier of the Benton Harbor State Bank had, on December 31, assured members of the lodge who made application for the loan that they could borrow the money on this note, but with the qualification that their application had to be taken up by him with the loan committee of the bank at its meeting after closing hours that afternoon. The loan committee, however, disapproved the loan and refused to accept the note. Plaintiff was with Marsh and others in Farmer’s office on December 31st, when it was expected the new loan would be consummated, and testified that some members, he did not recall who, went down with the note to the Benton Harbor State Bank to get the money for the purpose of taking it over to the National Bank of which Marsh was cashier, and there [700]*700paying the $1,000 evidenced by the past due lodge notes which he had accepted without authority; that “when they came back they informed Mr. Marsh and the rest of us they could not get the money until the next day at five o’clock”; and “Mr. Marsh almost fainted in his chair there,” saying “that money has got to be taken up before 4 o’clock.” Plaintiff thereupon, without solicitation of any one so far as shown, went to the National Bank that afternoon and paid up the past due notes over which the trouble had arisen. Of his reason for so doing he says, after telling of Marsh’s manifestations of distress:

“That is what gave me the motive for going and taking it up myself, to relieve the strain on Marsh’s mind at that time. * * * I took some securities I had, borrowed a thousand dollars and went to the bank and took up the notes under a promise of getting the money from the other bank the next day. That is the reason I paid the notes.”

Who then made that promise plaintiff does not disclose. It concededly was not defendant, who was not present and knew nothing of the refusal of the State Bank to approve the loan and accept their note until some time later.

On the date of this rejected note defendant Sherman and his. wife executed an instrument called a trust deed to Hi. U. Rapp covering property described as the north 31 feet of lot 2, block F, Webb’s addition to the city of Benton Harbor, and a chattel mortgage for $1,000 covering the regalia, furniture and other personal property of Lodge No. 879, Loyal Order of Moose, was given Sherman, signed by Farmer, Glen-nan and Marsh as “trustees,” by what authority is not made plain.

The so-called trust deed to Rapp was destroyed in a fire which burned up his store. Secondary evidence was given of its contents and purpose. Sherman tes[701]*701titled that the property it covered was worth $2,300 upon which there was a mortgage of $1,100; that at a meeting called to discuss ways and means to take care of this past due indebtedness Parks announced the State Bank would take a note signed as proposed with some additional security, and at Marsh’s request he executed the deed to Rapp who had given the brethren quite a talk on their moral obligations; that they told him the deed was wanted as additional security by the Benton Harbor State Bank and Farmer asked him to make it out to Rapp, as trustee, and he accordingly made out the deed to Rapp as security, or collateral, for the note they all signed. Rapp testified that he never talked about the matter with Sherman before he signed the note, which he at first refused to sign, but states he did so later, “after Mr. Farmer came to my office with the deed made out to me as trustee. This deed was made by Mr. Sherman, as security for signing the note. * * * It was clearly set forth to me that Mr. Sherman was becoming solely as guarantor for payment of the note to the subscribers, to the signers.” Plaintiff’s testimony is that it was given to Rapp “as trustee for the persons named, that signed the note.”

It eventuated that plaintiff’s fraternal faith was not well founded and his impulsive liberality for the good of the order in general and Marsh in particular left him a victim of misplaced confidence. Unable to get his money back either from the lodge or any of those who had signed the unnegotiated note to the State Bank he, on April 11, 1918, secured from Rapp an assignment of the trust deed of December 31, 1915, which Rapp testified was withheld from record at Sherman’s request and destroyed by fire some time before he made the assignment. In the meantime the lodge had faded out of existence and Sherman refused to recognize any legal or moral obligation in the mat[702]*702ter beyond an offer to contribute his proportion of the $1,000 in connection with the others who signed the note to the State Bank.

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Related

Lentz v. Stoflet
273 N.W. 763 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1937)
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222 N.W. 209 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 N.W. 583, 208 Mich. 697, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-sherman-mich-1920.